
This collection of essays delves into the hidden currents that shape Japanese life, using the word kokoro — heart, mind, spirit — as its guiding thread. Written in the late nineteenth‑century Meiji era, the pieces weave personal observation with cultural reflection, offering listeners a window onto the inner world of a rapidly modernising nation.
The opening vignette places us at a bustling railway station where a notorious thief, captured after a violent escape, is led into the crowd for public justice. A grieving widow and her infant son confront the murderer, while a police officer gently compels the child to look at the man who killed his father. In a raw, tear‑filled moment the criminal collapses, begging forgiveness and expressing a desperate remorse that shakes even the stoic officer.
Through scenes like this, the author invites contemplation of how duty, compassion, and shame intertwine in everyday encounters. Listeners are offered a nuanced portrait of a society where public ceremony and private feeling meet, prompting reflection on the universal pulse of the human heart.
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (430K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-09-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1850–1904
Best known for bringing Japanese legends and ghost stories to English-language readers, this globe-trotting writer turned close observation into vivid, atmospheric prose. His work still feels fresh for the way it blends travel writing, folklore, and a deep curiosity about everyday life.
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