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  • March 1, 1879
  • Page 28
  • THE GRAVE OF WILL ADAMS.
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The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1879: Page 28

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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Grave Of Will Adams.

THE GRAVE OF WILL ADAMS .

^ PWICE within the last half-dozen years it has been my lot to spend a week or two at - - Tokoska , a village about sixteen miles from Tokohama , the picturesque beauty of whose surrounding scenery , once seen , can never be forgotten . The place is of importance , too , boasting a spacious dockyard , with several clocks , finished and unfinished ; large workshops , fitted up with all the latest improvements in modern machinery , even to a 100-ton steam-hammer , which an intelligent Japanese hammerman , waiting for his heat

" " at an adjoining forge , assured me had never been used ; building-sheds ancl slips which have lent then- aid in bringing into existence Japan's iron-clad navy ; ancl , lastly , there is a two-storied brick building running away in a straight line for more than a mile , and containing all that is required in the art of rope-making . The supervision is , I believe , French ; but the workmen are in all cases native , and the Mikado ' s Government have always evinced the deepest interest in the progress ancl success of the vast

establishments at Tokoska . But it is not its artificial wonders which charm a visitor to this gem of watering-places in the far East . Standing on the shore of the dockyard ancl looking seaward , you gaze at a small land-locked bay , whose rocky and precipitous sides are crowned with the luxuriant growth of tropical vegetation , terminating in a series of bill-tops , each of which has a beauty of its own . On the summit of one , just opposite , stands an old temple . It looks not half a mile distant ; but well do we remember

three weary hours of climbing , one afternoon , before we stood within its sacred portals , ancl also that about twenty minutes sufficed for an almost headlong tumble down again , after which we discovered there was a good road on the inland side . Turning round and leaving the dockyard , we are at once in the native village , built between two hills , with its houses of bamboo and paper , the fronts open to the street , ancl the floors grass matted— -such tempting pictures of coolness and repose that we cannot resist sitting

down for a few minutes to breathe the well-known hospitality of Japan . At the end of the street there is a surprise in store for us ; for , having turned our backs upon the dockyard ancl the sea , we were far from feeling clear as to our whereabouts , when we suddenly came out upon a sandy beach , extending away on our right as far as eye could reach , whilst the gentle undulations of the vast expanse of water before us told plainly that it was no landlocked bay , but the swell of the great Pacific . But the sands lie not in our way now . Turning over the leaves of my Journal , I find , some weeks later , this : —

" 0 ! pleasant hours spent on that shelly strand , or idly lying on some grassy knoll amongst its leafy bushes , watching the deep blue sea that fringed the glittering sands . " Retracing our way through the village , we pass out by a road skirting the dockyard bay into a lovely valley , the track winding gently upward to the hills beyond . We soon come to the smaU village of Hemi-mura , where Adams settled clown in the autumn

of hisdays , with his Japanese wife , son , and daughter , supreme rider of an estate comprising nearly a hundred households , over whose members he had absolute power of life and death . Close by , in the temple of Tookoozan To Odoshi , are several relics , brought by Adams to the country nearly three hundred years ago . They are highly prized and well looked after , but we managed to get a peep at them after the priest bad unlocked some half-dozen gates and doors . They consisted of Siamese images ancl scrollsthe former

, apparently solid gold , though , as our unholy hands were not allowed to touch , that fact remains to be verified , spite of the assurances of the attendant priest . Resuming our way , which soon began to grow more rugged and steep , we soon caught two or three very lovely views of the valley far below on our left , whose sloping sides were covered with fields of ripening com , whilst a tiny stream meandered midway between , feeding the green paddy ( rice ) enclosures , which followed its course in a series of terraces . Remembering the toilsome nature of our way last year , we determined to try , if possible , a lower road , and were rewarded by finding a delightfully shady lane

“The Masonic Magazine: 1879-03-01, Page 28” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 10 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031879/page/28/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Summary. Article 1
BY-LAWS OF AN OLD LODGE. Article 2
THE GREAT PYRAMID. Article 3
TORTURED BY DEGREES. Article 5
THE COUNTRY. Article 6
THE RELATION OF THEISM TO FREEMASONRY. Article 7
FAITH, HOPE, AND CHARITY. Article 10
WHIST. Article 11
KILLED BY THE NATIVES. Article 12
TIME'S CHANGES. Article 20
BEATRICE. Article 21
LES FRANCS-MACONS. Article 23
THE GRAVE OF WILL ADAMS. Article 28
THANKFULNESS.—A CONFESSION. Article 30
AN ALLEGORY. Article 31
THE PROPOSED RESTORATION OF THE WEST FRONT OF THE CATHEDRAL CHURCH OF ST. ALBAN'S, Article 38
GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE.* Article 39
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 45
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Page 28

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Grave Of Will Adams.

THE GRAVE OF WILL ADAMS .

^ PWICE within the last half-dozen years it has been my lot to spend a week or two at - - Tokoska , a village about sixteen miles from Tokohama , the picturesque beauty of whose surrounding scenery , once seen , can never be forgotten . The place is of importance , too , boasting a spacious dockyard , with several clocks , finished and unfinished ; large workshops , fitted up with all the latest improvements in modern machinery , even to a 100-ton steam-hammer , which an intelligent Japanese hammerman , waiting for his heat

" " at an adjoining forge , assured me had never been used ; building-sheds ancl slips which have lent then- aid in bringing into existence Japan's iron-clad navy ; ancl , lastly , there is a two-storied brick building running away in a straight line for more than a mile , and containing all that is required in the art of rope-making . The supervision is , I believe , French ; but the workmen are in all cases native , and the Mikado ' s Government have always evinced the deepest interest in the progress ancl success of the vast

establishments at Tokoska . But it is not its artificial wonders which charm a visitor to this gem of watering-places in the far East . Standing on the shore of the dockyard ancl looking seaward , you gaze at a small land-locked bay , whose rocky and precipitous sides are crowned with the luxuriant growth of tropical vegetation , terminating in a series of bill-tops , each of which has a beauty of its own . On the summit of one , just opposite , stands an old temple . It looks not half a mile distant ; but well do we remember

three weary hours of climbing , one afternoon , before we stood within its sacred portals , ancl also that about twenty minutes sufficed for an almost headlong tumble down again , after which we discovered there was a good road on the inland side . Turning round and leaving the dockyard , we are at once in the native village , built between two hills , with its houses of bamboo and paper , the fronts open to the street , ancl the floors grass matted— -such tempting pictures of coolness and repose that we cannot resist sitting

down for a few minutes to breathe the well-known hospitality of Japan . At the end of the street there is a surprise in store for us ; for , having turned our backs upon the dockyard ancl the sea , we were far from feeling clear as to our whereabouts , when we suddenly came out upon a sandy beach , extending away on our right as far as eye could reach , whilst the gentle undulations of the vast expanse of water before us told plainly that it was no landlocked bay , but the swell of the great Pacific . But the sands lie not in our way now . Turning over the leaves of my Journal , I find , some weeks later , this : —

" 0 ! pleasant hours spent on that shelly strand , or idly lying on some grassy knoll amongst its leafy bushes , watching the deep blue sea that fringed the glittering sands . " Retracing our way through the village , we pass out by a road skirting the dockyard bay into a lovely valley , the track winding gently upward to the hills beyond . We soon come to the smaU village of Hemi-mura , where Adams settled clown in the autumn

of hisdays , with his Japanese wife , son , and daughter , supreme rider of an estate comprising nearly a hundred households , over whose members he had absolute power of life and death . Close by , in the temple of Tookoozan To Odoshi , are several relics , brought by Adams to the country nearly three hundred years ago . They are highly prized and well looked after , but we managed to get a peep at them after the priest bad unlocked some half-dozen gates and doors . They consisted of Siamese images ancl scrollsthe former

, apparently solid gold , though , as our unholy hands were not allowed to touch , that fact remains to be verified , spite of the assurances of the attendant priest . Resuming our way , which soon began to grow more rugged and steep , we soon caught two or three very lovely views of the valley far below on our left , whose sloping sides were covered with fields of ripening com , whilst a tiny stream meandered midway between , feeding the green paddy ( rice ) enclosures , which followed its course in a series of terraces . Remembering the toilsome nature of our way last year , we determined to try , if possible , a lower road , and were rewarded by finding a delightfully shady lane

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