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  • March 1, 1879
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The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1879: Page 29

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    Article THE GRAVE OF WILL ADAMS. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 29

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

The Grave Of Will Adams.

which wound gently round the hill for nearly a mile , having on either hand a thick pine forest , into whose depths on our left we could look clown through a labyrinth of deephrown trunks , and now and again catch patches of green and gold in the valley far helow . A flight of roughly-hewn steps at the last brings us to the summit of the hill on which stands the monument that marks the resting-place of Will Adams ancl his Japanese wife . A first glance shews us that several of the trees have been cut clown ,

thus altering slightly , though in no way materially , the very good view which appeared some time since ( November 1873 , 1 think ) in the Illustrated London Neivs . Ascending the seven steps , we pass through a small gate on to a platform , where stand the jealously-guarded Japanese memorials of the first Englishman who trade their soil . The larger monument on the left is sacred to the memory of Anjin-sama , the name given by the natives to Adamsthat on the riht is in memory of his Japanese wife .

; g In front of each pillar is a smah hollow , in which the pious pilgrims who pass this way may deposit offerings , which no doubt are collected by the priests of the neighbouring temple , who look after both the grave ancl relies of Adams . The stones bear native inscriptions , but our guide did not possess enough knowledge of English to translate them . A frequent iteration of the name Anjin-sama , with a reverent genuflection towards the monumentsserved to show that the memory of Adams is still kept

, green around the neighbourhood in which he lived ancl died . One can readily imagine that the Japanese are lovers of the picturesque , for the view from the spot whereon we stand is most magnificent—hill ancl dale , with ever-changing beauties succeeding each other to the water's edge , where the coast-line may be traced in its very irregular windings , forming here and there very pretty capes , bays , ancl peninsulas , with miniature islands dotting the silvery surface of the sea in wild profusion . But the shades of

evening are already deepening around , so we retrace our road , discussing by the ivay the Fates that led Will Adams to be buried where he lay . Considering that we had no Pocket Encyclopaedic Biography , our facts may not be , " like Ctesar's wife , above suspicion . " Nevertheless , I give them without alteration .

Imprimis . Who was Will Adams ? The first Englishman that set foot in this sunny land—born somewhere in Kent , near Rochester , ancl was a pilot in the days of good Queen Bess . What brought him out here ? His duty as a pilot , having undertaken to conduct a squadron of merchant-ships , seeking a profitable market for their merchandise , to this part of the world . Out of five ships , Faith , Hope , Charity , Fidelity , and Good Neivs , one only , the Charity , reached Japan , and that after great hardships and severe sufferings on the part of the crew .

And is this the spot where they landed ? Oh , no . Further down the coast , on the western island of Eiu-Siu , somewhere Hear the town of Nagasaki , Avhere the Portuguese Jesuits had already established a settlement . _ _ Of course the Portuguese were highly indignant at the audacity of our countryman in introducing John Bull to the scenes of THEIR labours ?

Tes ; said they were pirates , on which they were seized and taken in galleys through the beautiful inland sea to Osalri , some two hundred and fifty miles nearer to this place , Tokoska ; thrown into prison , but treated kindly , till , after several interviews with the Emperor , in which they managed to convince him that the English were THE peojile of the future , and not the Portuguese , they were set at liberty . Adams found the shi plundered and taken to of these bays round here—perhaps this

p one very Tokoska . Be that as it may , " his occupation was gone , " and nothing remained for him but to set up a new trade . " Whichhe did ? As a shipbuilder , gaining so much favour that in a few years he became a personage or great influence at the court of the Emperor , and greatly assisted the Dutch in forming trade relations with Japan .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1879-03-01, Page 29” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 10 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031879/page/29/.
  • 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 29

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

The Grave Of Will Adams.

which wound gently round the hill for nearly a mile , having on either hand a thick pine forest , into whose depths on our left we could look clown through a labyrinth of deephrown trunks , and now and again catch patches of green and gold in the valley far helow . A flight of roughly-hewn steps at the last brings us to the summit of the hill on which stands the monument that marks the resting-place of Will Adams ancl his Japanese wife . A first glance shews us that several of the trees have been cut clown ,

thus altering slightly , though in no way materially , the very good view which appeared some time since ( November 1873 , 1 think ) in the Illustrated London Neivs . Ascending the seven steps , we pass through a small gate on to a platform , where stand the jealously-guarded Japanese memorials of the first Englishman who trade their soil . The larger monument on the left is sacred to the memory of Anjin-sama , the name given by the natives to Adamsthat on the riht is in memory of his Japanese wife .

; g In front of each pillar is a smah hollow , in which the pious pilgrims who pass this way may deposit offerings , which no doubt are collected by the priests of the neighbouring temple , who look after both the grave ancl relies of Adams . The stones bear native inscriptions , but our guide did not possess enough knowledge of English to translate them . A frequent iteration of the name Anjin-sama , with a reverent genuflection towards the monumentsserved to show that the memory of Adams is still kept

, green around the neighbourhood in which he lived ancl died . One can readily imagine that the Japanese are lovers of the picturesque , for the view from the spot whereon we stand is most magnificent—hill ancl dale , with ever-changing beauties succeeding each other to the water's edge , where the coast-line may be traced in its very irregular windings , forming here and there very pretty capes , bays , ancl peninsulas , with miniature islands dotting the silvery surface of the sea in wild profusion . But the shades of

evening are already deepening around , so we retrace our road , discussing by the ivay the Fates that led Will Adams to be buried where he lay . Considering that we had no Pocket Encyclopaedic Biography , our facts may not be , " like Ctesar's wife , above suspicion . " Nevertheless , I give them without alteration .

Imprimis . Who was Will Adams ? The first Englishman that set foot in this sunny land—born somewhere in Kent , near Rochester , ancl was a pilot in the days of good Queen Bess . What brought him out here ? His duty as a pilot , having undertaken to conduct a squadron of merchant-ships , seeking a profitable market for their merchandise , to this part of the world . Out of five ships , Faith , Hope , Charity , Fidelity , and Good Neivs , one only , the Charity , reached Japan , and that after great hardships and severe sufferings on the part of the crew .

And is this the spot where they landed ? Oh , no . Further down the coast , on the western island of Eiu-Siu , somewhere Hear the town of Nagasaki , Avhere the Portuguese Jesuits had already established a settlement . _ _ Of course the Portuguese were highly indignant at the audacity of our countryman in introducing John Bull to the scenes of THEIR labours ?

Tes ; said they were pirates , on which they were seized and taken in galleys through the beautiful inland sea to Osalri , some two hundred and fifty miles nearer to this place , Tokoska ; thrown into prison , but treated kindly , till , after several interviews with the Emperor , in which they managed to convince him that the English were THE peojile of the future , and not the Portuguese , they were set at liberty . Adams found the shi plundered and taken to of these bays round here—perhaps this

p one very Tokoska . Be that as it may , " his occupation was gone , " and nothing remained for him but to set up a new trade . " Whichhe did ? As a shipbuilder , gaining so much favour that in a few years he became a personage or great influence at the court of the Emperor , and greatly assisted the Dutch in forming trade relations with Japan .

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