Shapers of Japanese History

Lafcadio Hearn’s Journey to the Center of the Japanese Spirit

History Culture Society

Lafcadio Hearn is known for his writings on Japan in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, including notably his retellings of ghost stories. His great-grandson Koizumi Bon introduces the life of his famous ancestor.

Izumo, Land of the Gods

Hearn initially traveled to Japan as a special correspondent for Harper’s, but the contract was annulled and he chose to settle down locally. With help from Hattori Ichizō, a ministry of education bureaucrat he had met at the New Orleans World Fair, and Chamberlain, he obtained a teaching position at Shimane Prefectural Common Middle School in Matsue. He arrived there on August 30, 1890. At the front of Ko-Ji-Ki there was a map showing “The World as Known to the Japanese of the Mythical Era,” with the words “Idzumo Legendary Cycle” written across it. Hearn must have felt great joy and enthusiasm at his chance to live near Izumo, the setting of Japan’s early myths.

In Matsue, Hearn found a kindred spirit in vice-principal Nishida Sentarō, among others. In the dreamlike, gentle sunlight and rich variations in the surface of Lake Shinji, he discovered an Eastern beauty he had not previously encountered. He also began to live with Koizumi Setsu, the daughter of a samurai family in Matsue introduced to him by Nishida. Hearn originally heard many of the famous tales he later retold in Kwaidan from Setsu.

He was warmly welcomed to Izumo Taisha Shrine by the chief priest Senge Takanori, becoming the first Westerner to enter the honden, or main sanctuary structure. He later made two more visits to study Shintō through direct experience. Partly prompted by a request from Chamberlain, he began collecting protective amulets from many shrines in Izumo, sending more than 80 to Edward Burnett Tylor, the head of Oxford’s Pitt Rivers Museum, whom he loved and respected.

Milk delivery was already established in Matsue, and the chef of a Western restaurant brought steaks to his home. He could also find beer at a local pharmacy. Although a Japanophile, it took time for Hearn to accustom himself to local cuisine, so with some irony, he found solace for mind and body in this Westernized environment.

Investigating the Japanese Spirit

Stunned by the cold of Matsue in winter, after a year and three months Hearn set off on fresh travels. He lived successively in Kumamoto, Kobe, and Tokyo. While in Kobe, he gave greatest consideration to his future home life, marrying into Setsu’s family in 1896 and taking the Japanese name Koizumi Yakumo. As he cheerfully explained in a September letter to his friend Elwood Hendrick, “‘Yakumo’ is a poetical alternative for Izumo, my beloved province, ‘the Place of the Issuing of Clouds.’ You will understand how the name was chosen.”

Lafcadio Hearn (left) with his family in Kobe. (© Lafcadio Hearn Memorial Museum)

From his Kumamoto days onward, he encountered a Japan that had lost its humility and was pressing forward with Westernization, modernization, and militarism; he had sensed none of these in Matsue. His disappointment brought with it a mature, objective outlook on the country. Reducing his fieldwork, he shut himself in his study to investigate the Japanese view of kami (gods). At the same time, he listened to Setsu’s ghost tales, becoming engrossed in creating versions imbued with a literary spirit.

Many in the West saw Shintō, with its lack of religious texts or precepts, as heathen. Hearn, however, believed that Shintō lived not in books but in Japanese people’s hearts, deeply resonating with a form of folk spirit that lay at the foundations of superstition, legend, and the occult. He found himself sympathetic to the notion that sometimes living people could become gods and the broad-minded view that could accept spirits living in artificial objects.

Reading Hearn in Occupied Japan

In Hearn’s final work, Japan: An Attempt at Interpretation, he wrote a history of the Japanese spirit. He took ancestor worship as passing through stages from a “domestic cult” via a “communal cult” to a “state cult,” in which imperial ancestors are worshiped at Ise Shrine. In other words, he saw ancestor worship as inseparable from the reverence shown to the emperor. One of the later readers to agree with this assessment was US General Bonner Fellers, who served under General Douglas MacArthur during World War II.

US Army General Bonner Fellers.

Fellers read all of Hearn’s works and, shortly after arriving in Japan as part of operations immediately following the end of the war, he sought out his descendants and visited his grave. The general contributed to the drawing up of a memorandum on the imperial institution and a memoir by Emperor Shōwa (Hirohito). He also proposed that the emperor should not be subjected to the Tokyo Trial, and that instead his authority should be applied in a new democratic direction. This would avoid removing the Japanese people’s spiritual anchor. Fellers made a great contribution to the realization of today’s symbolic role for the emperor.

The MacArthur Memorial, a museum in Norfolk, Virginia, houses 5,000 of the general’s personal books, including seven written by Hearn. Works like Japan: An Attempt at Interpretation and Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan were important sources of reference during MacArthur’s time in Japan.

Lafcadio Hearn Japanese Gardens in Tramore, Ireland. Hearn often visited the coastal town together with his great-aunt when he was a young boy living in Dublin. It consists of 10 gardens introducing Hearn’s life.

(Originally published in Japanese on November 28, 2018. Banner photo: Lafcadio Hearn in 1889. Photographs courtesy the Koizumi family, unless otherwise stated.)

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literature Shintō Meiji era folklore

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