ABSTRACT

As the preface to this new edition points out, Mitford (Algernon Bertram, the first Lord Redesdale) was a gifted writer whose descriptions of Japan, during the critical time of transition from a feudal to a modern state in the late nineteenth century, are a testimony to his narrative skills, accuracy and objective reporting - qualities which are sometimes overshadowed by the higher profile given to his contemporary Ernest Satow. Accordingly, this new paperback edition, which makes the Mitford memoirs available to a much wider audience, includes a wide selection of extracts from Mitford's bestselling Tales of Old Japan (1871) - what Mitford, according to Carmen Blacker, perceived as the essence of the Japanese spirit: 'heroic, ruthless, devotedly loyal, bloody and chivalrous'.

chapter |14 pages

‘Old and new Japan'

chapter |4 pages

‘Feudalism in Japan'

chapter |151 pages

From Memories

chapter |18 pages

From Memories 1866–7

chapter |10 pages

The Shogun or Tycoon

chapter |14 pages

An adventurous journey

chapter |33 pages

Civil war

chapter |14 pages

‘Mukashi'

chapter |15 pages

The Mikado

chapter |25 pages

Sensation diplomacy

chapter |9 pages

Betwixt old and new

chapter |25 pages

‘A holiday in Japan'

chapter |43 pages

The Garter Mission, 1906

chapter |8 pages

Gardens in Japan