Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Foreword
- Preface to the English edition
- Contents
- Foreword to the Paperback edition
- Preface to the Japanese edition (1992)
- Translator’s Note by Hugh Cortazzi
- The Gakushūin
- Chapter 1 Ten Days in the Japanese Ambassador’s Residence:
- Chapter 2 Life in Colonel Hall’s House:
- Chapter 3 Entering Oxford:
- Chapter 4 About Oxford:
- Chapter 5 Daily Life at Oxford:
- Chapter 6 Cultural Life at Oxford:
- Chapter 7 Sport:
- Chapter 8 Life as a Research Student at Oxford:
- Chapter 9 Travels in Britain and Abroad:
- Chapter 10 Looking Back on My Two Years’ Stay:
- Postscript
- Bibliography
- Index
Postscript
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 May 2022
- Frontmatter
- Foreword
- Preface to the English edition
- Contents
- Foreword to the Paperback edition
- Preface to the Japanese edition (1992)
- Translator’s Note by Hugh Cortazzi
- The Gakushūin
- Chapter 1 Ten Days in the Japanese Ambassador’s Residence:
- Chapter 2 Life in Colonel Hall’s House:
- Chapter 3 Entering Oxford:
- Chapter 4 About Oxford:
- Chapter 5 Daily Life at Oxford:
- Chapter 6 Cultural Life at Oxford:
- Chapter 7 Sport:
- Chapter 8 Life as a Research Student at Oxford:
- Chapter 9 Travels in Britain and Abroad:
- Chapter 10 Looking Back on My Two Years’ Stay:
- Postscript
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
As I wrote this account of my time studying abroad and reviewed the various memories which passed through my mind, I realized that I had come to grips with all sorts of issues while I had been at Oxford. Fond memories of each scene flashed through my mind like a revolving lantern. I faced one problem in writing this book; it was seven years since I had left Oxford. Although I could remember a good deal, there were limits to the extent to which I could recall individual events. However, fortunately while I was at Oxford, I had jotted down each day what I had done and had kept these notes. I was able to put these together with the memos made bymy police escort and through these I was able to recall my experiences. My diary in English, which I had written while I was staying with the Halls and which had been checked bymy English teachers, was also useful and the pamphlets and leaflets about places which I had visited onmy travels together with the tickets and other items, which I had kept, were a real treasure-trove. I had taken over two thousand photographs while I was at Oxford and these were very useful for reference. In addition, the official telegrams which had been sent at the time naturally provided background material. After I came home the occasional essays which I had written about my studies were also valuable memory aides and these have been incorporated into this book.
In September 1991, I revisited England to attend the Japan Festival and was delighted to be able to meet once again many of those who had helped me during my time as a student. I was much gratified to receive the award of an honorary doctorate from Oxford University. I revisited Merton where I met Dr Roberts, the warden, Dr Highfield and other dons of the college and was able to get together again with some of the students whom I had known and who were pursuing their researches. I was invited to a pub by the student I mentioned earlier who had been learning to play the shakuhachi. As I trod the familiar streets that evening I felt that Oxford had not changed and nostalgic memories welled up within Me.
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Thames and IA Memoir of Two Years at Oxford, pp. 144 - 145Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2019