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Updated: 2005-05-04 09:15

Japanese inns take you back in time

傳統(tǒng)日式客?!≈販匚羧丈?/P>

Japanese inns take you back in time
Fukuzumiro ryokan in Hakone-machi offers 19 traditional rooms in a three-story wood building.

Heading back to the room for dinner and a hot soak may sound like the act of a defeated tourist, but in a traditional Japanese inn -- or ryokan -- those activities can be as intriguing as anything along the sightseeing trail.

"People going looking for a sort of nostalgic , old-fashioned, traditional view of Japanese life will find it most easily in a ryokan," said Peter Grilli, president of Japan Society of Boston, Massachusetts.

Many ryokan sprang up in the 17th century to accommodate feudal lords traveling along the Tokaido highway to Edo (now Tokyo). Today tourists looking for a taste of the country's historic lifestyle find varying levels of understated elegance in ryokan throughout the country.

A typical stay starts with a greeting from the inn's staff and a change from street shoes into slippers. An attendant escorts guests to their rooms, where slippers are removed before walking on the rice straw flooring, called tatami.

Shuffling along behind a kimono -clad attendant on the creaky wood floors of Fukuzumiro ryokan's hallways is like stepping back in time. The inn was established in 1890 by a former samurai.

Tim Paterson, 33, a banker living in Tokyo, has stayed at several ryokan. The New Zealand native leaves feeling relaxed and culturally enriched.

"I think it's quite good mixing culture with history and not just going to see it, but living in it, staying in it," he said after a recent stay at Fukuzumiro.

Sliding glass doors line the inn's rustic hallways, bringing in the sound of trickling water and the serenity of the stone and tree-filled courtyards outside.

(Agencies)

趕回住所吃飯,泡個(gè)熱水澡聽(tīng)起來(lái)好像只有受挫的旅行者才會(huì)這樣做,然而在一家傳統(tǒng)的日式客棧里,這些行為如同觀光途中的見(jiàn)聞一樣有趣。

美國(guó)馬薩諸塞州波士頓市日本社團(tuán)的會(huì)長(zhǎng)彼得·格理利說(shuō):"想要尋找日式生活中懷舊、老式、傳統(tǒng)的一面,去這樣的日式客棧最好不過(guò)了。"

早在17世紀(jì),日本就涌現(xiàn)出大量日式客棧,建造這些日式客棧是為當(dāng)時(shí)那些沿著東海道公路到東京旅行的封建王族們提供住處而修建的。如今,那些來(lái)感受日本傳統(tǒng)生活方式的游客們,在遍及該國(guó)的日式客棧中不難發(fā)現(xiàn)各種不張揚(yáng)的高貴和典雅。

典型的入住場(chǎng)景是這樣的:客人一進(jìn)門(mén),客棧的工作人員就會(huì)上去打招呼,然后客人脫下旅行鞋,換上拖鞋。接著,服務(wù)員會(huì)把客人帶到房間,客人脫掉拖鞋后才能走在“榻榻米”(一種稻草墊)上。

游客們慢吞吞地跟在身穿和服的服務(wù)員身后,走在Fukuzumiro客棧走廊咯吱作響的木地板上,恍若時(shí)光倒流。1890年,一名前日本武士在此修建了這家客棧。

33歲的提姆·帕特森是一名住在東京的銀行家,他住過(guò)好幾家日式客棧。這位新西蘭人離開(kāi)客棧時(shí)不僅覺(jué)得心情愉悅而且還深受文化的熏陶。

最近,他在Fukuzumiro客棧投宿后說(shuō):"我覺(jué)得這里是文化與歷史的完美結(jié)合。我們不只是參觀,而是在此居住、逗留。"

透過(guò)客棧頗具鄉(xiāng)村風(fēng)格的走廊上的玻璃拉門(mén),依稀可以聽(tīng)到外面的涓涓流水聲,看到鋪著石頭、郁郁蔥蔥的寧?kù)o的庭院。

(中國(guó)日?qǐng)?bào)網(wǎng)站譯)

Vocabulary:

soak: an act or state of remaining in of be completely covered by a liquid, esp. so as to become soft or completely wet(浸濕,濕透)

ryokan: (傳統(tǒng)的日式旅店)

nostalgic: unhappy at being away and longing for familiar things or person(鄉(xiāng)愁的,懷舊的)

shuffle: walk by dragging one's feet(拖曳,攪亂,慢吞吞地走)

kimono: (和服)

 
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