Akutagawa Ryūnosuke was born in Tokyo on the first day of March, 1892, and drank poison and died in Tokyo early on the morning of July 24, 1927. Of the thirty-five years of his life, lived almost entirely in that same Tokyo, he spent some eighteen mostly in school as a young prodigy and some eleven mostly at his desk as the fashioner and polisher of perhaps 200 overwrought short stories, of which this book contains eleven, translated into English as nearly word for word as possible.
His father, a man named Niihara Toshizō, is said to have given him the name Ryūnosuke (Dragon-helper) because he was born at the dragon hour on a dragon day in the dragon month of a dragon year. But his father’s part in the story ends there. His mother was unwell, and he was given in infancy, in the Japanese way, to her childless elder brother, Akutagawa Shōdō. His adoptive mother’s great uncle is reported to have been a man of fashion in the latter days of the old Edo period, but beyond this very frail hint, no home influence has been suggested as contributing to his genius.
When in the third year of primary school, bright young Ryūnosuke picked up Tokutomi Roka’s book of sketches, Shizen to Jinsei (Nature and Man) and read it with a pleasure that is said to have turned him to literature. He went into the First High School in Tokyo on recommendation without examination, passed through the school an honor student and entered the Imperial University of Tokyo, where he studied English literature, graduating in 1916. His graduation thesis was entitled, “ Wiriamu Morisu Kenkyū ” (A Study of William Morris).
He was like Morris in his surrender to the fascination of the Middle Ages, but he had none of the practical reforming tendencies of that artist