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Flushed with this success Alcock decided to return to Tokyo by way of the famed sulphur springs at Atami on the Izu Peninsular, which lies to the south of Mount Fuji. At that time the Oyu Geyser at Atami was one of the world's three mightiest geysers, yet no Westerner had ever seen its power. It would take Alcock and Toby over a month to travel down to Atami, arriving there in September 1860...From their lodgings Alcock and Toby set out to view the famed Oyu geyser, just outside Atami; a geyser that sent scalding jets of water and steam at 70 kilometres per hour up to 10 metres into the air, 'shaking the earth with its vigorous blasts'. Upon reaching Oyu, Toby had the misfortune to stand on a piece of ground from which the geyser would periodically erupt. The inevitable happened; the unsuspecting Toby was blasted into the air by the force of the scalding water and steam shooting out from the earth. A distraught Alcock organised a funeral for Toby in Atami and Toby was duly buried beside the Oyu geyser. The stone, which still stands today [pictured below], reads simply 'Poor Toby, 23 September 1860'. Alcock also erected another stone beside Toby's tombstone. This is inscribed with the less modest words 'I am the first non-Japanese to have climbed Fusiyama and visited Atami'.
