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272 KiB
Plaintext
Project Gutenberg's Botchan (Master Darling), by Kin-nosuke Natsume
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This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
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almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
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re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
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with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
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Title: Botchan (Master Darling)
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Author: Kin-nosuke Natsume
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Translator: Yasotaro Morri
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Posting Date: October 14, 2012 [EBook #8868]
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Release Date: September, 2005
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First Posted: August 17, 2003
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Language: English
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*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BOTCHAN (MASTER DARLING) ***
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Produced by David Starner and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
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BOTCHAN (MASTER DARLING)
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By The Late Mr. Kin-nosuke Natsume
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TRANSLATED By Yasotaro Morri
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Revised by J. R. KENNEDY
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1919
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A NOTE BY THE TRANSLATOR
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No translation can expect to equal, much less to excel, the original.
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The excellence of a translation can only be judged by noting how far it
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has succeeded in reproducing the original tone, colors, style, the
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delicacy of sentiment, the force of inert strength, the peculiar
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expressions native to the language with which the original is written,
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or whatever is its marked characteristic. The ablest can do no more, and
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to want more than this will be demanding something impossible. Strictly
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speaking, the only way one can derive full benefit or enjoyment from a
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foreign work is to read the original, for any intelligence at
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second-hand never gives the kind of satisfaction which is possible only
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through the direct touch with the original. Even in the best translated
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work is probably wanted the subtle vitality natural to the original
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language, for it defies an attempt, however elaborate, to transmit all
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there is in the original. Correctness of diction may be there, but
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spontaneity is gone; it cannot be helped.
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The task of the translator becomes doubly hazardous in case of
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translating a European language into Japanese, or vice versa. Between
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any of the European languages and Japanese there is no visible kinship
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in word-form, significance, grammatical system, rhetorical arrangements.
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It may be said that the inspiration of the two languages is totally
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different. A want of similarity of customs, habits, traditions, national
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sentiments and traits makes the work of translation all the more
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difficult. A novel written in Japanese which had attained national
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popularity might, when rendered into English, lose its captivating
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vividness, alluring interest and lasting appeal to the reader.
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These remarks are made not in way of excuse for any faulty dictions that
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may be found in the following pages. Neither are they made out of
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personal modesty nor of a desire to add undue weight to the present
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work. They are made in the hope that whoever is good enough to go
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through the present translation will remember, before he may venture to
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make criticisms, the kind and extent of difficulties besetting him in
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his attempts so as not to judge the merit of the original by this
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translation. Nothing would afford the translator a greater pain than any
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unfavorable comment on the original based upon this translation. If
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there be any deserving merits in the following pages the credit is due
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to the original. Any fault found in its interpretation or in the English
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version, the whole responsibility is on the translator.
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For the benefit of those who may not know the original, it must be
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stated that "Botchan" by the late Mr. K. Natsume was an epoch-making
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piece of work. On its first appearance, Mr. Natsume's place and name as
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the foremost in the new literary school were firmly established. He had
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written many other novels of more serious intent, of heavier thoughts
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and of more enduring merits, but it was this "Botchan" that secured him
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the lasting fame. Its quaint style, dash and vigor in its narration
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appealed to the public who had become somewhat tired of the stereotyped
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sort of manner with which all stories had come to be handled.
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In its simplest understanding, "Botchan" may be taken as an episode in
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the life of a son born in Tokyo, hot-blooded, simple-hearted, pure as
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crystal and sturdy as a towering rock, honest and straight to a fault,
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intolerant of the least injustice and a volunteer ever ready to champion
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what he considers right and good. Children may read it as a "story of
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man who tried to be honest." It is a light, amusing and, at the name
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time, instructive story, with no tangle of love affairs, no scheme of
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blood-curdling scenes or nothing startling or sensational in the plot or
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characters. The story, however, may be regarded as a biting sarcasm on a
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hypocritical society in which a gang of instructors of dark character at
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a middle school in a backwoods town plays a prominent part. The hero of
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the story is made a victim of their annoying intrigues, but finally
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comes out triumphant by smashing the petty red tapism, knocking down the
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sham pretentions and by actual use of the fist on the Head Instructor
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and his henchman.
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The story will be found equally entertaining as a means of studying the
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peculiar traits of the native of Tokyo which are characterised by their
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quick temper, dashing spirit, generosity and by their readiness to
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resist even the lordly personage if convinced of their own justness, or
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to kneel down even to a child if they acknowledge their own wrong.
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Incidently the touching devotion of the old maid servant Kiyo to the
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hero will prove a standing reproach to the inconstant, unfaithful
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servants of which the number is ever increasing these days in Tokyo. The
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story becomes doubly interesting by the fact that Mr. K. Natsume, when
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quite young, held a position of teacher of English at a middle school
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somewhere about the same part of the country described in the story,
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while he himself was born and brought up in Tokyo.
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It may be added that the original is written in an autobiographical
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style. It is profusely interladed with spicy, catchy colloquials patent
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to the people of Tokyo for the equals of which we may look to the
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rattling speeches of notorious Chuck Conners of the Bowery of New York.
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It should be frankly stated that much difficulty was experienced in
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getting the corresponding terms in English for those catchy expressions.
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Strictly speaking, some of them have no English equivalents. Care has
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been exercised to select what has been thought most appropriate in the
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judgment or the translator in converting those expressions into English
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but some of them might provoke disapproval from those of the "cultured"
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class with "refined" ears. The slangs in English in this translation
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were taken from an American magazine of world-wide reputation editor of
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which was not afraid to print of "damn" when necessary, by scorning the
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timid, conventional way of putting it as "d--n." If the propriety of
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printing such short ugly words be questioned, the translator is sorry to
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say that no means now exists of directly bringing him to account for he
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met untimely death on board the Lusitania when it was sunk by the German
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submarine.
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Thanks are due to Mr. J. R. Kennedy, General Manager, and Mr. Henry
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Satoh, Editor-in-Chief, both of the Kokusai Tsushin-sha (the
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International News Agency) of Tokyo and a host of personal friends of
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the translator whose untiring assistance and kind suggestions have made
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the present translation possible. Without their sympathetic interests,
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this translation may not have seen the daylight.
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Tokyo, September, 1918.
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BOTCHAN (MASTER DARLING)
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CHAPTER I
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Because of an hereditary recklessness, I have been playing always a
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losing game since my childhood. During my grammar school days, I was
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once laid up for about a week by jumping from the second story of the
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school building. Some may ask why I committed such a rash act. There was
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no particular reason for doing such a thing except I happened to be
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looking out into the yard from the second floor of the newly-built
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school house, when one of my classmates, joking, shouted at me; "Say,
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you big bluff, I'll bet you can't jump down from there! O, you
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chicken-heart, ha, ha!" So I jumped down. The janitor of the school had
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to carry me home on his back, and when my father saw me, he yelled
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derisively, "What a fellow you are to go and get your bones dislocated
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by jumping only from a second story!"
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"I'll see I don't get dislocated next time," I answered.
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One of my relatives once presented me with a pen-knife. I was showing it
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to my friends, reflecting its pretty blades against the rays of the sun,
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when one of them chimed in that the blades gleamed all right, but seemed
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rather dull for cutting with.
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"Rather dull? See if they don't cut!" I retorted.
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"Cut your finger, then," he challenged. And with "Finger nothing! Here
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goes!" I cut my thumb slant-wise. Fortunately the knife was small and
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the bone of the thumb hard enough, so the thumb is still there, but the
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scar will be there until my death.
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About twenty steps to the east edge of our garden, there was a
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moderate-sized vegetable yard, rising toward the south, and in the
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centre of which stood a chestnut tree which was dearer to me than life.
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In the season when the chestnuts were ripe, I used to slip out of the
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house from the back door early in the morning to pick up the chestnuts
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which had fallen during the night, and eat them at the school. On the
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west side of the vegetable yard was the adjoining garden of a pawn shop
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called Yamashiro-ya. This shopkeeper's son was a boy about 13 or 14
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years old named Kantaro. Kantaro was, it happens, a mollycoddle.
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Nevertheless he had the temerity to come over the fence to our yard and
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steal my chestnuts.
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One certain evening I hid myself behind a folding-gate of the fence and
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caught him in the act. Having his retreat cut off he grappled with me in
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desperation. He was about two years older than I, and, though
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weak-kneed, was physically the stronger. While I wallopped him, he
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pushed his head against my breast and by chance it slipped inside my
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sleeve. As this hindered the free action of my arm, I tried to shake him
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loose, though, his head dangled the further inside, and being no longer
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able to stand the stifling combat, he bit my bare arm. It was painful. I
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held him fast against the fence, and by a dexterous foot twist sent him
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down flat on his back. Kantaro broke the fence and as the ground
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belonging to Yamashiro-ya was about six feet lower than the vegetable
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yard, he fell headlong to his own territory with a thud. As he rolled
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off he tore away the sleeve in which his head had been enwrapped, and my
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arm recovered a sudden freedom of movement. That night when my mother
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went to Yamashiro-ya to apologize, she brought back that sleeve.
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Besides the above, I did many other mischiefs. With Kaneko of a
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carpenter shop and Kaku of a fishmarket, I once ruined a carrot patch of
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one Mosaku. The sprouts were just shooting out and the patch was covered
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with straws to ensure their even healthy growth. Upon this straw-covered
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patch, we three wrestled for fully half a day, and consequently
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thoroughly smashed all the sprouts. Also I once filled up a well which
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watered some rice fields owned by one Furukawa, and he followed me with
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kicks. The well was so devised that from a large bamboo pole, sunk deep
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into the ground, the water issued and irrigated the rice fields.
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Ignorant of the mechanical side of this irrigating method at that time,
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I stuffed the bamboo pole with stones and sticks, and satisfied that no
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more water came up, I returned home and was eating supper when Furukawa,
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fiery red with anger, burst into our house with howling protests. I
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believe the affair was settled on our paying for the damage.
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Father did not like me in the least, and mother always sided with my big
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brother. This brother's face was palish white, and he had a fondness for
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taking the part of an actress at the theatre.
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"This fellow will never amount to much," father used to remark when
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he saw me.
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"He's so reckless that I worry about his future," I often heard mother
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say of me. Exactly; I have never amounted to much. I am just as you see
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me; no wonder my future used to cause anxiety to my mother. I am living
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without becoming but a jailbird.
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Two or three days previous to my mother's death, I took it into my head
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to turn a somersault in the kitchen, and painfully hit my ribs against
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the corner of the stove. Mother was very angry at this and told me not
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to show my face again, so I went to a relative to stay with. While
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there, I received the news that my mother's illness had become very
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serious, and that after all efforts for her recovery, she was dead. I
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came home thinking that I should have behaved better if I had known the
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conditions were so serious as that. Then that big brother of mine
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denounced me as wanting in filial piety, and that I had caused her
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untimely death. Mortified at this, I slapped his face, and thereupon
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received a sound scolding from father.
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After the death of mother, I lived with father and brother. Father did
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nothing, and always said "You're no good" to my face. What he meant by
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"no good" I am yet to understand. A funny dad he was. My brother was to
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be seen studying English hard, saying that he was going to be a
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businessman. He was like a girl by nature, and so "sassy" that we two
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were never on good terms, and had to fight it out about once every ten
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days. When we played a chess game one day, he placed a chessman as a
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"waiter,"--a cowardly tactic this,--and had hearty laugh on me by seeing
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me in a fix. His manner was so trying that time that I banged a chessman
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on his forehead which was injured a little bit and bled. He told all
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about this to father, who said he would disinherit me.
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Then I gave up myself for lost, and expected to be really disinherited.
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But our maid Kiyo, who had been with us for ten years or so, interceded
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on my behalf, and tearfully apologized for me, and by her appeal my
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father's wrath was softened. I did not regard him, however, as one to be
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afraid of in any way, but rather felt sorry for our Kiyo. I had heard
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that Kiyo was of a decent, well-to-do family, but being driven to
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poverty at the time of the Restoration, had to work as a servant. So she
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was an old woman by this time. This old woman,--by what affinity, as
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the Buddhists say, I don't know,--loved me a great deal. Strange,
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indeed! She was almost blindly fond of me,--me, whom mother, became
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thoroughly disgusted with three days before her death; whom father
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considered a most aggravating proposition all the year round, and whom
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the neighbors cordially hated as the local bully among the youngsters. I
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had long reconciled myself to the fact that my nature was far from being
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attractive to others, and so didn't mind if I were treated as a piece of
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wood; so I thought it uncommon that Kiyo should pet me like that.
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Sometimes in the kitchen, when there was nobody around, she would praise
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me saying that I was straightforward and of a good disposition. What she
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meant by that exactly, was not clear to me, however. If I were of so
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good a nature as she said, I imagined those other than Kiyo should
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accord me a better treatment. So whenever Kiyo said to me anything of
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the kind, I used to answer that I did not like passing compliments. Then
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she would remark; "That's the very reason I say you are of a good
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disposition," and would gaze at me with absorbing tenderness. She seemed
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to recreate me by her own imagination, and was proud of the fact. I felt
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even chilled through my marrow at her constant attention to me.
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After my mother was dead, Kiyo loved me still more. In my simple
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reasoning, I wondered why she had taken such a fancy to me. Sometimes I
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thought it quite futile on her part, that she had better quit that sort
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of thing, which was bad for her. But she loved me just the same. Once
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in, a while she would buy, out of her own pocket, some cakes or
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sweetmeats for me. When the night was cold, she would secretly buy some
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noodle powder, and bring all unawares hot noodle gruel to my bed; or
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sometimes she would even buy a bowl of steaming noodles from the
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peddler. Not only with edibles, but she was generous alike with socks,
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pencils, note books, etc. And she even furnished me,--this happened some
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time later,--with about three yen, I did not ask her for the money; she
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offered it from her own good will by bringing it to my room, saying that
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I might be in need of some cash. This, of course, embarrassed me, but as
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she was so insistent I consented to borrow it. I confess I was really
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glad of the money. I put it in a bag, and carried it in my pocket. While
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about the house, I happened to drop the bag into a cesspool. Helpless, I
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told Kiyo how I had lost the money, and at once she fetched a bamboo
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stick, and said she will get it for me. After a while I heard a
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splashing sound of water about our family well, and going there, saw
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Kiyo washing the bag strung on the end of the stick. I opened the bag
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and found the edict of the three one-yen bills turned to faint yellow
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and designs fading. Kiyo dried them at an open fire and handed them over
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to me, asking if they were all right. I smelled them and said; "They
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stink yet."
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"Give them to me; I'll get them changed." She took those three bills,
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and,--I do not know how she went about it,--brought three yen in silver.
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I forget now upon what I spent the three yen. "I'll pay you back soon,"
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I said at the time, but didn't. I could not now pay it back even if I
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wished to do so with ten times the amount.
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When Kiyo gave me anything she did so always when both father and
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brother were out. Many things I do not like, but what I most detest is
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the monopolizing of favors behind some one else's back. Bad as my
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relations were with my brother, still I did not feel justified in
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accepting candies or color-pencils from Kiyo without my brother's
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knowledge. "Why do you give those things only to me and not to my
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brother also?" I asked her once, and she answered quite unconcernedly
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that my brother may be left to himself as his father bought him
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everything. That was partiality; father was obstinate, but I am sure he
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was not a man who would indulge in favoritism. To Kiyo, however, he
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might have looked that way. There is no doubt that Kiyo was blind to the
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extent of her undue indulgence with me. She was said to have come from a
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well-to-do family, but the poor soul was uneducated, and it could not be
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helped. All the same, you cannot tell how prejudice will drive one to
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the extremes. Kiyo seemed quite sure that some day I would achieve high
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position in society and become famous. Equally she was sure that my
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brother, who was spending his hours studiously, was only good for his
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white skin, and would stand no show in the future. Nothing can beat an
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old woman for this sort of thing, I tell you. She firmly believed that
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whoever she liked would become famous, while whoever she hated would
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not. I did not have at that time any particular object in my life. But
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the persistency with which Kiyo declared that I would be a great man
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some day, made me speculate myself that after all I might become one.
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How absurd it seems to me now when I recall those days. I asked her once
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what kind of a man I should be, but she seemed to have formed no
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concrete idea as to that; only she said that I was sure to live in a
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house with grand entrance hall, and ride in a private rikisha.
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And Kiyo seemed to have decided for herself to live with me when I
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became independent and occupy my own house. "Please let me live with
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you,"--she repeatedly asked of me. Feeling somewhat that I should
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eventually be able to own a house, I answered her "Yes," as far as such
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an answer went. This woman, by the way, was strongly imaginative. She
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questioned me what place I liked,--Kojimachi-ku or Azabu-ku?--and
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suggested that I should have a swing in our garden, that one room be
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enough for European style, etc., planning everything to suit her own
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fancy. I did not then care a straw for anything like a house; so neither
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Japanese nor European style was much of use to me, and I told her to
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that effect. Then she would praise me as uncovetous and clean of heart.
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Whatever I said, she had praise for me.
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I lived, after the death of mother, in this fashion for five or six
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years. I had kicks from father, had rows with brother, and had candies
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and praise from Kiyo. I cared for nothing more; I thought this was
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enough. I imagined all other boys were leading about the same kind of
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life. As Kiyo frequently told me, however, that I was to be pitied, and
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was unfortunate, I imagined that that might be so. There was nothing
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that particularly worried me except that father was too tight with my
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pocket money, and this was rather hard on me.
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In January of the 6th year after mother's death, father died of
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apoplexy. In April of the same year, I graduated from a middle school,
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and two months later, my brother graduated from a business college. Soon
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he obtained a job in the Kyushu branch of a certain firm and had to go
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there, while I had to remain in Tokyo and continue my study. He proposed
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the sale of our house and the realization of our property, to which I
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answered "Just as you like it." I had no intention of depending upon him
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anyway. Even were he to look after me, I was sure of his starting
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something which would eventually end in a smash-up as we were prone to
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quarrel on the least pretext. It was because in order to receive his
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protection that I should have to bow before such a fellow, that I
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resolved that I would live by myself even if I had to do milk delivery.
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Shortly afterwards he sent for a second-hand dealer and sold for a song
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all the bric-a-bric which had been handed down from ages ago in our
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family. Our house and lot were sold, through the efforts of a middleman
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to a wealthy person. This transaction seemed to have netted a goodly sum
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to him, but I know nothing as to the detail.
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For one month previous to this, I had been rooming in a boarding house
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in Kanda-ku, pending a decision as to my future course. Kiyo was greatly
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grieved to see the house in which she had lived so many years change
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ownership, but she was helpless in the matter.
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"If you were a little older, you might have inherited this house," she
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once remarked in earnest.
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If I could have inherited the house through being a little older, I
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ought to have been able to inherit the house right then. She knew
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nothing, and believed the lack of age only prevented my coming into the
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possession of the house.
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Thus I parted from my brother, but the disposal of Kiyo was a difficult
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proposition. My brother was, of course, unable to take her along, nor
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was there any danger of her following him so far away as Kyushu, while I
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was in a small room of a boarding house, and might have to clear out
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anytime at that. There was no way out, so I asked her if she intended to
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work somewhere else. Finally she answered me definitely that she would
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go to her nephew's and wait until I started my own house and get
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married. This nephew was a clerk in the Court of Justice, and being
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fairly well off, had invited Kiyo before more than once to come and live
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|
with him, but Kiyo preferred to stay with us, even as a servant, since
|
|
she had become well used to our family. But now I think she thought it
|
|
better to go over to her nephew than to start a new life as servant in a
|
|
strange house. Be that as it may, she advised me to have my own
|
|
household soon, or get married, so she would come and help me in
|
|
housekeeping. I believe she liked me more than she did her own kin.
|
|
My brother came to me, two days previous to his departure for Kyushu,
|
|
and giving me 600 yen, said that I might begin a business with it, or go
|
|
ahead with my study, or spend it in any way I liked, but that that would
|
|
be the last he could spare. It was a commendable act for my brother.
|
|
What! about only 600 yen! I could get along without it, I thought, but
|
|
as this unusually simple manner appealed to me, I accepted the offer
|
|
with thanks. Then he produced 50 yen, requesting me to give it to Kiyo
|
|
next time I saw her, which I readily complied with. Two days after, I
|
|
saw him off at the Shimbashi Station, and have not set my eyes on him
|
|
ever since.
|
|
Lying in my bed, I meditated on the best way to spend that 600 yen. A
|
|
business is fraught with too much trouble, and besides it was not my
|
|
calling. Moreover with only 600 yen no one could open a business worth
|
|
the name. Were I even able to do it, I was far from being educated, and
|
|
after all, would lose it. Better let investments alone, but study more
|
|
with the money. Dividing the 600 yen into three, and by spending 200 yen
|
|
a year, I could study for three years. If I kept at one study with
|
|
bull-dog tenacity for three years, I should be able to learn something.
|
|
Then the selection of a school was the next problem. By nature, there is
|
|
no branch of study whatever which appeals to my taste. Nix on languages
|
|
or literature! The new poetry was all Greek to me; I could not make out
|
|
one single line of twenty. Since I detested every kind of study, any
|
|
kind of study should have been the same to me. Thinking thus, I happened
|
|
to pass front of a school of physics, and seeing a sign posted for the
|
|
admittance of more students, I thought this might be a kind of
|
|
"affinity," and having asked for the prospectus, at once filed my
|
|
application for entrance. When I think of it now, it was a blunder due
|
|
to my hereditary recklessness.
|
|
For three years I studied about as diligently as ordinary fellows, but
|
|
not being of a particularly brilliant quality, my standing in the class
|
|
was easier to find by looking up from the bottom. Strange, isn't it,
|
|
that when three years were over, I graduated? I had to laugh at myself,
|
|
but there being no reason for complaint, I passed out.
|
|
Eight days after my graduation, the principal of the school asked me to
|
|
come over and see him. I wondered what he wanted, and went. A middle
|
|
school in Shikoku was in need of a teacher of mathematics for forty yen
|
|
a month, and he sounded me to see if I would take it. I had studied for
|
|
three years, but to tell the truth, I had no intention of either
|
|
teaching or going to the country. Having nothing in sight, however,
|
|
except teaching, I readily accepted the offer. This too was a blunder
|
|
due to hereditary recklessness.
|
|
I accepted the position, and so must go there. The three years of my
|
|
school life I had seen confined in a small room, but with no kick coming
|
|
or having no rough house. It was a comparatively easy going period in my
|
|
life. But now I had to pack up. Once I went to Kamakura on a picnic with
|
|
my classmates while I was in the grammar school, and that was the first
|
|
and last, so far, that I stepped outside of Tokyo since I could
|
|
remember. This time I must go darn far away, that it beats Kamakura by a
|
|
mile. The prospective town is situated on the coast, and looked the size
|
|
of a needle-point on the map. It would not be much to look at anyway. I
|
|
knew nothing about the place or the people there. It did not worry me or
|
|
cause any anxiety. I had simply to travel there and that was the
|
|
annoying part.
|
|
Once in a while, since our house was no more, I went to Kiyo's
|
|
nephew's to see her. Her nephew was unusually good-natured, and
|
|
whenever I called upon her, he treated me well if he happened to be at
|
|
home. Kiyo would boost me sky-high to her nephew right to my face. She
|
|
went so far once as to say that when I had graduated from school, I
|
|
would purchase a house somewhere in Kojimachi-ku and get a position in
|
|
a government office. She decided everything in her own way, and talked
|
|
of it aloud, and I was made an unwilling and bashful listener. I do
|
|
not know how her nephew weighed her tales of self-indulgence on me.
|
|
Kiyo was a woman of the old type, and seemed, as if it was still the
|
|
days of Feudal Lords, to regard her nephew equally under obligation to
|
|
me even as she was herself.
|
|
After settling about my new position, I called upon her three days
|
|
previous to my departure. She was sick abed in a small room, but, on
|
|
seeing me she got up and immediately inquired;
|
|
"Master Darling, when do you begin housekeeping?"
|
|
She evidently thought as soon as a fellow finishes school, money comes
|
|
to his pocket by itself. But then how absurd to call such a "great man"
|
|
"Darling." I told her simply that I should let the house proposition go
|
|
for some time, as I had to go to the country. She looked greatly
|
|
disappointed, and blankly smoothed her gray-haired sidelocks. I felt
|
|
sorry for her, and said comfortingly; "I am going away but will come
|
|
back soon. I'll return in the vacation next summer, sure." Still as she
|
|
appeared not fully satisfied, I added;
|
|
"Will bring you back a surprise. What do you like?"
|
|
She wished to eat "sasa-ame"[1] of Echigo province. I had never heard of
|
|
"sasa-ame" of Echigo. To begin with, the location is entirely different.
|
|
[Footnote 1: Sasa-ame is a kind of rice-jelly wrapped with sasa, or the
|
|
bamboo leaves, well-known as a product of Echigo province.]
|
|
"There seems to be no 'sasa-ame' in the country where I'm going," I
|
|
explained, and she rejoined; "Then, in what direction?" I answered
|
|
"westward" and she came back with "Is it on the other side of Hakone?"
|
|
This give-and-take conversation proved too much for me.
|
|
On the day of my departure, she came to my room early in the morning and
|
|
helped me to pack up. She put into my carpet-bag tooth powder,
|
|
tooth-brush and towels which she said she had bought at a dry goods
|
|
store on her way. I protested that I did not want them, but she was
|
|
insistent.[A] We rode in rikishas to the station. Coming up the
|
|
platform, she gazed at me from outside the car, and said in a low voice;
|
|
"This may be our last good-by. Take care of yourself."
|
|
Her eyes were full of tears. I did not cry, but was almost going to.
|
|
After the train had run some distance, thinking it would be all right
|
|
now, I poked my head out of the window and looked back. She was still
|
|
there. She looked very small.
|
|
CHAPTER II.
|
|
With a long, sonorous whistle the steamer which I was aboard came to a
|
|
standstill, and a boat was seen making toward us from the shore. The man
|
|
rowing the boat was stark naked, except for a piece of red cloth girt
|
|
round his loins. A barbarous place, this! though he may have been
|
|
excused for it in such hot weather as it was. The sun's rays were strong
|
|
and the water glimmered in such strange colors as to dazzle one's sight
|
|
if gazed at it for long. I had been told by a clerk of the ship that I
|
|
was to get off here. The place looked like a fishing village about the
|
|
size of Omori. Great Scott! I wouldn't stay in such a hole, I thought,
|
|
but I had to get out. So, down I jumped first into the boat, and I think
|
|
five or six others followed me. After loading about four large boxes
|
|
besides, the red-cloth rowed us ashore. When the boat struck the sand, I
|
|
was again the first to jump out, and right away I accosted a skinny
|
|
urchin standing nearby, asking him where the middle school was. The kid
|
|
answered blankly that he did not know. Confound the dull-head! Not to
|
|
know where the middle school was, living in such a tiny bit of a town.
|
|
Then a man wearing a rig with short, queer shaped sleeves approached me
|
|
and bade me follow. I walked after him and was taken to an inn called
|
|
Minato-ya. The maids of the inn, who gave me a disagreeable impression,
|
|
chorused at sight of me; "Please step inside." This discouraged me in
|
|
proceeding further, and I asked them, standing at the door-way, to show
|
|
me the middle school. On being told that the middle school was about
|
|
four miles away by rail, I became still more discouraged at putting up
|
|
there. I snatched my two valises from the man with queer-shaped [B]
|
|
sleeves who had guided me so far, and strode away. The people of the inn
|
|
looked after me with a dazed expression.
|
|
The station was easily found, and a ticket bought without any fuss. The
|
|
coach I got in was about as dignified as a match-box. The train rambled
|
|
on for about five minutes, and then I had to get off. No wonder the fare
|
|
was cheap; it cost only three sen. I then hired a rikisha and arrived at
|
|
the middle school, but school was already over and nobody was there. The
|
|
teacher on night-duty was out just for a while, said the janitor,--the
|
|
night-watch was taking life easy, sure. I thought of visiting the
|
|
principal, but being tired, ordered the rikishaman to take me to a
|
|
hotel. He did this with much alacrity and led me to a hotel called
|
|
Yamashiro-ya. I felt it rather amusing to find the name Yamashiro-ya the
|
|
same as that of Kantaro's house.
|
|
They ushered me to a dark room below the stairway. No one could stay in
|
|
such a hot place! I said I did not like such a warm room, but the maid
|
|
dumped my valises on the floor and left me, mumbling that all the other
|
|
rooms were occupied. So I took the room though it took some resolution
|
|
to stand the weltering heat. After a while the maid said the bath was
|
|
ready, and I took one: On my way back from the bathroom, I peeped about,
|
|
and found many rooms, which looked much cooler than mine, vacant.
|
|
Sunnovagun! They had lied. By'm-by, she fetched my supper. Although the
|
|
room was hot, the meal was a deal better than the kind I used to have in
|
|
my boarding house. While waiting on me, she questioned me where I was
|
|
from, and I said, "from Tokyo." Then she asked; "Isn't Tokyo a nice
|
|
place?" and I shot back, "Bet 'tis." About the time the maid had reached
|
|
the kitchen, loud laughs were heard. There was nothing doing, so I went
|
|
to bed, but could not sleep. Not only was it hot, but noisy,--about five
|
|
times noisier than my boarding house. While snoozing, I dreamed of Kiyo.
|
|
She was eating "sasa-ame" of Echigo province without taking off the
|
|
wrapper of bamboo leaves. I tried to stop her, saying bamboo leaves may
|
|
do her harm, but she replied, "O, no, these leaves are very helpful for
|
|
the health," and ate them with much relish. Astounded, I laughed "Ha,
|
|
ha, ha!"--and so awoke. The maid was opening the outside shutters. The
|
|
weather was just as clear as the previous day.
|
|
I had heard once before that when travelling, one should give "tea
|
|
money" to the hotel or inn where he stops; that unless this "tea
|
|
money" is given, the hostelry would accord him rather rough treatment.
|
|
It must have been on account of my being slow in the fork over of this
|
|
"tea money" that they had huddled me into such a narrow, dark room.
|
|
Likewise my shabby clothes and the carpet bags and satin umbrella must
|
|
have been accountable for it. Took me for a piker, eh? those hayseeds!
|
|
I would give them a knocker with "tea money." I left Tokyo with about
|
|
30 yen in my pocket, which remained from my school expenses. Taking
|
|
off the railway and steamship fare, and other incidental expenses, I
|
|
had still about 14 yen in my pocket. I could give them all I
|
|
had;--what did I care, I was going to get a salary now. All country
|
|
folk are tight-wads, and one 5-yen bill would hit them square. Now
|
|
watch and see. Having washed myself, I returned to my room and waited,
|
|
and the maid of the night before brought in my breakfast. Waiting on
|
|
me with a tray, she looked at me with a sort of sulphuric smile. Rude!
|
|
Is any parade marching on my face? I should say. Even my face is far
|
|
better than that of the maid. I intended of giving "tea money" after
|
|
breakfast, but I became disgusted, and taking out one 5-yen bill told
|
|
her to take it to the office later. The face of the maid became then
|
|
shy and awkward. After the meal, I left for the school. The maid did
|
|
not have my shoes polished.
|
|
I had had vague idea of the direction of the school as I rode to it the
|
|
previous day, so turning two or three corners, I came to the front gate.
|
|
From the gate to the entrance the walk was paved with granite. When I
|
|
had passed to the entrance in the rikisha, this walk made so
|
|
outlandishly a loud noise that I had felt coy. On my way to the school,
|
|
I met a number of the students in uniforms of cotton drill and they all
|
|
entered this gate. Some of them were taller than I and looked much
|
|
stronger. When I thought of teaching fellows of this ilk, I was
|
|
impressed with a queer sort of uneasiness. My card was taken to the
|
|
principal, to whose room I was ushered at once. With scant mustache,
|
|
dark-skinned and big-eyed, the principal was a man who looked like a
|
|
badger. He studiously assumed an air of superiority, and saying he would
|
|
like to see me do my best, handed the note of appointment, stamped big,
|
|
in a solemn manner. This note I threw away into the sea on my way back
|
|
to Tokyo. He said he would introduce me to all my fellow teachers, and I
|
|
was to show to each one of them the note of appointment. What a bother!
|
|
It would be far better to stick this note up in the teachers' room for
|
|
three days instead of going through such a monkey process.
|
|
The teachers would not be all in the room until the bugle for the first
|
|
hour was sounded. There was plenty of time. The principal took out his
|
|
watch, and saying that he would acquaint me particularly with the school
|
|
by-and-bye, he would only furnish me now with general matters, and
|
|
started a long lecture on the spirit of education. For a while I
|
|
listened to him with my mind half away somewhere else, but about half
|
|
way through his lecture, I began to realize that I should soon be in a
|
|
bad fix. I could not do, by any means, all he expected of me. He
|
|
expected that I should make myself an example to the students, should
|
|
become an object of admiration for the whole school or should exert my
|
|
moral influence, besides teaching technical knowledge in order to
|
|
become a real educator, or something ridiculously high-sounding. No man
|
|
with such admirable qualities would come so far away for only 40 yen a
|
|
month! Men are generally alike. If one gets excited, one is liable to
|
|
fight, I thought, but if things are to be kept on in the way the
|
|
principal says, I could hardly open my mouth to utter anything, nor take
|
|
a stroll around the place. If they wanted me to fill such an onerous
|
|
post, they should have told all that before. I hate to tell a lie; I
|
|
would give it up as having been cheated, and get out of this mess like a
|
|
man there and then. I had only about 9 yen left in my pocket after
|
|
tipping the hotel 5 yen. Nine yen would not take me back to Tokyo. I had
|
|
better not have tipped the hotel; what a pity! However, I would be able
|
|
to manage it somehow. I considered it better to run short in my return
|
|
expenses than to tell a lie.
|
|
"I cannot do it the way you want me to. I return this appointment."
|
|
I shoved back the note. The principal winked his badger-like eyes and
|
|
gazed at me. Then he said;
|
|
"What I have said just now is what I desire of you. I know well that you
|
|
cannot do all I want, So don't worry."
|
|
And he laughed. If he knew it so well already, what on earth did he
|
|
scare me for?
|
|
Meanwhile the bugle sounded, being followed by bustling noises in the
|
|
direction of the class rooms. All the teachers would be now ready, I was
|
|
told, and I followed the principal to the teachers' room. In a spacious
|
|
rectangular room, they sat each before a table lined along the walls.
|
|
When I entered the room, they all glanced at me as if by previous
|
|
agreement. Did they think my face was for a show? Then, as per
|
|
instructions, I introduced myself and showed the note to each one of
|
|
them. Most of them left their chairs and made a slight bow of
|
|
acknowledgment. But some of the more painfully polite took the note and
|
|
read it and respectfully returned it to me, just like the cheap
|
|
performances at a rural show! When I came to the fifteenth, who was the
|
|
teacher of physical training, I became impatient at repeating the same
|
|
old thing so often. The other side had to do it only once, but my side
|
|
had to do it fifteen times. They ought to have had some sympathy.
|
|
Among those I met in the room there was Mr. Blank who was head teacher.
|
|
Said he was a Bachelor of Arts. I suppose he was a great man since he
|
|
was a graduate from Imperial University and had such a title. He talked
|
|
in a strangely effeminate voice like a woman. But what surprised me most
|
|
was that he wore a flannel shirt. However thin it might be, flannel is
|
|
flannel and must have been pretty warm at that time of the year. What
|
|
painstaking dress is required which will be becoming to a B.A.! And it
|
|
was a red shirt; wouldn't that kill you! I heard afterwards that he
|
|
wears a red shirt all the year round. What a strange affliction!
|
|
According to his own explanation, he has his shirts made to order for
|
|
the sake of his health as the red color is beneficial to the physical
|
|
condition. Unnecessary worry, this, for that being the case, he should
|
|
have had his coat and hakama also in red. And there was one Mr. Koga,
|
|
teacher of English, whose complexion was very pale. Pale-faced people
|
|
are usually thin, but this man was pale and fat. When I was attending
|
|
grammar school, there was one Tami Asai in our class, and his father was
|
|
just as pale as this Koga. Asai was a farmer, and I asked Kiyo if one's
|
|
face would become pale if he took up farming. Kiyo said it was not so;
|
|
Asai ate always Hubbard squash of "uranari" [2] and that was the reason.
|
|
Thereafter when I saw any man pale and fat, I took it for granted that
|
|
it was the result of his having eaten too much of squash of "uranari."
|
|
This English teacher was surely subsisting upon squash. However, what
|
|
the meaning of "uranari" is, I do not know. I asked Kiyo once, but she
|
|
only laughed. Probably she did not know. Among the teachers of
|
|
mathematics, there was one named Hotta. This was a fellow of massive
|
|
body, with hair closely cropped. He looked like one of the old-time
|
|
devilish priests who made the Eizan temple famous. I showed him the note
|
|
politely, but he did not even look at it, and blurted out;
|
|
"You're the man newly appointed, eh? Come and see me sometime,
|
|
ha, ha, ha!"
|
|
[Footnote 2: Means the last crop.]
|
|
Devil take his "Ha, ha, ha!" Who would go to see a fellow so void of the
|
|
sense of common decency! I gave this priest from this time the nickname
|
|
of Porcupine.
|
|
The Confucian teacher was strict in his manner as becoming to his
|
|
profession. "Arrived yesterday? You must be tired. Start teaching
|
|
already? Working hard, indeed!"--and so on. He was an old man, quite
|
|
sociable and talkative.
|
|
The teacher of drawing was altogether like a cheap actor. He wore a
|
|
thin, flappy haori of sukiya, and, toying with a fan, he giggled; "Where
|
|
from? eh? Tokyo? Glad to hear that. You make another of our group. I'm a
|
|
Tokyo kid myself."
|
|
If such a fellow prided himself on being a Tokyo kid, I wished I had
|
|
never been born in Tokyo. I might go on writing about each one of
|
|
them, for there are many, but I stop here otherwise there will be no
|
|
end to it.
|
|
When my formal introduction was over, the principal said that I might go
|
|
for the day, but I should make arrangements as to the class hours, etc.,
|
|
with the head teacher of mathematics and begin teaching from the day
|
|
after the morrow. Asked who was the head teacher of mathematics, I found
|
|
that he was no other than that Porcupine. Holy smokes! was I to serve
|
|
under him? I was disappointed.
|
|
"Say, where are you stopping? Yamashiro-ya? Well, I'll come and
|
|
talk it over."
|
|
So saying, Porcupine, chalk in hand, left the room to his class. That
|
|
was rather humiliating for a head-teacher to come over and see his
|
|
subordinate, but it was better than to call me over to him.
|
|
After leaving the school, I thought of returning straight to the hotel,
|
|
but as there was nothing to do, I decided to take in a little of the
|
|
town, and started walking about following my nose. I saw prefectural
|
|
building; it was an old structure of the last century. Also I saw the
|
|
barracks; they were less imposing than those of the Azabu Regiment,
|
|
Tokyo. I passed through the main street. The width of the street is
|
|
about one half that of Kagurazaka, and its aspect is inferior. What
|
|
about a castle-town of 250,000-koku Lord! Pity the fellows who get
|
|
swell-headed in such a place as a castle-town!
|
|
While I walked about musing like this, I found myself in front of
|
|
Yamashiro-ya. The town was much narrower than I had been led to believe.
|
|
"I think I have seen nearly all. Guess I'll return and eat." And I
|
|
entered the gate. The mistress of the hotel who was sitting at the
|
|
counter, jumped out of her place at my appearance and with "Are you
|
|
back, Sire!" scraped the floor with her forehead. When I took my shoes
|
|
off and stepped inside, the maid took me to an upstairs room that had
|
|
became vacant. It was a front room of 15 mats (about 90 square feet). I
|
|
had never before lived in so splendid a room as this. As it was quite
|
|
uncertain when I should again be able to occupy such a room in future, I
|
|
took off my European dress, and with only a single Japanese summer coat
|
|
on, sprawled in the centre of the room in the shape of the Japanese
|
|
letter "big" (arms stretched out and legs spread wide[D]). I found it
|
|
very refreshing.
|
|
After luncheon I at once wrote a letter to Kiyo. I hate most to write
|
|
letters because I am poor at sentence-making and also poor in my stock
|
|
of words. Neither did I have any place to which to address my letters.
|
|
However, Kiyo might be getting anxious. It would not do to let her worry
|
|
lest she think the steamer which I boarded had been wrecked and I was
|
|
drowned,--so I braced up and wrote a long one. The body of the letter
|
|
was as follows:
|
|
"Arrived yesterday. A dull place. Am sleeping in a room of 15 mats.
|
|
Tipped the hotel five yen as tea money. The house-wife of the hotel
|
|
scraped the floor with her forehead. Couldn't sleep last night.
|
|
Dreamed Kiyo eat sasa-ame together with the bamboo-leaf wrappers. Will
|
|
return next summer. Went to the school to-day, and nicknamed all the
|
|
fellows. 'Badger' for the principal, 'Red Shirt' for the head-teacher,
|
|
'Hubbard Squash' for the teacher of English, 'Porcupine' the teacher
|
|
of mathematics and 'Clown' for that of drawing. Will write you many
|
|
other things soon. Good bye."
|
|
When I finished writing the letter, I felt better and sleepy. So I slept
|
|
in the centre of the room, as I had done before, in the letter "big"
|
|
shape ([D]). No dream this time, and I had a sound sleep.
|
|
"Is this the room?"--a loud voice was heard,--a voice which woke me up,
|
|
and Porcupine entered.
|
|
"How do you do? What you have to do in the school----" he began talking
|
|
shop as soon as I got up and rattled me much. On learning my duties in
|
|
the school, there seemed to be no difficulty, and I decided to accept.
|
|
If only such were what was expected of me, I would not be surprised were
|
|
I told to start not only two days hence but even from the following day.
|
|
The talk on business over, Porcupine said that he did not think it was
|
|
my intention to stay in such a hotel all the time, that he would find a
|
|
room for me in a good boarding house, and that I should move.
|
|
"They wouldn't take in another from anybody else but I can do it
|
|
right away. The sooner the better. Go and look at the room to-day,
|
|
move tomorrow and start teaching from the next day. That'll be all
|
|
nice and settled."
|
|
He seemed satisfied by arranging all by himself. Indeed, I should not be
|
|
able to occupy such a room for long. I might have to blow in all of my
|
|
salary for the hotel bill and yet be short of squaring it. It was pity
|
|
to leave the hotel so soon after I had just shone with a 5-yen tip.
|
|
However, it being decidedly convenient to move and get settled early if
|
|
I had to move at all, I asked Porcupine to get that room for me. He told
|
|
me then to come over with him and see the house at any rate, and I did.
|
|
The house was situated mid-way up a hill at the end of the town, and was
|
|
a quiet. The boss was said to be a dealer in antique curios, called
|
|
Ikagin, and his wife was about four years his senior. I learned the
|
|
English word "witch" when I was in middle school, and this woman looked
|
|
exactly like one. But as she was another man's wife, what did I care if
|
|
she was a witch. Finally I decided to live in the house from the next
|
|
day. On our way back Porcupine treated me to a cup of ice-water. When I
|
|
first met him in the school, I thought him a disgustingly overbearing
|
|
fellow, but judging by the way he had looked after me so far, he
|
|
appeared not so bad after all. Only he seemed, like me, impatient by
|
|
nature and of quick-temper. I heard afterward that he was liked most by
|
|
all the students in the school.
|
|
CHAPTER III.
|
|
My teaching began at last. When I entered the class-room and stepped
|
|
upon the platform for the first time, I felt somewhat strange. While
|
|
lecturing, I wondered if a fellow like me could keep up the profession
|
|
of public instructor. The students were noisy. Once in a while, they
|
|
would holler "Teacher!" "Teacher,"--it was "going some." I had been
|
|
calling others "teacher" every day so far, in the school of physics, but
|
|
in calling others "teacher" and being called one, there is a wide gap of
|
|
difference. It made me feel as if some one was tickling my soles. I am
|
|
not a sneakish fellow, nor a coward; only--it's a pity--I lack audacity.
|
|
If one calls me "teacher" aloud, it gives me a shock similar to that of
|
|
hearing the noon-gun in Marunouchi when I was hungry. The first hour
|
|
passed away in a dashing manner. And it passed away without encountering
|
|
any knotty questions. As I returned to the teachers' room, Porcupine
|
|
asked me how it was. I simply answered "well," and he seemed satisfied.
|
|
When I left the teachers' room, chalk in hand, for the second hour
|
|
class, I felt as if I was invading the enemy's territory. On entering
|
|
the room, I found the students for this hour were all big fellows. I am
|
|
a Tokyo kid, delicately built and small, and did not appear very
|
|
impressive even in my elevated position. If it comes to a scraping, I
|
|
can hold my own even with wrestlers, but I had no means of appearing
|
|
awe-inspiring[E], merely by the aid of my tongue, to so many as forty
|
|
such big chaps before me. Believing, however, that it would set a bad
|
|
precedent to show these country fellows any weakness, I lectured rather
|
|
loudly and in brusque tone. During the first part the students were
|
|
taken aback and listened literally with their mouths open. "That's one
|
|
on you!" I thought. Elated by my success, I kept on in this tone, when
|
|
one who looked the strongest, sitting in the middle of the front row,
|
|
stood up suddenly, and called "Teacher!" There it goes!--I thought, and
|
|
asked him what it was.
|
|
"A-ah sa-ay, you talk too quick. A-ah ca-an't you make it a leetle slow?
|
|
A-ah?" "A-ah ca-an't you?" "A-ah?" was altogether dull.
|
|
"If I talk too fast, I'll make it slow, but I'm a Tokyo fellow, and
|
|
can't talk the way you do. If you don't understand it, better wait
|
|
until you do."
|
|
So I answered him. In this way the second hour was closed better than I
|
|
had expected. Only, as I was about to leave the class, one of the
|
|
students asked me, "A-ah say, won't you please do them for me?" and
|
|
showed me some problems in geometry which I was sure I could not solve.
|
|
This proved to be somewhat a damper on me. But, helpless, I told him I
|
|
could not make them out, and telling him that I would show him how next
|
|
time, hastily got out of the room. And all of them raised "Whee--ee!"
|
|
Some of them were heard saying "He doesn't know much." Don't take a
|
|
teacher for an encyclopaedia! If I could work out such hard questions as
|
|
these easily, I would not be in such a backwoods town for forty yen a
|
|
month. I returned to the teachers' room.
|
|
"How was it this time?" asked Porcupine. I said "Umh." But not satisfied
|
|
with "Umh" only, I added that all the students in this school were
|
|
boneheads. He put up a whimsical face.
|
|
The third and the fourth hour and the first hour in the afternoon were
|
|
more or less the same. In all the classes I attended, I made some kind
|
|
of blunder. I realised that the profession of teaching not quite so easy
|
|
a calling as might have appeared. My teaching for the day was finished
|
|
but I could not get away. I had to wait alone until three o'clock. I
|
|
understood that at three o'clock the students of my classes would finish
|
|
cleaning up the rooms and report to me, whereupon I would go over the
|
|
rooms. Then I would run through the students' roll, and then be free to
|
|
go home. Outrageous, indeed, to keep on chained to the school, staring
|
|
at the empty space when he had nothing more to do, even though he was
|
|
"bought" by a salary! Other fellow teachers, however, meekly submitted
|
|
to the regulation, and believing it not well for me,--a new comer--to
|
|
fuss about it, I stood it. On my way home, I appealed to Porcupine as to
|
|
the absurdity of keeping me there till three o'clock regardless of my
|
|
having nothing to do in the school. He said "Yes" and laughed. But he
|
|
became serious and in an advisory manner told me not to make many
|
|
complaints about the school.
|
|
"Talk to me only, if you want to. There are some queer guys around."
|
|
As we parted at the next corner, I did not have time to hear more from
|
|
him.
|
|
On reaching my room, the boss of the house came to me saying, "Let me
|
|
serve you tea." I expected he was going to treat me to some good tea
|
|
since he said "Let me serve you," but he simply made himself at home
|
|
and drank my own tea. Judging by this, I thought he might be
|
|
practising "Let me serve you" during my absence. The boss said that he
|
|
was fond of antique drawings and curios and finally had decided to
|
|
start in that business.
|
|
"You look like one quite taken about art. Suppose you begin patronizing
|
|
my business just for fun as er--connoisseur of art?"
|
|
It was the least expected kind of solicitation. Two years ago, I went to
|
|
the Imperial Hotel (Tokyo) on an errand, and I was taken for a
|
|
locksmith. When I went to see the Daibutsu at Kamakura, haying wrapped
|
|
up myself from head to toe with a blanket, a rikisha man addressed me as
|
|
"Gov'ner." I have been mistaken on many occasions for as many things,
|
|
but none so far has counted on me as a probable connoisseur of art. One
|
|
should know better by my appearance. Any one who aspires to be a patron
|
|
of art is usually pictured,--you may see in any drawing,--with either a
|
|
hood on his head, or carrying a tanzaku[3] in his hand. The fellow who
|
|
calls me a connoisseur of art and pretends to mean it, may be surely as
|
|
crooked as a dog's hind legs. I told him I did not like such art-stuff,
|
|
which is usually favored by retired people. He laughed, and remarking
|
|
that that nobody liked it at first, but once in it, will find it so
|
|
fascinating that he will hardly get over it, served tea for himself and
|
|
drank it in a grotesque manner. I may say that I had asked him the night
|
|
before to buy some tea for me, but I did not like such a bitter, heavy
|
|
kind. One swallow seemed to act right on my stomach. I told him to buy a
|
|
kind not so bitter as that, and he answered "All right, Sir," and drank
|
|
another cup. The fellow seemed never to know of having enough of
|
|
anything so long as it was another man's. After he left the room, I
|
|
prepared for the morrow and went to bed.
|
|
[Footnote 3: A tanzaku is a long, narrow strip of stiff paper on which a
|
|
Japanese poem is written.]
|
|
Everyday thereafter I attended at the school and worked as per
|
|
regulations. Every day on my return, the boss came to my room with the
|
|
same old "Let me serve you tea." In about a week I understood the school
|
|
in a general way, and had my own idea as to the personality of the boss
|
|
and his wife. I heard from one of my fellow teachers that the first week
|
|
to one month after the receipt of the appointment worried them most as
|
|
to whether they had been favorably received among the students. I never
|
|
felt anything on that score. Blunders in the class room once in a while
|
|
caused me chagrin, but in about half an hour everything would clear out
|
|
of my head. I am a fellow who, by nature, can't be worrying long
|
|
about[F] anything even if I try to. I was absolutely indifferent as how
|
|
my blunders in the class room affected the students, or how much further
|
|
they affected the principal or the head-teacher. As I mentioned before,
|
|
I am not a fellow of much audacity to speak of, but I am quick to give
|
|
up anything when I see its finish.
|
|
I had resolved to go elsewhere at once if the school did not suit me. In
|
|
consequence, neither Badger nor Red Shirt wielded any influence over me.
|
|
And still less did I feel like coaxing or coddling the youngsters in the
|
|
class room.
|
|
So far it was O.K. with the school, but not so easy as that at my
|
|
boarding house. I could have stood it if it had been only the boss
|
|
coming to my room after my tea. But he would fetch many things to my
|
|
room. First time he brought in seals.[4] He displayed about ten of them
|
|
before me and persuaded me to buy them for three yen, which was very
|
|
cheap, he said. Did he take me for a third rate painter making a round
|
|
of the country? I told him I did not want them. Next time he brought in
|
|
a panel picture of flowers and birds, drawn by one Kazan or somebody. He
|
|
hung it against the wall of the alcove and asked me if it was not well
|
|
done, and I echoed it looked well done. Then he started lecturing about
|
|
Kazan, that there are two Kazans, one is Kazan something and the other
|
|
is Kazan anything, and that this picture was the work of that Kazan
|
|
something. After this nonsensical lecture, he insisted that he would
|
|
make it fifteen yen for me to buy it. I declined the offer saying that I
|
|
was shy of the money.
|
|
[Footnote 4: Artists have several seals of stone with which to stamp on
|
|
the picture they draw as a guarantee of their personal work or for
|
|
identification. The shape and kind of seals are quite a hobby among
|
|
artists, and sales or exchange are of common occurrence.]
|
|
"You can pay any time." He was insistent. I settled him by telling him
|
|
of my having no intention of purchasing it even if I had the necessary
|
|
money. Again next time, he yanked in a big writing stone slab about the
|
|
size of a ridge-tile.
|
|
"This is a tankei,"[5] he said. As he "tankeied" two or three times, I
|
|
asked for fun what was a tankei. Right away he commenced lecturing on
|
|
the subject. "There are the upper, the middle and the lower stratum in
|
|
tankei," he said. "Most of tankei slabs to-day are made from the upper
|
|
stratum," he continued, "but this one is surely from the middle
|
|
stratum. Look at this 'gan.'[6] 'Tis certainly rare to have three
|
|
'gans' like this. The ink-cake grates smoothly on it. Try it,
|
|
sir,"--and he pushed it towards me. I asked him how much, and he
|
|
answered that on account of its owner having brought it from China and
|
|
wishing to sell if as soon as possible, he would make it very cheap,
|
|
that I could have it for thirty yen. I was sure he was a fool. I seemed
|
|
to be able to get through the school somehow, but I would soon give out
|
|
if this "curio siege" kept on long.
|
|
[Footnote 5: Tankei is the name of a place in China where a certain kind
|
|
of stone suitable for writing purposes was produced.]
|
|
[Footnote 6: "Gan" may be understood as a kind of natural mark on the
|
|
stone peculiar to the stone from Tankei.]
|
|
Shortly afterwards, I began to get sick of the school. One certain
|
|
night, while I was strolling about a street named Omachi, I happened to
|
|
notice a sign of noodles below of which was annotated "Tokyo" in the
|
|
house next to the post office. I am very fond of noodles. While I was in
|
|
Tokyo, if I passed by a noodle house and smelled the seasoning spices, I
|
|
felt uncontrollable temptation to go inside at any cost. Up to this time
|
|
I had forgotten the noodle on account of mathematics and antique curios,
|
|
but since I had seen thus the sign of noodles, I could hardly pass it by
|
|
unnoticed. So availing myself of this opportunity, I went in. It was not
|
|
quite up to what I had judged by the sign. Since it claimed to follow
|
|
the Tokyo style, they should have tidied up a little bit about the room.
|
|
They did not either know Tokyo or have the means,--I did not know which,
|
|
but the room was miserably dirty. The floor-mats had all seen better
|
|
days and felt shaggy with sandy dust. The sootcovered walls defied the
|
|
blackest black. The ceiling was not only smoked by the lamp black, but
|
|
was so low as to force one involuntarily bend down his neck. Only the
|
|
price-list, on which was glaringly written "Noodles" and which was
|
|
pasted on the wall, was entirely new. I was certain that they bought an
|
|
old house and opened the business just two or three days before. At the
|
|
head of the price-list appeared "tempura" (noodles served with shrimp
|
|
fried in batter).
|
|
"Say, fetch me some tempura," I ordered in a loud voice. Then three
|
|
fellows who had been making a chewing noise together in a corner, looked
|
|
in my direction. As the room was dark I did not notice them at first.
|
|
But when we looked at each other, I found them all to be boys in our
|
|
school. They "how d'ye do'd" me and I acknowledged it. That night,
|
|
having come across the noodle after so long a time, it tasted so fine
|
|
that I ate four bowls.
|
|
The next day as I entered the class room quite unconcernedly, I saw on
|
|
the black board written in letters so large as to take up the whole
|
|
space; "Professor Tempura." The boys all glanced at my face and made
|
|
merry hee-haws at my cost. It was so absurd that I asked them if it was
|
|
in any way funny for me to eat tempura noodle. Thereupon one of them
|
|
said,--"But four bowls is too much." What did they care if I ate four
|
|
bowls or five as long as I paid it with my own money,--and speedily
|
|
finishing up my class, I returned to the teachers' room. After ten
|
|
minutes' recess, I went to the next class, and there on the black board
|
|
was newly written quite as large as before; "Four bowls of tempura
|
|
noodles, but don't laugh."
|
|
The first one did not arouse any ill-temper in me, but this time it made
|
|
me feel irritating mad. A joke carried too far becomes mischievous. It
|
|
is like the undue jealousy of some women who, like coal, look black and
|
|
suggest flames. Nobody likes it. These country simpletons, unable to
|
|
differentiate upon so delicate a boundary, would seem to be bent on
|
|
pushing everything to the limit. As they lived in such a narrow town
|
|
where one has no more to see if he goes on strolling about for one hour,
|
|
and as they were capable of doing nothing better, they were trumpeting
|
|
aloud this tempura incident in quite as serious a manner as the
|
|
Russo-Japanese war. What a bunch of miserable pups! It is because they
|
|
are raised in this fashion from their boyhood that there are many punies
|
|
who, like the dwarf maple tree in the flower pot, mature gnarled and
|
|
twisted. I have no objection to laugh myself with others over innocent
|
|
jokes. But how's this? Boys as they are, they showed a "poisonous
|
|
temper." Silently erasing off "tempura" from the board, I questioned
|
|
them if they thought such mischief interesting, that this was a cowardly
|
|
joke and if they knew the meaning of "cowardice." Some of them answered
|
|
that to get angry on being laughed at over one's own doing, was
|
|
cowardice. What made them so disgusting as this? I pitied myself for
|
|
coming from far off Tokyo to teach such a lot.
|
|
"Keep your mouth shut, and study hard," I snapped, and started the
|
|
class. In the next class again there was written: "When one eats tempura
|
|
noodles it makes him drawl nonsense." There seemed no end to it. I was
|
|
thoroughly aroused with anger, and declaring that I would not teach such
|
|
sassies, went home straight. The boys were glad of having an unexpected
|
|
holiday, so I heard. When things had come to this pass, the antique
|
|
curious seemed far more preferable to the school.
|
|
My return home and sleep over night greatly rounded off my rugged temper
|
|
over the tempura affair. I went to the school, and they were there also.
|
|
I could not tell what was what. The three days thereafter were pacific,
|
|
and on the night of the fourth day, I went to a suburb called Sumida and
|
|
ate "dango" (small balls made of glutinous rice, dressed with
|
|
sugar-paste). Sumida is a town where there are restaurants, hot-springs
|
|
bath houses and a park, and in addition, the "tenderloin." The dango
|
|
shop where I went was near the entrance to the tenderloin, and as the
|
|
dango served there was widely known for its nice taste, I dropped in on
|
|
my way back from my bath. As I did not meet any students this time, I
|
|
thought nobody knew of it, but when I entered the first hour class next
|
|
day, I found written on the black board; "Two dishes of dango--7 sen."
|
|
It is true that I ate two dishes and paid seven sen. Troublesome kids! I
|
|
declare. I expected with certainty that there would be something at the
|
|
second hour, and there it was; "The dango in the tenderloin taste fine."
|
|
Stupid wretches!
|
|
No sooner I thought, the dango incident closed than the red towel became
|
|
the topic for widespread gossip. Inquiry as to the story revealed it to
|
|
be something unusually absurd. Since, my arrival here, I had made it a
|
|
part of my routine to take in the hot springs bath every day. While
|
|
there was nothing in this town which compared favorably with Tokyo, the
|
|
hot springs were worthy of praise. So long as I was in the town, I
|
|
decided that I would have a dip every day, and went there walking,
|
|
partly for physical exercise, before my supper. And whenever I went
|
|
there I used to carry a large-size European towel dangling from my hand.
|
|
Added to somewhat reddish color the towel had acquired by its having
|
|
been soaked in the hot-springs, the red color on its border, which was
|
|
not fast enough, streaked about so that the towel now looked as if it
|
|
were dyed red. This towel hung down from my hand on both ways whether
|
|
afoot or riding in the train. For this reason, the students nicknamed me
|
|
Red Towel. Honest, it is exasperating to live in a little town.
|
|
There is some more. The bath house I patronized was a newly built
|
|
three-story house, and for the patrons of the first class the house
|
|
provided a bath-robe, in addition to an attendant, and the cost was only
|
|
eight sen. On top of that, a maid would serve tea in a regular polite
|
|
fashion. I always paid the first class. Then those gossipy spotters
|
|
started saying that for one who made only forty yen a month to take a
|
|
first class bath every day was extravagant. Why the devil should they
|
|
care? It was none of their business.
|
|
There is still some more. The bath-tub,--or the tank in this case,--was
|
|
built of granite, and measured about thirty square feet. Usually there
|
|
were thirteen or fourteen people in the tank, but sometimes there was
|
|
none. As the water came up clear to the breast, I enjoyed, for athletic
|
|
purposes, swimming in the tank. I delighted in swimming in this
|
|
30-square feet tank, taking chances of the total absence of other
|
|
people. Once, going downstairs from the third story with a light heart,
|
|
and peeping through the entrance of the tank to see if I should be able
|
|
to swim, I noticed a sign put up in which was boldly written: "No
|
|
swimming allowed in the tank." As there may not have been many who swam
|
|
in the tank, this notice was probably put up particularly for my sake.
|
|
After that I gave up swimming. But although I gave up swimming, I was
|
|
surprised, when I went to the school, to see on the board, as usual,
|
|
written: "No swimming allowed in the tank." It seemed as if all the
|
|
students united in tracking me everywhere. They made me sick. I was not
|
|
a fellow to stop doing whatever I had started upon no matter what
|
|
students might say, but I became thoroughly disgusted when I meditated
|
|
on why I had come to such a narrow, suffocating place. And, then, when I
|
|
returned home, the "antique curio siege" was still going on.
|
|
CHAPTER IV
|
|
For us teachers there was a duty of night watch in the school, and we
|
|
had to do it in turn. But Badger and Red Shirt were not in it. On
|
|
asking why these two were exempt from this duty, I was told that they
|
|
were accorded by the government treatment similar to officials of
|
|
"Sonin" rank. Oh, fudge! They were paid more, worked less, and were
|
|
then excused from this night watch. It was not fair. They made
|
|
regulations to suit their convenience and seemed to regard all this as
|
|
a matter of course. How could they be so brazen faced as this! I was
|
|
greatly dissatisfied relative to this question, but according to the
|
|
opinion of Porcupine, protests by a single person, with what insistency
|
|
they may be made, will not be heard. They ought to be heard whether
|
|
they are made by one person or by two if they are just. Porcupine
|
|
remonstrated with me by quoting "Might is right" in English. I did not
|
|
catch his point, so I asked him again, and he told me that it meant the
|
|
right of the stronger. If it was the right of the stronger I had known
|
|
it for long, and did not require Porcupine explain that to me at this
|
|
time. The right of the stronger was a question different from that of
|
|
the night watch. Who would agree that Badger and Red Shirt were the
|
|
stronger? But argument or no argument, the turn of this night watch at
|
|
last fell upon me. Being quite fastidious, I never enjoyed sound sleep
|
|
unless I slept comfortably in my own bedding. From my childhood, I
|
|
never stayed out overnight. When I did not find sleeping under the roof
|
|
of my friends inviting, night watch in the school, you may be sure, was
|
|
still worse. However repulsive, if this was a part of the forty yen a
|
|
month, there was no alternative. I had to do it.
|
|
To remain alone in the school after the faculty and students had gone
|
|
home, was something particularly awkward. The room for the night watch
|
|
was in the rear of the school building at the west end of the dormitory.
|
|
I stepped inside to see how it was, and finding it squarely facing the
|
|
setting sun, I thought I would melt. In spite of autumn having already
|
|
set in, the hot spell still lingered, quite in keeping with the
|
|
dilly-dally atmosphere of the country. I ordered the same kind of meal
|
|
as served for the students, and finished my supper. The meal was
|
|
unspeakably poor. It was a wonder they could subsist on such miserable
|
|
stuff and keep on "roughing it" in that lively fashion. Not only that,
|
|
they were always hungry for supper, finishing it at 4.30 in the
|
|
afternoon. They must be heroes in a sense. I had thus my supper, but the
|
|
sun being still high, could not go to bed yet. I felt like going to the
|
|
hot-springs. I did not know the wrong or right of night watch going out,
|
|
but it was oppressively trying to stand a life akin to heavy
|
|
imprisonment. When I called at the school the first time and inquired
|
|
about night watch, I was told by the janitor that he had just gone out
|
|
and I thought it strange. But now by taking the turn of night watch
|
|
myself, I could fathom the situation; it was right for any night watch
|
|
to go out. I told the janitor that I was going out for a minute. He
|
|
asked me "on business?" and I answered "No," but to take a bath at the
|
|
hot springs, and went out straight. It was too bad that I had left my
|
|
red towel at home, but I would borrow one over there for to-day.
|
|
I took plenty of time in dipping in the bath and as it became dark at
|
|
last, I came to the Furumachi Station on a train. It was only about four
|
|
blocks to the school; I could cover it in no time. When I started
|
|
walking schoolwards, Badger was seen coming from the opposite direction.
|
|
Badger, I presumed, was going to the hot springs by this train. He came
|
|
with brisk steps, and as we passed by, I nodded my courtesy. Then
|
|
Badger, with a studiously owlish countenance, asked:
|
|
"Am I wrong to understand that you are night watch?"
|
|
Chuck that "Am-I-wrong-to-understand"! Two hours ago, did he not say to
|
|
me "You're on first night watch to-night. Now, take care of yourself?"
|
|
What makes one use such a roundabout, twisted way of saying anything
|
|
when he becomes a principal? I was far from smiling.
|
|
"Yes, Sir," I said, "I'm night watch to-night, and as I am night watch I
|
|
will return to the school and stay there overnight, sure." With this
|
|
parting shot, I left him where we met. Coming then to the cross-streets
|
|
of Katamachi, I met Porcupine. This is a narrow place, I tell you.
|
|
Whenever one ventures out, he is sure to come across some familiar face.
|
|
"Say, aren't you night watch?" he hallooed, and I said "Yes, I am." "Tis
|
|
wrong for night watch to leave his post at his pleasure," he added, and
|
|
to this I blurted out with a bold front; "Nothing wrong at all. It is
|
|
wrong not to go out."
|
|
"Say, old man, your slap-dash is going to the limit. Wouldn't look well
|
|
for the principal or the head teacher to see you out like this."
|
|
The submissive tone of his remark was contrary to Porcupine as I had
|
|
known him so far, so I cut him short by saying:
|
|
"I have met the principal just now. Why, he approved my taking a stroll
|
|
about the town. Said it would be hard on night watch unless he took a
|
|
walk when it is hot." Then I made a bee-line for the school.
|
|
Soon it was night. I called the janitor to my room and had a chat for
|
|
about two hours. I grew tired of this, and thought I would get into bed
|
|
anyway, even if I could not sleep. I put on my night shirt, lifted the
|
|
mosquito-net, rolled off the red blanket and fell down flat on my back
|
|
with a bang. The making of this bumping noise when I go to bed is my
|
|
habit from my boyhood. "It is a bad habit," once declared a student of a
|
|
law school who lived on the ground floor, and I on the second, when I
|
|
was in the boarding house at Ogawa-machi, Kanda-ku, and who brought
|
|
complaints to my room in person. Students of law schools, weaklings as
|
|
they are, have double the ability of ordinary persons when it comes to
|
|
talking. As this student of law dwelt long on absurd accusations, I
|
|
downed him by answering that the noise made when I went to bed was not
|
|
the fault of my hip, but that of the house which was not built on a
|
|
solid base, and that if he had any fuss to make, make it to the house,
|
|
not to me. This room for night watch was not on the second floor, so
|
|
nobody cared how much I banged. I do not feel well-rested unless I go to
|
|
bed with the loudest bang I can make.
|
|
"This is bully!" and I straightened out my feet, when something jumped
|
|
and clung to them. They felt coarse, and seemed not to be fleas. I was a
|
|
bit surprised, and shook my feet inside the blanket two or three times.
|
|
Instantly the blamed thing increased,--five or six of them on my legs,
|
|
two or three on the thighs, one crushed beneath my hip and another clear
|
|
up to my belly. The shock became greater. Up I jumped, took off the
|
|
blanket, and about fifty to sixty grasshoppers flew out. I was more or
|
|
less uneasy until I found out what they were, but now I saw they were
|
|
grasshoppers, they set me on the war path. "You insignificant
|
|
grasshoppers, startling a man! See what's coming to you!" With this I
|
|
slapped them with my pillow twice or thrice, but the objects being so
|
|
small, the effect was out of proportion to the force with which the
|
|
blows were administered. I adopted a different plan. In the manner of
|
|
beating floor-mats with rolled matting at house-cleaning, I sat up in
|
|
bed and began beating them with the pillow. Many of them flew up by the
|
|
force of the pillow; some desperately clung on or shot against my nose
|
|
or head. I could not very well hit those on my head with the pillow; I
|
|
grabbed such, and dashed them on the floor. What was more provoking was
|
|
that no matter how hard I dashed them, they landed on the mosquito-net
|
|
where they made a fluffy jerk and remained, far from being dead. At
|
|
last, in about half an hour the slaughter of the grasshoppers was ended.
|
|
I fetched a broom and swept them out. The janitor came along and asked
|
|
what was the matter.
|
|
"Damn the matter! Where in thunder are the fools who keep grasshoppers
|
|
in bed! You pumpkinhead!"
|
|
The janitor answered by explaining that he did not know anything about
|
|
it. "You can't get away with Did-not-know," and I followed this
|
|
thundering by throwing away the broom. The awe-struck janitor shouldered
|
|
the broom and faded away.
|
|
At once I summoned three of the students to my room as the
|
|
"representatives," and six of them reported. Six or ten made no
|
|
difference; I rolled up the sleeves of my night-shirt and fired away.
|
|
"What do you mean by putting grasshoppers in my bed!"
|
|
"Grasshoppers? What are they?" said one in front, in a tone disgustingly
|
|
quiet. In this school, not only the principal, but the students as well,
|
|
were addicted to using twisted-round expressions.
|
|
"Don't know grasshoppers! You shall see!" To my chagrin, there was none;
|
|
I had swept them all out. I called the janitor again and told him to
|
|
fetch those grasshoppers he had taken away. The janitor said he had
|
|
thrown them into the garbage box, but that he would pick them out again.
|
|
"Yes, hurry up," I said, and he sped away. After a while he brought back
|
|
about ten grasshoppers on a white paper, remarking:
|
|
"I'm sorry, Sir. It's dark outside and I can't find out more. I'll find
|
|
some tomorrow." All fools here, down to the janitor. I showed one
|
|
grasshopper to the students.
|
|
"This is a grasshopper. What's the matter for as big idiots as you not
|
|
to know a grasshopper." Then the one with a round face sitting on the
|
|
left saucily shot back:
|
|
"A-ah say, that's a locust, a-ah----."
|
|
"Shut up. They're the same thing. In the first place, what do you
|
|
mean by answering your teacher 'A-ah say'? Ah-Say or Ah-Sing is a
|
|
Chink's name!"
|
|
For this counter-shot, he answered:
|
|
"A-ah say and Ah-Sing is different,--A-ah say." They never got rid of
|
|
"A-ah say."
|
|
"Grasshoppers or locusts, why did you put them into my bed? When I
|
|
asked you to?"
|
|
"Nobody put them in."
|
|
"If not, how could they get into the bed?"
|
|
"Locusts are fond of warm places and probably they got in there
|
|
respectfully by themselves."
|
|
"You fools! Grasshoppers getting into bed respectfully! I should smile
|
|
at them getting in there respectfully! Now, what's the reason for doing
|
|
this mischief? Speak out."
|
|
"But there is no way to explain it because we didn't do it."
|
|
Shrimps! If they were afraid of making a clean breast of their own deed,
|
|
they should not have done it at all. They looked defiant, and appeared
|
|
to insist on their innocence as long as no evidence was brought up. I
|
|
myself did some mischief while in the middle school, but when the
|
|
culprit was sought after, I was never so cowardly, not even once, to
|
|
back out. What one has done, has been done; what he has not, has not
|
|
been,--that's the black and white of it. I, for one have been game and
|
|
square, no matter how much mischief I might have done. If I wished to
|
|
dodge the punishment, I would not start it. Mischief and punishment are
|
|
bound to go together. We can enjoy mischief-making with some show of
|
|
spirit because it is accompanied by certain consequences. Where does one
|
|
expect to see the dastardly spirit which hungers for mischief-making
|
|
without punishment, in vogue? The fellows who like to borrow money but
|
|
not pay it back, are surely such as these students here after they are
|
|
graduated. What did these fellows come to this middle school for,
|
|
anyway? They enter a school, tattle round lies, play silly jokes behind
|
|
some one by sneaking and cheating and get wrongly swell-headed when they
|
|
finish the school thinking they have received an education. A common lot
|
|
of jackasses they are.
|
|
My hatred of talking with these scamps became intense, so I dismissed
|
|
them by saying:
|
|
"If you fellows have nothing to say, let it go at that. You deserve
|
|
pity for not knowing the decent from the vulgar after coming to a
|
|
middle school."
|
|
I am not very decent in my own language or manner, but am sure that my
|
|
moral standard is far more decent than that of these gangs. Those six
|
|
boys filed out leisurely. Outwardly they appeared more dignified than I
|
|
their teacher, it was the more repulsive for their calm behavior. I have
|
|
no temerity equal to theirs. Then I went to bed again, and found the
|
|
inside of the net full of merry crowds of mosquitoes. I could not bother
|
|
myself to burn one by one with a candle flame. So I took the net off the
|
|
hooks, folded it the lengthwise, and shook it crossways, up and down the
|
|
room. One of the rings of the net, flying round, accidentally hit the
|
|
back of my hand, the effect of which I did not soon forget. When I went
|
|
to bed for the third time, I cooled off a little, but could not sleep
|
|
easily. My watch showed it was half past ten. Well, as I thought it
|
|
over, I realized myself as having come to a dirty pit. If all teachers
|
|
of middle schools everywhere have to handle fellows like these in this
|
|
school, those teachers have my sympathy. It is wonderful that teachers
|
|
never run short. I believe there are many boneheads of extraordinary
|
|
patience; but me for something else. In this respect, Kiyo is worthy of
|
|
admiration. She is an old woman, with neither education nor social
|
|
position, but as a human, she does more to command our respect. Until
|
|
now, I have been a trouble to her without appreciating her goodness, but
|
|
having come alone to such a far-off country, I now appreciated, for the
|
|
first time, her kindness. If she is fond of sasa-ame of Echigo province,
|
|
and if I go to Echigo for the purpose of buying that sweetmeat to let
|
|
her eat it, she is fully worth that trouble. Kiyo has been praising me
|
|
as unselfish and straight, but she is a person of sterling qualities far
|
|
more than I whom she praises. I began to feel like meeting her.
|
|
While I was thus meditating about Kiyo, all of a sudden, on the floor
|
|
above my head, about thirty to forty people, if I guess by the number,
|
|
started stamping the floor with bang, bang, bang that well threatened to
|
|
bang down the floor. This was followed by proportionately loud whoops.
|
|
The noise surprised me, and I popped up. The moment I got up I became
|
|
aware that the students were starting a rough house to get even with me.
|
|
What wrong one has committed, he has to confess, or his offence is never
|
|
atoned for. They are just to ask for themselves what crimes they have
|
|
done. It should be proper that they repent their folly after going to
|
|
bed and to come and beg me pardon the next morning. Even if they could
|
|
not go so far as to apologize they should have kept quiet. Then what
|
|
does this racket mean? Where we keeping hogs in our dormitory?
|
|
"This crazy thing got to stop. See what you get!"
|
|
I ran out of the room in my night shirt, and flew upstairs in three and
|
|
half steps. Then, strange to say, thunderous rumbling, of which I was
|
|
sure of hearing in the act, was hushed. Not only a whisper but even
|
|
footsteps were not heard. This was funny. The lamp was already blown
|
|
out and although I could not see what was what in the dark, nevertheless
|
|
could tell by instinct whether there was somebody around or not. In the
|
|
long corridor running from the east to the west, there was not hiding
|
|
even a mouse. From other end of the corridor the moonlight flooded in
|
|
and about there it was particularly light. The scene was somewhat
|
|
uncanny. I have had the habit from my boyhood of frequently dreaming and
|
|
of flying out of bed and of muttering things which nobody understood,
|
|
affording everybody a hearty laugh. One night, when I was sixteen or
|
|
seventeen, I dreamed that I picked up a diamond, and getting up,
|
|
demanded of my brother who was sleeping close to me what he had done
|
|
with that diamond. The demand was made with such force that for about
|
|
three days all in the house chaffed me about the fatal loss of precious
|
|
stone, much to my humiliation. Maybe this noise which I heard was but a
|
|
dream, although I was sure it was real. I was wondering thus in the
|
|
middle of the corridor, when at the further end where it was moonlit, a
|
|
roar was raised, coming from about thirty or forty throats, "One, two,
|
|
three,--Whee-ee!" The roar had hardly subsided, when, as before, the
|
|
stamping of the floor commenced with furious rhythm. Ah, it was not a
|
|
dream, but a real thing!
|
|
"Quit making the noise! 'Tis midnight!"
|
|
I shouted to beat the band, and started in their direction. My passage
|
|
was dark; the moonlight yonder was only my guide. About twelve feet
|
|
past, I stumbled squarely against some hard object; ere the "Ouch!" has
|
|
passed clear up to my head, I was thrown down. I called all kinds of
|
|
gods, but could not run. My mind urged me on to hurry up, but my leg
|
|
would not obey the command. Growing impatient, I hobbled on one foot,
|
|
and found both voice and stamping already ceased and perfectly quiet.
|
|
Men can be cowards but I never expected them capable of becoming such
|
|
dastardly cowards as this. They challenged hogs.
|
|
Now the situation having developed to this pretty mess, I would not give
|
|
it up until I had dragged them out from hiding and forced them to
|
|
apologize. With this determination, I tried to open one of the doors and
|
|
examine inside, but it would not open. It was locked or held fast with a
|
|
pile of tables or something; to my persistent efforts the door stood
|
|
unyielding. Then I tried one across the corridor on the northside, but
|
|
it was also locked. While this irritating attempt at door-opening was
|
|
going on, again on the east end of the corridor the whooping roar and
|
|
rhythmic stamping of feet were heard. The fools at both ends were bent
|
|
on making a goose of me. I realized this, but then I was at a loss what
|
|
to do. I frankly confess that I have not quite as much tact as dashing
|
|
spirit. In such a case I am wholly at the mercy of swaying circumstances
|
|
without my own way of getting through it. Nevertheless, I do not expect
|
|
to play the part of underdog. If I dropped the affair then and there, it
|
|
would reflect upon my dignity. It would be mortifying to have them think
|
|
that they had one on the Tokyo-kid and that Tokyo-kid was wanting in
|
|
tenacity. To have it on record that I had been guyed by these
|
|
insignificant spawn when on night watch, and had to give in to their
|
|
impudence because I could not handle them,--this would be an indelible
|
|
disgrace on my life. Mark ye,--I am descendant of a samurai of the
|
|
"hatamato" class. The blood of the "hatamoto" samurai could be traced to
|
|
Mitsunaka Tada, who in turn could claim still a nobler ancestor. I am
|
|
different from, and nobler than, these manure-smelling louts. The only
|
|
pity is that I am rather short of tact; that I do not know what to do in
|
|
such a case. That is the trouble. But I would not throw up the sponge;
|
|
not on your life! I only do not know how because I am honest. Just
|
|
think,--if the honest does not win, what else is there in this world
|
|
that will win? If I cannot beat them to-night, I will tomorrow; if not
|
|
tomorrow, then the day after tomorrow. If not the day after tomorrow, I
|
|
will sit down right here, get my meals from my home until I beat them.
|
|
Thus resolved, I squatted in the middle of the corridor and waited for
|
|
the dawn. Myriads of mosquitoes swarmed about me, but I did not mind
|
|
them. I felt my leg where I hit it a while ago; it seemed bespattered
|
|
with something greasy. I thought it was bleeding. Let it bleed all it
|
|
cares! Meanwhile, exhausted by these unwonted affairs, I fell asleep.
|
|
When I awoke, up I jumped with a curse. The door on my right was half
|
|
opened, and two students were standing in front of me. The moment I
|
|
recovered my senses from the drowsy lull, I grabbed a leg of one of them
|
|
nearest to me, and yanked it with all my might. He fell down prone. Look
|
|
at what you're getting now! I flew at the other fellow, who was much
|
|
confused; gave him vigorous shaking twice or thrice, and he only kept
|
|
open his bewildering eyes.
|
|
"Come up to my room." Evidently they were mollycoddles, for they obeyed
|
|
my command without a murmur. The day had become already clear.
|
|
I began questioning those two in my room, but,--you cannot pound out the
|
|
leopard's spots no matter how you may try,--they seemed determined to
|
|
push it through by an insistent declaration of "not guilty," that they
|
|
would not confess. While this questioning was going on, the students
|
|
upstairs came down, one by one, and began congregating in my room. I
|
|
noticed all their eyes were swollen from want of sleep.
|
|
"Blooming nice faces you got for not sleeping only one night. And you
|
|
call yourselves men! Go, wash your face and come back to hear what I've
|
|
got to tell you."
|
|
I hurled this shot at them, but none of them went to wash his face. For
|
|
about one hour, I had been talking and back-talking with about fifty
|
|
students when suddenly Badger put in his appearance. I heard afterward
|
|
that the janitor ran to Badger for the purpose of reporting to him that
|
|
there was a trouble in the school. What a weak-knee of the janitor to
|
|
fetch the principal for so trifling an affair as this! No wonder he
|
|
cannot see better times than a janitor.
|
|
The principal listened to my explanation, and also to brief remarks from
|
|
the students. "Attend school as usual till further notice. Hurry up with
|
|
washing your face and breakfast; there isn't much time left." So the
|
|
principal let go all the students. Decidedly slow way of handling, this.
|
|
If I were the principal, I would expel them right away. It is because
|
|
the school accords them such luke-warm treatment that they get "fresh"
|
|
and start "guying" the night watch.
|
|
He said to me that it must have been trying on my nerves, and that
|
|
I might be tired, and also that I need not teach that day. To this
|
|
I replied:
|
|
"No, Sir, no worrying at all. Such things may happen every night,
|
|
but it would not disturb me in the least as long as I breathe. I
|
|
will do the teaching. If I were not able to teach on account of lack
|
|
of sleep for only one single night, I would make a rebate of my
|
|
salary to the school."
|
|
I do not know how this impressed him, but he gazed at me for a while,
|
|
and called my attention to the fact that my face was rather swollen.
|
|
Indeed, I felt it heavy. Besides, it itched all over. I was sure the
|
|
mosquitoes must have stung me there to their hearts' content. I
|
|
further added:
|
|
"My face may be swollen, but I can talk all right; so I will teach;"
|
|
thus scratching my face with some warmth. The principal smiled and
|
|
remarked, "Well, you have the strength." To tell the truth, he did not
|
|
intend remark to be a compliment, but, I think, a sneer.
|
|
CHAPTER V.
|
|
"Won't you go fishing?" asked Red Shirt He talks in a strangely womanish
|
|
voice. One would not be able to tell whether he was a man or a woman. As
|
|
a man he should talk like one. Is he not a college graduate? I can talk
|
|
man-like enough, and am a graduate from a school of physics at that. It
|
|
is a shame for a B.A. to have such a squeak.
|
|
I answered with the smallest enthusiasm, whereupon he further asked me
|
|
an impolite question if I ever did fishing. I told him not much, that I
|
|
once caught three gibels when I was a boy, at a fishing game pond at
|
|
Koume, and that I also caught a carp about eight inches long, at a
|
|
similar game at the festival of Bishamon at Kagurazaka;--the carp, just
|
|
as I was coaxing it out of the water, splashed back into it, and when I
|
|
think of the incident I feel mortified at the loss even now. Red Shirt
|
|
stuck out his chin and laughed "ho, ho." Why could he not laugh just
|
|
like an ordinary person? "Then you are not well acquainted with the
|
|
spirit of the game," he cried. "I'll show you if you like." He seemed
|
|
highly elated.
|
|
Not for me! I take it this way that generally those who are fond of
|
|
fishing or shooting have cruel hearts. Otherwise, there is no reason why
|
|
they could derive pleasure in murdering innocent creatures. Surely, fish
|
|
and birds would prefer living to getting killed. Except those who make
|
|
fishing or shooting their calling, it is nonsense for those who are well
|
|
off to say that they cannot sleep well unless they seek the lives of
|
|
fish or birds. This was the way I looked at the question, but as he was
|
|
a B. A. and would have a better command of language when it came to
|
|
talking, I kept mum, knowing he would beat me in argument. Red Shirt
|
|
mistook my silence for my surrender, and began to induce me to join him
|
|
right away, saying he would show me some fish and I should come with him
|
|
if I was not busy, because he and Mr. Yoshikawa were lonesome when
|
|
alone. Mr. Yoshikawa is the teacher of drawing whom I had nicknamed
|
|
Clown. I don't know what's in the mind of this Clown, but he was a
|
|
constant visitor at the house of Red Shirt, and wherever he went, Clown
|
|
was sure to be trailing after him. They appeared more like master and
|
|
servant than two fellow teachers. As Clown used to follow Red Shirt like
|
|
a shadow, it would be natural to see them go off together now, but when
|
|
those two alone would have been well off, why should they invite
|
|
me,--this brusque, unaesthetic fellow,--was hard to understand.
|
|
Probably, vain of his fishing ability, he desired to show his skill, but
|
|
he aimed at the wrong mark, if that was his intention, as nothing of the
|
|
kind would touch me. I would not be chagrined if he fishes out two or
|
|
three tunnies. I am a man myself and poor though I may be in the art, I
|
|
would hook something if I dropped a line. If I declined his invitation,
|
|
Red Shirt would suspect that I refused not because of my lack of
|
|
interest in the game but because of my want of skill of fishing. I
|
|
weighed the matter thus, and accepted his invitation. After the school,
|
|
I returned home and got ready, and having joined Red Shirt and Clown at
|
|
the station, we three started to the shore. There was only one boatman
|
|
to row; the boat was long and narrow, a kind we do not have in Tokyo. I
|
|
looked for fishing rods but could find none.
|
|
"How can we fish without rods? How are we going to manage it?" I asked
|
|
Clown and he told me with the air of a professional fisherman that no
|
|
rods were needed in the deep-sea fishing, but only lines. I had better
|
|
not asked him if I was to be talked down in this way.
|
|
The boatman was rowing very slowly, but his skill was something
|
|
wonderful. We had already come far out to sea, and on turning back, saw
|
|
the shore minimized, fading in far distance. The five-storied pagoda of
|
|
Tosho Temple appeared above the surrounding woods like a needle-point.
|
|
Yonder stood Aoshima (Blue Island). Nobody was living on this island
|
|
which a closer view showed to be covered with stones and pine trees. No
|
|
wonder no one could live there. Red Shirt was intently surveying about
|
|
and praising the general view as fine. Clown also termed it "an
|
|
absolutely fine view." I don't know whether it is so fine as to be
|
|
absolute, but there was no doubt as to the exhilarating air. I realized
|
|
it as the best tonic to be thus blown by the fresh sea breeze upon a
|
|
wide expanse of water. I felt hungry.
|
|
"Look at that pine; its trunk is straight and spreads its top branches
|
|
like an umbrella. Isn't it a Turnersque picture?" said Red Shirt. "Yes,
|
|
just like Turner's," responded Clown, "Isn't the way it curves just
|
|
elegant? Exactly the touch of Turner," he added with some show of pride.
|
|
I didn't know what Turner was, but as I could get along without knowing
|
|
it, I kept silent. The boat turned to the left with the island on the
|
|
right. The sea was so perfectly calm as to tempt one to think he was not
|
|
on the deep sea. The pleasant occasion was a credit to Red Shirt. As I
|
|
wished, if possible, to land on the island, I asked the boatman if our
|
|
boat could not be made to it. Upon this Red Shirt objected, saying that
|
|
we could do so but it was not advisable to go too close the shore for
|
|
fishing. I kept still for a while. Then Clown made the unlooked-for
|
|
proposal that the island be named Turner Island. "That's good; We shall
|
|
call it so hereafter," seconded Red Shirt. If I was included in that
|
|
"We," it was something I least cared for. Aoshima was good enough for
|
|
me. "By the way, how would it look," said Clown, "if we place Madonna by
|
|
Raphael upon that rock? It would make a fine picture."
|
|
"Let's quit talking about Madonna, ho, ho, ho," and Red Shirt emitted a
|
|
spooky laugh.
|
|
"That's all right. Nobody's around," remarked Clown as he glanced at me,
|
|
and turning his face to other direction significantly, smiled
|
|
devilishly. I felt sickened.
|
|
As it was none of my business whether it was a Madonna or a kodanna
|
|
(young master), they let pose there any old way, but it was vulgar to
|
|
feign assurance that one's subject is in no danger of being understood
|
|
so long as others did not know the subject. Clown claims himself as a
|
|
Yedo kid. I thought that the person called Madonna was no other than a
|
|
favorite geisha of Red Shirt. I should smile at the idea of his gazing
|
|
at his tootsy-wootsy standing beneath a pine tree. It would be better
|
|
if Clown would make an oil painting of the scene and exhibit it for
|
|
the public.
|
|
"This will be about the best place." So saying the boatman stopped
|
|
rowing the boat and dropped an anchor.
|
|
"How deep is it?" asked Red Shirt, and was told about six fathoms.
|
|
"Hard to fish sea-breams in six fathoms," said Red Shirt as he dropped a
|
|
line into the water. The old sport appeared to expect to fetch some
|
|
bream. Bravo!
|
|
"It wouldn't be hard for you. Besides it is calm," Clown fawningly
|
|
remarked, and he too dropped a line. The line had only a tiny bit of
|
|
lead that looked like a weight. It had no float. To fish without a float
|
|
seemed as nearly reasonable as to measure the heat without a
|
|
thermometer, which was something impossible for me. So I looked on. They
|
|
then told me to start, and asked me if I had any line. I told them I had
|
|
more than I could use, but that I had no float.
|
|
"To say that one is unable to fish without a float shows that he is a
|
|
novice," piped up Clown.
|
|
"See? When the line touches the bottom, you just manage it with your
|
|
finger on the edge. If a fish bites, you could tell in a minute. There
|
|
it goes," and Red Shirt hastily started taking out the line. I wondered
|
|
what he had got, but I saw no fish, only the bait was gone. Ha, good for
|
|
you, Gov'nur!
|
|
"Wasn't it too bad! I'm sure it was a big one. If you miss that way,
|
|
with your ability, we would have to keep a sharper watch to-day. But,
|
|
say, even if we miss the fish, it's far better than staring at a float,
|
|
isn't it? Just like saying he can't ride a bike without a brake." Clown
|
|
has been getting rather gay, and I was almost tempted to swat him. I'm
|
|
just as good as they are. The sea isn't leased by Red Shirt, and there
|
|
might be one obliging bonito which might get caught by my line. I
|
|
dropped my line then, and toyed it with my finger carelessly.
|
|
After a while something shook my line with successive jerks. I thought
|
|
it must be a fish. Unless it was something living, it would not give
|
|
that tremulous shaking. Good! I have it, and I commenced drawing in the
|
|
line, while Clown jibed me "What? Caught one already? Very remarkable,
|
|
indeed!" I had drawn in nearly all the line, leaving only about five
|
|
feet in the water. I peeped over and saw a fish that looked like a gold
|
|
fish with stripes was coming up swimming to right and left. It was
|
|
interesting. On taking it out of the water, it wriggled and jumped, and
|
|
covered my face with water. After some effort, I had it and tried to
|
|
detach the hook, but it would not come out easily. My hands became
|
|
greasy and the sense was anything but pleasing. I was irritated; I swung
|
|
the line and banged the fish against the bottom of the boat. It speedily
|
|
died. Red Shirt and Clown watched me with surprise. I washed my hands in
|
|
the water but they still smelled "fishy." No more for me! I don't care
|
|
what fish I might get, I don't want to grab a fish. And I presume the
|
|
fish doesn't want to be grabbed either. I hastily rolled up the line.
|
|
"Splendid for the first honor, but that's goruki," Clown again made a
|
|
"fresh" remark.
|
|
"Goruki sounds like the name of a Russian literator," said Red Shirt.
|
|
"Yes, just like a Russian literator," Clown at once seconded Red Shirt.
|
|
Gorky for a Russian literator, Maruki a photographer of Shibaku, and
|
|
komeno-naruki (rice) a life-giver, eh? This Red Shirt has a bad hobby of
|
|
marshalling before anybody the name of foreigners. Everybody has his
|
|
specialty. How could a teacher of mathematics like me tell whether it is
|
|
a Gorky or shariki (rikishaman). Red Shirt should have been a little
|
|
more considerate. And if he wants to mention such names at all, let him
|
|
mention "Autobiography of Ben Franklin," or "Pushing to the Front," or
|
|
something we all know. Red Shirt has been seen once in a while bringing
|
|
a magazine with a red cover entitled Imperial Literature to the school
|
|
and poring over it with reverence. I heard it from Porcupine that Red
|
|
Shirt gets his supply of all foreign names from that magazine. Well, I
|
|
should say!
|
|
For some time, Red Shirt and Clown fished assiduously and within about
|
|
an hour they caught about fifteen fish. The funny part of it was that
|
|
all they caught were goruki; of sea-bream there was not a sign.
|
|
"This is a day of bumper crop of Russian literature," Red Shirt said,
|
|
and Clown answered:
|
|
"When one as skilled as you gets nothing but goruki, it's natural for me
|
|
to get nothing else."
|
|
The boatman told me that this small-sized fish goruki has too many
|
|
tiny bones and tastes too poor to be fit for eating, but they could be
|
|
used for fertilising. So Red Shirt and Clown were fishing fertilisers
|
|
with vim and vigor. As for me, one goruki was enough and I laid down
|
|
myself on the bottom, and looked up at the sky. This was far more
|
|
dandy than fishing.
|
|
Then the two began whispering. I could not hear well, nor did I care to.
|
|
I was looking up at the sky and thinking about Kiyo. If I had enough of
|
|
money, I thought, and came with Kiyo to such a picturesque place, how
|
|
joyous it would be. No matter how picturesque the scene might be, it
|
|
would be flat in the company of Clown or of his kind. Kiyo is a poor
|
|
wrinkled woman, but I am not ashamed to take her to any old place. Clown
|
|
or his likes, even in a Victoria or a yacht, or in a sky-high position,
|
|
would not be worthy to come within her shadow. If I were the head
|
|
teacher, and Red Shirt I, Clown would be sure to fawn on me and jeer at
|
|
Red Shirt. They say Yedo kids are flippant. Indeed, if a fellow like
|
|
Clown was to travel the country and repeatedly declare "I am a Yedo
|
|
kid," no wonder the country folk would decide that the flippant are Yedo
|
|
kids and Yedo kids are flippant. While I was meditating like this, I
|
|
heard suppressed laughter. Between their laughs they talked something,
|
|
but I could not make out what they were talking about. "Eh? I don't
|
|
know......" "...... That's true ...... he doesn't know ...... isn't it
|
|
pity, though ......." "Can that be......." "With grasshoppers ......
|
|
that's a fact."
|
|
I did not listen to what they were talking, but when I heard Clown say
|
|
"grasshoppers," I cocked my ear instinctively. Clown emphasized, for
|
|
what reason I do not know the word "grasshopers" so that it would be
|
|
sure to reach my ear plainly, and he blurred the rest on purpose. I did
|
|
not move, and kept on listening. "That same old Hotta," "that may be the
|
|
case...." "Tempura ...... ha, ha, ha ......" "...... incited ......"
|
|
"...... dango also? ......"
|
|
The words were thus choppy, but judging by their saying "grasshoppers,"
|
|
"tempura" or "dango," I was sure they were secretly talking something
|
|
about me. If they wanted to talk, they should do it louder. If they
|
|
wanted to discuss something secret, why in thunder did they invite me?
|
|
What damnable blokes! Grasshoppers or glass-stoppers, I was not in the
|
|
wrong; I have kept quiet to save the face of Badger because the
|
|
principle asked me to leave the matter to him. Clown has been making
|
|
unnecessary criticisms; out with your old paint-brushes there! Whatever
|
|
concerns me, I will settle it myself sooner or later, and they had just
|
|
to keep off my toes. But remarks such as "the same old Hotta" or "......
|
|
incited ......" worried me a bit. I could not make out whether they
|
|
meant that Hotta incited me to extend the circle of the trouble, or that
|
|
he incited the students to get at me. As I gazed at the blue sky, the
|
|
sunlight gradually waned and chilly winds commenced stirring. The clouds
|
|
that resembled the streaky smokes of joss sticks were slowly extending
|
|
over a clear sky, and by degrees they were absorbed, melted and changed
|
|
to a faint fog.
|
|
"Well, let's be going," said Red Shirt suddenly. "Yes, this is the time
|
|
we were going. See your Madonna to-night?" responded Clown. "Cut out
|
|
nonsense ...... might mean a serious trouble," said Red Shirt who was
|
|
reclining against the edge of the boat, now raising himself. "O, that's
|
|
all right if he hears.......," and when Clown, so saying, turned himself
|
|
my way, I glared squarely in his face. Clown turned back as if to keep
|
|
away from a dazzling light, and with "Ha, this is going some," shrugged
|
|
his shoulders and scratched his head.
|
|
The boat was now being rowed shore-ward over the calm sea. "You don't
|
|
seem much fond of fishing," asked Red Shirt. "No, I'd rather prefer
|
|
lying and looking at the sky," I answered, and threw the stub of
|
|
cigarette I had been smoking into the water; it sizzled and floated on
|
|
the waves parted by the oar.
|
|
"The students are all glad because you have come. So we want you do your
|
|
best." Red Shirt this time started something quite alien to fishing. "I
|
|
don't think they are," I said. "Yes; I don't mean it as flattery. They
|
|
are, sure. Isn't it so, Mr. Yoshikawa?"
|
|
"I should say they are. They're crazy over it," said Clown with an
|
|
unctuous smile. Strange that whatever Clown says, it makes me itching
|
|
mad. "But, if you don't look out, there is danger," warned Red Shirt.
|
|
"I am fully prepared for all dangers," I replied. In fact, I had made up
|
|
my mind either to get fired or to make all the students in the dormitory
|
|
apologize to me.
|
|
"If you talk that way, that cuts everything out. Really, as a head
|
|
teacher, I've been considering what is good for you, and wouldn't like
|
|
you to mistake it."
|
|
"The head teacher is really your friend. And I'm doing what I can for
|
|
you, though mighty little, because you and I are Yedo kids, and I would
|
|
like to have you stay with us as long as possible and we can help each
|
|
other." So said Clown and it sounded almost human. I would sooner hang
|
|
myself than to get helped by Clown.
|
|
"And the students are all glad because you had come, but there are many
|
|
circumstances," continued Red Shirt. "You may feel angry sometimes but
|
|
be patient for the present, and I will never do anything to hurt your
|
|
interests."
|
|
"You say 'many circumstances'; what are they?"
|
|
"They're rather complicated. Well, they'll be clear to you by and by.
|
|
You'll understand them naturally without my talking them over. What do
|
|
you say, Mr. Yoshikawa?"
|
|
"Yes, they're pretty complicated; hard to get them cleared up in a
|
|
jiffy. But they'll become clear by-the-bye. Will be understood naturally
|
|
without my explaining them," Clown echoed Red Shirt.
|
|
"If they're such a bother, I don't mind not hearing them. I only asked
|
|
you because you sprang the subject."
|
|
"That's right. I may seem irresponsible in not concluding the thing I
|
|
had started. Then this much I'll tell you. I mean no offense, but you
|
|
are fresh from school, and teaching is a new experience. And a school is
|
|
a place where somewhat complicated private circumstances are common and
|
|
one cannot do everything straight and simple".
|
|
"If can't get it through straight and simple, how does it go?"
|
|
"Well, there you are so straight as that. As I was saying, you're short
|
|
of experience........"
|
|
"I should be. As I wrote it down in my record-sheet, I'm 23 years and
|
|
four months."
|
|
"That's it. So you'd be done by some one in unexpected quarter."
|
|
"I'm not afraid who might do me as long as I'm honest."
|
|
"Certainly not. No need be afraid, but I do say you look sharp; your
|
|
predecessor was done."
|
|
I noticed Clown had become quiet, and turning round, saw him at the
|
|
stern talking with the boatman. Without Clown, I found our conversation
|
|
running smoothly.
|
|
"By whom was my predecessor done?"
|
|
"If I point out the name, it would reflect on the honor of that person,
|
|
so I can't mention it. Besides there is no evidence to prove it and I
|
|
may be in a bad fix if I say it. At any rate, since you're here, my
|
|
efforts will prove nothing if you fail. Keep a sharp look-out, please."
|
|
"You say look-out, but I can't be more watchful than I'm now. If I don't
|
|
do anything wrong, after all, that's all right isn't it?"
|
|
Red Shirt laughed. I did not remember having said anything provocative
|
|
of laughter. Up to this very minute, I have been firm in my conviction
|
|
that I'm right. When I come to consider the situation, it appears that a
|
|
majority of people are encouraging others to become bad. They seem to
|
|
believe that one must do wrong in order to succeed. If they happen to
|
|
see some one honest and pure, they sneer at him as "Master Darling" or
|
|
"kiddy." What's the use then of the instructors of ethics at grammar
|
|
schools or middle schools teaching children not to tell a lie or to be
|
|
honest. Better rather make a bold departure and teach at schools the
|
|
gentle art of lying or the trick of distrusting others, or show pupils
|
|
how to do others. That would be beneficial for the person thus taught
|
|
and for the public as well. When Red Shirt laughed, he laughed at my
|
|
simplicity. My word! what chances have the simple-hearted or the pure in
|
|
a society where they are made objects of contempt! Kiyo would never
|
|
laugh at such a time; she would listen with profound respect. Kiyo is
|
|
far superior to Red Shirt.
|
|
"Of course, that't all right as long as you don't do anything wrong. But
|
|
although you may not do anything wrong, they will do you just the same
|
|
unless you can see the wrong of others. There are fellows you have got
|
|
to watch,--the fellows who may appear off-hand, simple and so kind as to
|
|
get boarding house for you...... Getting rather cold. 'Tis already
|
|
autumn, isn't it. The beach looks beer-color in the fog. A fine view.
|
|
Say, Mr. Yoshikawa, what do you think of the scene along the
|
|
beach?......" This in a loud voice was addressed to Clown.
|
|
"Indeed, this is a fine view. I'd get a sketch of it if I had time.
|
|
Seems a pity to leave it there," answered Clown.
|
|
A light was seen upstairs at Minato-ya, and just as the whistle of a
|
|
train was sounded, our boat pushed its nose deep into the sand. "Well,
|
|
so you're back early," courtesied the wife of the boatman as she stepped
|
|
upon the sand. I stood on the edge of the boat; and whoop! I jumped out
|
|
to the beach.
|
|
CHAPTER VI.
|
|
I heartily despise Clown. It would be beneficial for Japan if such a
|
|
fellow were tied to a quernstone and dumped into the sea. As to Red
|
|
Shirt, his voice did not suit my fancy. I believe he suppresses his
|
|
natural tones to put on airs and assume genteel manner. He may put on
|
|
all kinds of airs, but nothing good will come of it with that type of
|
|
face. If anything falls in love with him, perhaps the Madonna will be
|
|
about the limit. As a head-teacher, however, he is more serious than
|
|
Clown. As he did not say definitely, I cannot get to the point, but it
|
|
appears that he warned me to look-out for Porcupine as he is crooked. If
|
|
that was the case, he should have declared it like a man. And if
|
|
Porcupine is so bad a teacher as that, it would be better to discharge
|
|
him. What a lack of backbone for a head teacher and a Bachelor of Arts!
|
|
As he is a fellow so cautious as to be unable to mention the name of the
|
|
other even in a whisper, he is surely a mollycoddle. All mollycoddles
|
|
are kind, and that Red Shirt may be as kind as a woman. His kindness is
|
|
one thing, and his voice quite another, and it would be wrong to
|
|
disregard his kindness on account of his voice. But then, isn't this
|
|
world a funny place! The fellow I don't like is kind to me, and the
|
|
friend whom I like is crooked,--how absurd! Probably everything here
|
|
goes in opposite directions as it is in the country, the contrary holds
|
|
in Tokyo. A dangerous place, this. By degrees, fires may get frozen and
|
|
custard pudding petrified. But it is hardly believable that Porcupine
|
|
would incite the students, although he might do most anything he wishes
|
|
as he is best liked among them. Instead of taking in so roundabout a
|
|
way, in the first place, it would have saved him a lot of trouble if he
|
|
came direct to me and got at me for a fight. If I am in his way, he had
|
|
better tell me so, and ask me to resign because I am in his way. There
|
|
is nothing that cannot be settled by talking it over. If what he says
|
|
sounds reasonable, I would resign even tomorrow. This is not the only
|
|
town where I can get bread and butter; I ought not to die homeless
|
|
wherever I go. I thought Porcupine was a better sport.
|
|
When I came here, Porcupine was the first to treat me to ice water. To
|
|
be treated by such a fellow, even if it is so trifling a thing as ice
|
|
water, affects my honor. I had only one glass then and had him pay only
|
|
one sen and a half. But one sen or half sen, I shall not die in peace if
|
|
I accept a favor from a swindler. I will pay it back tomorrow when I go
|
|
to the school. I borrowed three yen from Kiyo. That three yen is not
|
|
paid yet to-day, though it is five years since. Not that I could not
|
|
pay, but that I did not want to. Kiyo never looks to my pocket thinking
|
|
I shall pay it back by-the-bye. Not by any means. I myself do not expect
|
|
to fulfill cold obligation like a stranger by meditating on returning
|
|
it. The more I worry about paying it back, the more I may be doubting
|
|
the honest heart of Kiyo. It would be the same as traducing her pure
|
|
mind. I have not paid her back that three yen not because I regard her
|
|
lightly, but because I regard her as part of myself. Kiyo and Porcupine
|
|
cannot be compared, of course, but whether it be ice water or tea, the
|
|
fact that I accept another's favor without saying anything is an act of
|
|
good-will, taking the other on his par value, as a decent fellow.
|
|
Instead of chipping in my share, and settling each account, to receive
|
|
munificence with grateful mind is an acknowledgment which no amount of
|
|
money can purchase. I have neither title nor official position but I am
|
|
an independent fellow, and to have an independent fellow kowtow to you
|
|
in acknowledgment of the favor you extend him should be considered as
|
|
far more than a return acknowledgment with a million yen. I made
|
|
Porcupine blow one sen and a half, and gave him my gratitude which is
|
|
more costly than a million yen. He ought to have been thankful for that.
|
|
And then what an outrageous fellow to plan a cowardly action behind my
|
|
back! I will give him back that one sen and a half tomorrow, and all
|
|
will be square. Then I will land him one. When I thought thus far, I
|
|
felt sleepy and slept like a log. The next day, as I had something in my
|
|
mind, I went to the school earlier than usual and waited for Porcupine,
|
|
but he did not appear for a considerable time. "Confucius" was there, so
|
|
was Clown, and finally Red Shirt, but for Porcupine there was a piece of
|
|
chalk on his desk but the owner was not there. I had been thinking of
|
|
paying that one sen and a half as soon as I entered the room, and had
|
|
brought the coppers to the school grasped in my hand. My hands get
|
|
easily sweaty, and when I opened my hand, I found them wet. Thinking
|
|
that Porcupine might say something if wet coins were given him, I placed
|
|
them upon my desk, and cooled them by blowing in them. Then Red Shirt
|
|
came to me and said he was sorry to detain me yesterday, thought I have
|
|
been annoyed. I told him I was not annoyed at all, only I was hungry.
|
|
Thereupon Red Shirt put his elbows upon the desk, brought his
|
|
sauce-pan-like face close to my nose, and said; "Say, keep dark what I
|
|
told you yesterday in the boat. You haven't told it anybody, have you?"
|
|
He seems quite a nervous fellow as becoming one who talks in a feminish
|
|
voice. It was certain that I had not told it to anybody, but as I was in
|
|
the mood to tell it and had already one sen and a half in my hand, I
|
|
would be a little rattled if a gag was put on me. To the devil with Red
|
|
Shirt! Although he had not mentioned the name "Porcupine," he had given
|
|
me such pointers as to put me wise as to who the objective was, and now
|
|
he requested me not to blow the gaff!--it was an irresponsibility least
|
|
to be expected from a head teacher. In the ordinary run of things, he
|
|
should step into the thick of the fight between Porcupine and me, and
|
|
side with me with all his colors flying. By so doing, he might be worthy
|
|
the position of the head teacher, and vindicate the principle of wearing
|
|
red shirts.
|
|
I told the head teacher that I had not divulged the secret to anybody
|
|
but was going to fight it out with Porcupine. Red Shirt was greatly
|
|
perturbed, and stuttered out; "Say, don't do anything so rash as that. I
|
|
don't remember having stated anything plainly to you about Mr.
|
|
Hotta....... if you start a scrimmage here, I'll be greatly
|
|
embarrassed." And he asked the strangely outlandish question if I had
|
|
come to the school to start trouble? Of course not, I said, the school
|
|
would not stand for my making trouble and pay me salary for it. Red
|
|
Shirt then, perspiring, begged me to keep the secret as mere reference
|
|
and never mention it. "All right, then," I assured him, "this robs me
|
|
shy, but since you're so afraid of it, I'll keep it all to myself." "Are
|
|
you sure?" repeated Red Shirt. There was no limit to his womanishness.
|
|
If Red Shirt was typical of Bachelors of Arts, I did not see much in
|
|
them. He appeared composed after having requested me to do something
|
|
self-contradictory and wanting logic, and on top of that suspects my
|
|
sincerity.
|
|
"Don't you mistake," I said to myself, "I'm a man to the marrow, and
|
|
haven't the idea of breaking my own promises; mark that!"
|
|
Meanwhile the occupants of the desks on both my sides came to the room,
|
|
and Red Shirt hastily withdrew to his own desk. Red Shirt shows some air
|
|
even in his walk. In stepping about the room, he places down his shoes
|
|
so as to make no sound. For the first time I came to know that making no
|
|
sound in one's walk was something satisfactory to one's vanity. He was
|
|
not training himself for a burglar, I suppose. He should cut out such
|
|
nonsense before it gets worse. Then the bugle for the opening of classes
|
|
was heard. Porcupine did not appear after all. There was no other way
|
|
but to leave the coins upon the desk and attend the class.
|
|
When I returned to the room a little late after the first hour class,
|
|
all the teachers were there at their desks, and Porcupine too was
|
|
there. The moment Porcupine saw my face, he said that he was late on
|
|
my account, and I should pay him a fine. I took out that one sen and a
|
|
half, and saying it was the price of the ice water, shoved it on his
|
|
desk and told him to take it. "Don't josh me," he said, and began
|
|
laughing, but as I appeared unusually serious, he swept the coins back
|
|
to my desk, and flung back, "Quit fooling." So he really meant to
|
|
treat me, eh?
|
|
"No fooling; I mean it," I said. "I have no reason to accept your treat,
|
|
and that's why I pay you back. Why don't you take it?"
|
|
"If you're so worried about that one sen and a half, I will take it, but
|
|
why do you pay it at this time so suddenly?"
|
|
"This time or any time, I want to pay it back. I pay it back because I
|
|
don't like you treat me."
|
|
Porcupine coldly gazed at me and ejaculated "H'm." If I had not been
|
|
requested by Red Shirt, here was the chance to show up his cowardice and
|
|
make it hot for him. But since I had promised not to reveal the secret,
|
|
I could do nothing. What the deuce did he mean by "H'm" when I was red
|
|
with anger.
|
|
"I'll take the price of the ice water, but I want you leave your
|
|
boarding house."
|
|
"Take that coin; that's all there is to it. To leave or not,--that's my
|
|
pleasure."
|
|
"But that is not your pleasure. The boss of your boarding house came to
|
|
me yesterday and wanted me to tell you leave the house, and when I heard
|
|
his explanation, what he said was reasonable. And I dropped there on my
|
|
way here this morning to hear more details and make sure of everything."
|
|
What Porcupine was trying to get at was all dark to me.
|
|
"I don't care a snap what the boss was damn well pleased to tell you," I
|
|
cried. "What do you mean by deciding everything by yourself! If there is
|
|
any reason, tell me first. What's the matter with you, deciding what the
|
|
boss says is reasonable without hearing me."
|
|
"Then you shall hear," he said. "You're too tough and been regarded
|
|
a nuisance over there. Say, the wife of a boarding house is a wife,
|
|
not a maid, and you've been such a four-flusher as to make her wipe
|
|
your feet."
|
|
"When did I make her wipe my feet?" I asked.
|
|
"I don't know whether you did or did not, but anyway they're pretty sore
|
|
about you. He said he can make ten or fifteen yen easily if he sell a
|
|
roll of panel-picture."
|
|
"Damn the chap! Why did he take me for a boarder then!"
|
|
"I don't know why. They took you but they want you leave because they
|
|
got tired of you. So you'd better get out."
|
|
"Sure, I will. Who'd stay in such a house even if they beg me on their
|
|
knees. You're insolent to have induced me to go to such a false accuser
|
|
in the first place."
|
|
"Might be either I'm insolent or you're tough." Porcupine is no less
|
|
hot-tempered than I am, and spoke with equally loud voice. All the other
|
|
teachers in the room, surprised, wondering what has happened, looked in
|
|
our direction and craned their necks. I was not conscious of having done
|
|
anything to be ashamed of, so I stood up and looked around. Clown alone
|
|
was laughing amused. The moment he met my glaring stare as if to say
|
|
"You too want to fight?" he suddenly assumed a grave face and became
|
|
serious. He seemed to be a little cowed. Meanwhile the bugle was heard,
|
|
and Porcupine and I stopped the quarrel and went to the class rooms.
|
|
In the afternoon, a meeting of the teachers was going to be held to
|
|
discuss the question of punishment of those students in the dormitory
|
|
who offended me the other night. This meeting was a thing I had to
|
|
attend for the first time in my life, and I was totally ignorant about
|
|
it. Probably it was where the teachers gathered to blow about their own
|
|
opinions and the principal bring them to compromise somehow. To
|
|
compromise is a method used when no decision can be delivered as to the
|
|
right or wrong of either side. It seemed to me a waste of time to hold a
|
|
meeting over an affair in which the guilt of the other side was plain as
|
|
daylight. No matter who tried to twist it round, there was no ground for
|
|
doubting the facts. It would have been better if the principal had
|
|
decided at once on such a plain case; he is surely wanting in decision.
|
|
If all principals are like this, a principal is a synonym of a
|
|
"dilly-dally."
|
|
The meeting hall was a long, narrow room next to that of the principal,
|
|
and was used for dining room. About twenty chairs, with black leather
|
|
seat, were lined around a narrow table, and the whole scene looked like
|
|
a restaurant in Kanda. At one end of the table the principal took his
|
|
seat, and next to him Red Shirt. All the rest shifted for themselves,
|
|
but the gymnasium teacher is said always to take the seat farthest down
|
|
out of modesty. The situation was new to me, so I sat down between the
|
|
teachers of natural history and of Confucius. Across the table sat
|
|
Porcupine and Clown. Think how I might, the face of Clown was a
|
|
degrading type. That of Porcupine was far more charming, even if I was
|
|
now on bad terms with him. The panel picture which hung in the alcove of
|
|
the reception hall of Yogen temple where I went to the funeral of my
|
|
father, looked exactly like this Porcupine. A priest told me the picture
|
|
was the face of a strange creature called Idaten. To-day he was pretty
|
|
sore, and frequently stared at me with his fiery eyes rolling. "You
|
|
can't bulldoze me with that," I thought, and rolled my own in defiance
|
|
and stared back at him. My eyes are not well-shaped but their large size
|
|
is seldom beaten by others. Kiyo even once suggested that I should make
|
|
a fine actor because I had big eyes.
|
|
"All now here?" asked the principal, and the clerk named Kawamura
|
|
counted one, two, three and one was short. "Just one more," said the
|
|
clerk, and it ought to be; Hubbard Squash was not there. I don't know
|
|
what affinity there is between Hubbard Squash and me, but I can never
|
|
forget his face. When I come to the teachers' room, his face attracts me
|
|
first; while walking out in the street, his manners are recalled to my
|
|
mind. When I go to the hot springs, sometimes I meet him with a
|
|
pale-face in the bath, and if I hallooed to him, he would raise his
|
|
trembling head, making me feel sorry for him. In the school there is no
|
|
teacher so quiet as he. He seldom, if ever, laughs or talks. I knew the
|
|
word "gentleman" from books, and thought it was found only in the
|
|
dictionary, but not a thing alive. But since I met Hubbard Squash, I was
|
|
impressed for the first time that the word represented a real substance.
|
|
As he is a man so attached to me, I had noticed his absence as soon as I
|
|
entered the meeting hall. To tell the truth, I came to the hall with the
|
|
intention of sitting next to him. The principal said that the absentee
|
|
may appear shortly, and untied a package he had before him, taking out
|
|
some hectograph sheets and began reading them. Red Shirt began polishing
|
|
his amber pipe with a silk handkerchief. This was his hobby, which was
|
|
probably becoming to him. Others whispered with their neighbors. Still
|
|
others were writing nothings upon the table with the erasers at the end
|
|
of their pencils. Clown talked to Porcupine once in a while, but he was
|
|
not responsive. He only said "Umh" or "Ahm," and stared at me with
|
|
wrathful eyes. I stared back with equal ferocity.
|
|
Then the tardy Hubbard Squash apologetically entered, and politely
|
|
explained that he was unavoidably detained. "Well, then the meeting is
|
|
called to order," said Badger. On these sheets was printed, first the
|
|
question of the punishment of the offending students, second that of
|
|
superintending the students, and two or three other matters. Badger,
|
|
putting on airs as usual, as if he was an incarnation of education,
|
|
spoke to the following effect.
|
|
"Any misdeeds or faults among the teachers or the students in this
|
|
school are due to the lack of virtues in my person, and whenever
|
|
anything happens, I inwardly feel ashamed that a man like me could hold
|
|
his position. Unfortunately such an affair has taken place again, and I
|
|
have to apologize from my heart. But since it has happened, it cannot be
|
|
helped; we must settle it one way or other. The facts are as you already
|
|
know, and I ask you gentlemen to state frankly the best means by which
|
|
the affair may be settled."
|
|
When I heard the principal speak, I was impressed that indeed the
|
|
principal, or Badger, was saying something "grand." If the principal was
|
|
willing to assume all responsibilities, saying it was his fault or his
|
|
lack of virtues, it would have been better stop punishing the students
|
|
and get himself fired first. Then there will be no need of holding such
|
|
thing as a meeting. In the first place, just consider it by common
|
|
sense. I was doing my night duty right, and the students started
|
|
trouble. The wrong doer is neither the principal nor I. If Porcupine
|
|
incited them, then it would be enough to get rid of the students and
|
|
Porcupine. Where in thunder would be a peach of damfool who always
|
|
swipes other people's faults and says "these are mine?" It was a stunt
|
|
made possible only by Badger. Having made such an illogical statement,
|
|
he glanced at the teachers in a highly pleased manner. But no one opened
|
|
his mouth. The teacher of natural history was gazing at the crow which
|
|
had hopped on the roof of the nearby building. The teacher of Confucius
|
|
was folding and unfolding the hectograph sheet. Porcupine was still
|
|
staring at me. If a meeting was so nonsensical an affair as this, I
|
|
would have been better absent taking a nap at home.
|
|
I became irritated, and half raised myself, intending to make a
|
|
convincing speech, but just then Red Shirt began saying something and I
|
|
stopped. I saw him say something, having put away his pipe, and wiping
|
|
his face with a striped silk handkerchief. I'm sure he copped that
|
|
handkerchief from the Madonna; men should use white linen. He said:
|
|
"When I heard of the rough affairs in the dormitory, I was greatly
|
|
ashamed as the head teacher of my lack of discipline and influence. When
|
|
such an affair takes place there is underlying cause somewhere. Looking
|
|
at the affair itself, it may seem that the students were wrong, but in a
|
|
closer study of the facts, we may find the responsibility resting with
|
|
the School. Therefore, I'm afraid it might affect us badly in the future
|
|
if we administer too severe a punishment on the strength of what has
|
|
been shown on the surface. As they are youngsters, full of life and
|
|
vigor, they might half-consciously commit some youthful pranks, without
|
|
due regard as to their good or bad. As to the mode of punishment itself,
|
|
I have no right to suggest since it is a matter entirely in the hand of
|
|
the principal, but I should ask, considering these points, that some
|
|
leniency be shown toward the students."
|
|
Well, as Badger, so was Red Shirt. He declares the "Rough Necks" among
|
|
the students is not their fault but the fault of the teachers. A crazy
|
|
person beats other people because the beaten are wrong. Very grateful,
|
|
indeed. If the students were so full of life and vigor, shovel them out
|
|
into the campus and let them wrestle their heads off. Who would have
|
|
grasshoppers put into his bed unconsciously! If things go on like this,
|
|
they may stab some one asleep, and get freed as having done the deed
|
|
unconsciously.
|
|
Having figured it out in this wise, I thought I would state my own views
|
|
on the matter, but I wanted to give them an eloquent speech and fairly
|
|
take away their breath. I have an affection of the windpipe which clog
|
|
after two or three words when I am excited. Badger and Red Shirt are
|
|
below my standing in their personality, but they were skilled in
|
|
speech-making, and it would not do to have them see my awkwardness. I'll
|
|
make a rough note of composition first, I thought, and started mentally
|
|
making a sentence, when, to my surprise, Clown stood up suddenly. It was
|
|
unusual for Clown to state his opinion. He spoke in his flippant tone:
|
|
"Really the grasshopper incident and the whoop-la affair are peculiar
|
|
happenings which are enough to make us doubt our own future. We teachers
|
|
at this time must strive to clear the atmosphere of the school. And
|
|
what the principal and the head teacher have said just now are fit and
|
|
proper. I entirely agree with their opinions. I wish the punishment be
|
|
moderate."
|
|
In what Clown had said there were words but no meaning. It was a
|
|
juxtaposition of high-flown words making no sense. All that I understood
|
|
was the words, "I entirely agree with their opinions."
|
|
Clown's meaning was not clear to me, but as I was thoroughly angered, I
|
|
rose without completing my rough note.
|
|
"I am entirely opposed to......." I said, but the rest did not come at
|
|
once. ".......I don't like such a topsy-turvy settlement," I added and
|
|
the fellows began laughing. "The students are absolutely wrong from the
|
|
beginning. It would set a bad precedent if we don't make them apologize
|
|
....... What do we care if we kick them all out ....... darn the kids
|
|
trying to guy a new comer......." and I sat down. Then the teacher of
|
|
natural history who sat on my right whined a weak opinion, saying "The
|
|
students may be wrong, but if we punish them too severely, they may
|
|
start a reaction and would make it rather bad. I am for the moderate
|
|
side, as the head teacher suggested." The teacher of Confucius on my
|
|
left expressed his agreement with the moderate side, and so did the
|
|
teacher of history endorse the views of the head teacher. Dash those
|
|
weak-knees! Most of them belonged to the coterie of Red Shirt. It would
|
|
make a dandy school if such fellows run it. I had decided in my mind
|
|
that it must be either the students apologize to me or I resign, and if
|
|
the opinion of Red Shirt prevailed, I had determined to return home and
|
|
pack up. I had no ability of out-talking such fellows, or even if I had,
|
|
I was in no humor to keeping their company for long. Since I don't
|
|
expect to remain in the school, the devil may take care of the rest. If
|
|
I said anything, they would only laugh; so I shut my mouth tight.
|
|
Porcupine, who up to this time had been listening to the others, stood
|
|
up with some show of spirit. Ha, the fellow was going to endorse the
|
|
views of Red Shirt, eh? You and I got to fight it out anyway, I thought,
|
|
so do any way you darn please. Porcupine spoke in a thunderous voice:
|
|
"I entirely differ from the opinions of the head teacher and other
|
|
gentlemen. Because, viewed from whatever angle, this incident cannot be
|
|
other than an attempt by those fifty students in the dormitory to make
|
|
a fool of a new teacher. The head teacher seems to trace the cause of
|
|
the trouble to the personality of that teacher himself, but, begging
|
|
his pardon, I think he is mistaken. The night that new teacher was on
|
|
night duty was not long after his arrival, not more than twenty days
|
|
after he had come into contact with the students. During those short
|
|
twenty days, the students could have no reason to criticise his
|
|
knowledges or his person. If he was insulted for some cause which
|
|
deserved insult, there may be reasons in our considering the act of the
|
|
students, but if we show undue leniency toward the frivolous students
|
|
who would insult a new teacher without cause, it would affect the
|
|
dignity of this school. The spirit of education is not only in
|
|
imparting technical knowledges, but also in encouraging honest,
|
|
ennobling and samurai-like virtues, while eliminating the evil tendency
|
|
to vulgarity and roughness. If we are afraid of reaction or further
|
|
trouble, and satisfy ourselves with make-shifts, there is no telling
|
|
when we can ever get rid of this evil atmosphere[G]. We are here to
|
|
eradicate this very evil. If we mean to countenance it, we had better
|
|
not accepted our positions here. For these reasons, I believe it proper
|
|
to punish the students in the dormitory to the fullest extent and also
|
|
make them apologize to that teacher in the open."
|
|
All were quiet. Red Shirt again began polishing his pipe. I was greatly
|
|
elated. He spoke almost what I had wanted to. I'm such a simple-hearted
|
|
fellow that I forgot all about the bickerings with Porcupine, and looked
|
|
at him with a grateful face, but he appeared to take no notice of me.
|
|
After a while, Porcupine again stood up, and said. "I forgot to mention
|
|
just now, so I wish to add. The teacher on night duty that night seems
|
|
to have gone to the hot springs during his duty hours, and I think it a
|
|
blunder. It is a matter of serious misconduct to take the advantage of
|
|
being in sole charge of the school, to slip out to a hot springs. The
|
|
bad behavior of the students is one thing; this blunder is another, and
|
|
I wish the principal to call attention of the responsible person to
|
|
that matter."
|
|
A strange fellow! No sooner had he backed me up than he began talking me
|
|
down. I knew the other night watch went out during his duty hours, and
|
|
thought it was a custom, so I went as far out as to the hot springs
|
|
without considering the situation seriously. But when it was pointed out
|
|
like this, I realised that I had been wrong. Thereupon I rose again and
|
|
said; "I really went to the hot springs. It was wrong and I apologize."
|
|
Then all again laughed. Whatever I say, they laugh. What a lot of boobs!
|
|
See if you fellows can make a clean breast of your own fault like this!
|
|
You fellows laugh because you can't talk straight.
|
|
After that the principal said that since it appeared that there will be
|
|
no more opinions, he will consider the matter well and administer what
|
|
he may deem a proper punishment. I may here add the result of the
|
|
meeting. The students in the dormitory were given one week's
|
|
confinement, and in addition to that, apologized to me. If they had not
|
|
apologized, I intended to resign and go straight home, but as it was it
|
|
finally resulted in a bigger and still worse affair, of which more
|
|
later. The principal then at the meeting said something to the effect
|
|
that the manners of the students should be directed rightly by the
|
|
teachers' influence, and as the first step, no teacher should patronize,
|
|
if possible, the shops where edibles and drinks were served, excepting,
|
|
however, in case of farewell party or such social gatherings. He said he
|
|
would like no teacher to go singly to eating houses of lower kind--for
|
|
instance, noodle-house or dango shop.... And again all laughed. Clown
|
|
looked at Porcupine, said "tempura" and winked his eyes, but Porcupine
|
|
regarded him in silence. Good!
|
|
My "think box" is not of superior quality, so things said by Badger were
|
|
not clear to me, but I thought if a fellow can't hold the job of teacher
|
|
in a middle school because he patronizes a noodle-house or dango shop,
|
|
the fellow with bear-like appetite like me will never be able to hold
|
|
it. If it was the case, they ought to have specified when calling for a
|
|
teacher one who does not eat noodle and dango. To give an appointment
|
|
without reference to the matter at first, and then to proclaim that
|
|
noodle or dango should not be eaten was a blow to a fellow like me who
|
|
has no other petty hobby. Then Red Shirt again opened his mouth.
|
|
"Teachers of the middle school belong to the upper class of society and
|
|
they should not be looking after material pleasures only, for it would
|
|
eventually have effect upon their personal character. But we are human,
|
|
and it would be intolerable in a small town like this to live without
|
|
any means of affording some pleasure to ourselves, such as fishing,
|
|
reading literary products, composing new style poems, or haiku
|
|
(17-syllable poem). We should seek mental consolation of higher order."
|
|
There seemed no prospect that he would quit the hot air. If it was a
|
|
mental consolation to fish fertilisers on the sea, have goruki for
|
|
Russian literature, or to pose a favorite geisha beneath pine tree, it
|
|
would be quite as much a mental consolation to eat dempura noodle and
|
|
swallow dango. Instead of dwelling on such sham consolations, he would
|
|
find his time better spent by washing his red shirts. I became so
|
|
exasperated that I asked; "Is it also a mental consolation to meet the
|
|
Madonna?" No one laughed this time and looked at each other with queer
|
|
faces, and Red Shirt himself hung his head, apparently embarrassed. Look
|
|
at that! A good shot, eh? Only I was sorry for Hubbard Squash who,
|
|
having heard the remark, became still paler.
|
|
CHAPTER VII.
|
|
That very night I left the boarding house. While I was packing up, the
|
|
boss came to me and asked if there was anything wrong in the way I was
|
|
treated. He said he would be pleased to correct it and suit me if I was
|
|
sore at anything. This beats me, sure. How is it possible for so many
|
|
boneheads to be in this world! I could not tell whether they wanted me
|
|
to stay or get out. They're crazy. It would be disgrace for a Yedo kid
|
|
to fuss about with such a fellow; so I hired a rikishaman and speedily
|
|
left the house.
|
|
I got out of the house all right, but had no place to go. The rikishaman
|
|
asked me where I was going. I told him to follow me with his mouth shut,
|
|
then he shall see and I kept on walking. I thought of going to
|
|
Yamashiro-ya to avoid the trouble of hunting up a new boarding house,
|
|
but as I had no prospect of being able to stay there long, I would have
|
|
to renew the hunt sooner or later, so I gave up the idea. If I continued
|
|
walking this way, I thought I might strike a house with the sign of
|
|
"boarders taken" or something similar, and I would consider the first
|
|
house with the sign the one provided for me by Heaven. I kept on going
|
|
round and round through the quiet, decent part of the town when I found
|
|
myself at Kajimachi. This used to be former samurai quarters where one
|
|
had the least chance of finding any boarding house, and I was going to
|
|
retreat to a more lively part of the town when a good idea occurred to
|
|
me. Hubbard Squash whom I respected lived in this part of the town. He
|
|
is a native of the town, and has lived in the house inherited from his
|
|
great grandfather. He must be, I thought, well informed about nearly
|
|
everything in this town. If I call on him for his help, he will perhaps
|
|
find me a good boarding house. Fortunately, I called at his house once
|
|
before, and there was no trouble in finding it out. I knocked at the
|
|
door of a house, which I knew must be his, and a woman about fifty years
|
|
old with an old fashioned paper-lantern in hand, appeared at the door. I
|
|
do not despise young women, but when I see an aged woman, I feel much
|
|
more solicitous. This is probably because I am so fond of Kiyo. This
|
|
aged lady, who looked well-refined, was certainly mother of Hubbard
|
|
Squash whom she resembled. She invited me inside, but I asked her to
|
|
call him out for me. When he came I told him all the circumstances, and
|
|
asked him if he knew any who would take me for a boarder. Hubbard Squash
|
|
thought for a moment in a sympathetic mood, then said there was an old
|
|
couple called Hagino, living in the rear of the street, who had asked
|
|
him sometime ago to get some boarders for them as there are only two in
|
|
the house and they had some vacant rooms. Hubbard Squash was kind enough
|
|
to go along with me and find out if the rooms were vacant. They were.
|
|
From that night I boarded at the house of the Haginos. What surprised me
|
|
was that on the day after I left the house of Ikagin, Clown stepped in
|
|
and took the room I had been occupying. Well used to all sorts of tricks
|
|
and crooks as I might have been, this audacity fairly knocked me off my
|
|
feet. It was sickening.
|
|
I saw that I would be an easy mark for such people unless I brace up
|
|
and try to come up, or down, to their level. It would be a high time
|
|
indeed for me to be alive if it were settled that I would not get three
|
|
meals a day without living on the spoils of pick pockets. Nevertheless,
|
|
to hang myself,--healthy and vigorous as I am,--would be not only
|
|
inexcusable before my ancestors but a disgrace before the public. Now I
|
|
think it over, it would have been better for me to have started
|
|
something like a milk delivery route with that six hundred yen as
|
|
capital, instead of learning such a useless stunt as mathematics at the
|
|
School of Physics. If I had done so, Kiyo could have stayed with me,
|
|
and I could have lived without worrying about her so far a distance
|
|
away. While I was with her I did not notice it, but separated thus I
|
|
appreciated Kiyo as a good-natured old woman. One could not find a
|
|
noble natured woman like Kiyo everywhere. She was suffering from a
|
|
slight cold when I left Tokyo and I wondered how she was getting on
|
|
now? Kiyo must have been pleased when she received the letter from me
|
|
the other day. By the way, I thought it was the time I was in receipt
|
|
of answer from her. I spent two or three days with things like this in
|
|
my mind. I was anxious about the answer, and asked the old lady of the
|
|
house if any letter came from Tokyo for me, and each time she would
|
|
appear sympathetic and say no. The couple here, being formerly of
|
|
samurai class, unlike the Ikagin couple, were both refined. The old
|
|
man's recital of "utai" in a queer voice at night was somewhat telling
|
|
on my nerves, but it was much easier on me as he did not frequent my
|
|
room like Ikagin with the remark of "let me serve you tea."
|
|
The old lady once in a while would come to my room and chat on many
|
|
things. She questioned me why I had not brought my wife with me. I asked
|
|
her if I looked like one married, reminding her that I was only twenty
|
|
four yet. Saying "it is proper for one to get married at twenty four" as
|
|
a beginning, she recited that Mr. Blank married when he was twenty, that
|
|
Mr. So-and-So has already two children at twenty two, and marshalled
|
|
altogether about half a dozen examples,--quite a damper on my youthful
|
|
theory. I will then get marred at twenty four, I said, and requested her
|
|
to find me a good wife, and she asked me if I really meant it.
|
|
"Really? You bet! I can't help wanting to get married."
|
|
"I should suppose so. Everybody is just like that when young." This
|
|
remark was a knocker; I could not say anything to that.
|
|
"But I'm sure you have a Madam already. I have seen to that with my
|
|
own eyes."
|
|
"Well, they are sharp eyes. How have you seen it?"
|
|
"How? Aren't you often worried to death, asking if there's no letter
|
|
from Tokyo?"
|
|
"By Jupiter! This beats me!"
|
|
"Hit the mark, haven't I?"
|
|
"Well, you probably have."
|
|
"But the girls of these days are different from what they used to be and
|
|
you need a sharp look-out on them. So you'd better be careful."
|
|
"Do you mean that my Madam in Tokyo is behaving badly?"
|
|
"No, your Madam is all right."
|
|
"That makes me feel safe. Then about what shall I be careful?"
|
|
"Yours is all right. Though yours is all right......."
|
|
"Where is one not all right?"
|
|
"Rather many right in this town. You know the daughter of the Toyamas?
|
|
"No, I do not."
|
|
"You don't know her yet? She is the most beautiful girl about here. She
|
|
is so beautiful that the teachers in the school call her Madonna. You
|
|
haven't heard that?
|
|
"Ah, the Madonna! I thought it was the name of a geisha."
|
|
"No, Sir. Madonna is a foreign word and means a beautiful girl,
|
|
doesn't it?"
|
|
"That may be. I'm surprised."
|
|
"Probably the name was given by the teacher of drawing."
|
|
"Was it the work of Clown?"
|
|
"No, it was given by Professor Yoshikawa."
|
|
"Is that Madonna not all right?"
|
|
"That Madonna-san is a Madonna not all right."
|
|
"What a bore! We haven't any decent woman among those with nicknames
|
|
from old days. I should suppose the Madonna is not all right."
|
|
"Exactly. We have had awful women such as O-Matsu the Devil or Ohyaku
|
|
the Dakki.
|
|
"Does the Madonna belong to that ring?"
|
|
"That Madonna-san, you know, was engaged to Professor Koga,--who brought
|
|
you here,--yes, was promised to him."
|
|
"Ha, how strange! I never knew our friend Hubbard Squash was a fellow of
|
|
such gallantry. We can't judge a man by his appearance. I'll be a bit
|
|
more careful."
|
|
"The father of Professor Koga died last year,--up to that time they had
|
|
money and shares in a bank and were well off,--but since then things
|
|
have grown worse, I don't know why. Professor Koga was too good-natured,
|
|
in short, and was cheated, I presume. The wedding was delayed by one
|
|
thing or another and there appeared the head teacher who fell in love
|
|
with the Madonna head over heels and wanted to many her."
|
|
"Red Shirt? He ought be hanged. I thought that shirt was not an ordinary
|
|
kind of shirt. Well?"
|
|
"The head-teacher proposed marriage through a go-between, but the
|
|
Toyamas could not give a definite answer at once on account of their
|
|
relations with the Kogas. They replied that they would consider the
|
|
matter or something like that. Then Red Shirt-san worked up some ways
|
|
and started visiting the Toyamas and has finally won the heart of the
|
|
Miss. Red Shirt-san is bad, but so is Miss Toyama; they all talk bad of
|
|
them. She had agreed to be married to Professor Koga and changed her
|
|
mind because a Bachelor of Arts began courting her,--why, that would be
|
|
an offense to the God of To-day."
|
|
"Of course. Not only of To-day but also of tomorrow and the day after;
|
|
in fact, of time without end."
|
|
"So Hotta-san a friend of Koga-san, felt sorry for him and went to the
|
|
head teacher to remonstrate with him. But Red Shirt-san said that he had
|
|
no intention of taking away anybody who is promised to another. He may
|
|
get married if the engagement is broken, he said, but at present he was
|
|
only being acquainted with the Toyamas and he saw nothing wrong in his
|
|
visiting the Toyamas. Hotta-san couldn't do anything and returned. Since
|
|
then they say Red Shirt-san and Hotta-san are on bad terms."
|
|
"You do know many things, I should say. How did you get such details?
|
|
I'm much impressed."
|
|
"The town is so small that I can know everything."
|
|
Yes, everything seems to be known more than one cares. Judging by her
|
|
way, this woman probably knows about my tempura and dango affairs. Here
|
|
was a pot that would make peas rattle! The meaning of the Madonna, the
|
|
relations between Porcupine and Red Shirt became clear and helped me a
|
|
deal. Only what puzzled me was the uncertainty as to which of the two
|
|
was wrong. A fellow simple-hearted like me could not tell which side he
|
|
should help unless the matter was presented in black and white.
|
|
"Of Red Shirt and Porcupine, which is a better fellow?"
|
|
"What is Porcupine, Sir?"
|
|
"Porcupine means Hotta."
|
|
"Well, Hotta-san is physically strong, as strength goes, but Red
|
|
Shirt-san is a Bachelor of Arts and has more ability. And Red Shirt-san
|
|
is more gentle, as gentleness goes, but Hotta-san is more popular among
|
|
the students."
|
|
"After all, which is better?"
|
|
"After all, the one who gets a bigger salary is greater, I suppose?"
|
|
There was no use of going on further in this way, and I closed the talk.
|
|
Two or three days after this, when I returned from the school, the old
|
|
lady with a beaming smile, brought me a letter, saying, "Here you are
|
|
Sir, at last. Take your time and enjoy it." I took it up and found it
|
|
was from Kiyo. On the letter were two or three retransmission slips, and
|
|
by these I saw the letter was sent from Yamashiro-ya to the Iagins, then
|
|
to the Haginos. Besides, it stayed at Yamashiro-ya for about one week;
|
|
even letters seemed to stop in a hotel. I opened it, and it was a very
|
|
long letter.
|
|
"When I received the letter from my Master Darling, I intended to write
|
|
an answer at once. But I caught cold and was sick abed for about one
|
|
week and the answer was delayed for which I beg your pardon. I am not
|
|
well-used to writing or reading like girls in these days, and it
|
|
required some efforts to get done even so poorly written a letter as
|
|
this. I was going to ask my nephew to write it for me, but thought it
|
|
inexcusable to my Master Darling when I should take special pains for
|
|
myself. So I made a rough copy once, and then a clean copy. I finished
|
|
the clean copy, in two days, but the rough copy took me four days. It
|
|
may be difficult for you to read, but as I have written this letter with
|
|
all my might, please read it to the end."
|
|
This was the introductory part of the letter in which, about four feet
|
|
long, were written a hundred and one things. Well, it was difficult to
|
|
read. Not only was it poorly written but it was a sort of juxtaposition
|
|
of simple syllables that racked one's brain to make it clear where it
|
|
stopped or where it began. I am quick-tempered and would refuse to read
|
|
such a long, unintelligible letter for five yen, but I read this
|
|
seriously from the first to the last. It is a fact that I read it
|
|
through. My efforts were mostly spent in untangling letters and
|
|
sentences; so I started reading it over again. The room had become a
|
|
little dark, and this rendered it harder to read it; so finally I
|
|
stepped out to the porch where I sat down and went over it carefully.
|
|
The early autumn breeze wafted through the leaves of the banana trees,
|
|
bathed me with cool evening air, rustled the letter I was holding and
|
|
would have blown it clear to the hedge if I let it go. I did not mind
|
|
anything like this, but kept on reading.
|
|
"Master Darling is simple and straight like a split bamboo by
|
|
disposition," it says, "only too explosive. That's what worries me. If
|
|
you brand other people with nicknames you will only make enemies of
|
|
them; so don't use them carelessly; if you coin new ones, just tell them
|
|
only to Kiyo in your letters. The countryfolk are said to be bad, and I
|
|
wish you to be careful not have them do you. The weather must be worse
|
|
than in Tokyo, and you should take care not to catch cold. Your letter
|
|
is too short that I can't tell how things are going on with you. Next
|
|
time write me a letter at least half the length of this one. Tipping the
|
|
hotel with five yen is all right, but were you not short of money
|
|
afterward? Money is the only thing one can depend upon when in the
|
|
country and you should economize and be prepared for rainy days. I'm
|
|
sending you ten yen by postal money order. I have that fifty yen my
|
|
Master Darling gave me deposited in the Postal Savings to help you start
|
|
housekeeping when you return to Tokyo, and taking out this ten, I have
|
|
still forty yen left,--quite safe."
|
|
I should say women are very particular on many things.
|
|
When I was meditating with the letter flapping in my hand on the porch,
|
|
the old lady opened the sliding partition and brought in my supper.
|
|
"Still poring over the letter? Must be a very long one, I
|
|
imagine," she said.
|
|
"Yes, this is an important letter, so I'm reading it with the wind
|
|
blowing it about," I replied--the reply which was nonsense even for
|
|
myself,--and I sat down for supper. I looked in the dish on the tray,
|
|
and saw the same old sweet potatoes again to-night. This new boarding
|
|
house was more polite and considerate and refined than the Ikagins, but
|
|
the grub was too poor stuff and that was one drawback. It was sweet
|
|
potato yesterday, so it was the day before yesterday, and here it is
|
|
again to-night. True, I declared myself very fond of sweet potatoes, but
|
|
if I am fed with sweet potatoes with such insistency, I may soon have to
|
|
quit this dear old world. I can't be laughing at Hubbard Squash; I shall
|
|
become Sweet Potato myself before long. If it were Kiyo she would surely
|
|
serve me with my favorite sliced tunny or fried kamaboko, but nothing
|
|
doing with a tight, poor samurai. It seems best that I live with Kiyo.
|
|
If I have to stay long in the school, I believe I would call her from
|
|
Tokyo. Don't eat tempura, don't eat dango, and then get turned yellow by
|
|
feeding on sweet potatoes only, in the boarding house. That's for an
|
|
educator, and his place is really a hard one. I think even the priests
|
|
of the Zen sect are enjoying better feed. I cleaned up the sweet
|
|
potatoes, then took out two raw eggs from the drawer of my desk, broke
|
|
them on the edge of the rice bowl, to tide it over. I have to get
|
|
nourishment by eating raw eggs or something, or how can I stand the
|
|
teaching of twenty one hours a week?
|
|
I was late for my bath to-day on account of the letter from Kiyo. But I
|
|
would not like to drop off a single day since I had been there everyday.
|
|
I thought I would take a train to-day, and coming to the station with
|
|
the same old red towel dangling out of my hand, I found the train had
|
|
just left two or three minutes ago, and had to wait for some time. While
|
|
I was smoking a cigarette on a bench, my friend Hubbard Squash happened
|
|
to come in. Since I heard the story about him from the old lady my
|
|
sympathy for him had become far greater than ever. His reserve always
|
|
appeared to me pathetic. It was no longer a case of merely pathetic;
|
|
more than that. I was wishing to get his salary doubled, if possible,
|
|
and have him marry Miss Toyama and send them to Tokyo for about one
|
|
month on a pleasure trip. Seeing him, therefore, I motioned him to a
|
|
seat beside me, addressing him cheerfully:
|
|
"Hello[H], going to bath? Come and sit down here."
|
|
Hubbard Squash, appearing much awe-struck, said; "Don't mind me,
|
|
Sir," and whether out of polite reluctance or I don't know what,
|
|
remained standing.
|
|
"You have to wait for a little while before the next train starts; sit
|
|
down; you'll be tired," I persuaded him again. In fact, I was so
|
|
sympathetic for him that I wished to have him sit down by me somehow.
|
|
Then with a "Thank you, Sir," he at last sat down. A fellow like Clown,
|
|
always fresh, butts in where he is not wanted; or like Porcupine
|
|
swaggers about with a face which says "Japan would be hard up without
|
|
me," or like Red Shirt, self-satisfied in the belief of being the
|
|
wholesaler of gallantry and of cosmetics. Or like Badger who appears to
|
|
say; "If 'Education' were alive and put on a frockcoat, it would look
|
|
like me." One and all in one way or other have bravado, but I have
|
|
never seen any one like this Hubbard Squash, so quiet and resigned,
|
|
like a doll taken for a ransom. His face is rather swollen but for the
|
|
Madonna to cast off such a splendid fellow and give preference to Red
|
|
Shirt, was frivolous beyond my understanding. Put how many dozens of
|
|
Red Shirt you like together, it will not make one husband of stuff to
|
|
beat Hubbard Squash.
|
|
"Is anything wrong with you? You look quite fatigued," I asked.
|
|
"No, I have no particular ailments......."
|
|
"That's good. Poor health is the worst thing one can get."
|
|
"You appear very strong."
|
|
"Yes, I'm thin, but never got sick. That's something I don't like."
|
|
Hubbard Squash smiled at my words. Just then I heard some young girlish
|
|
laughs at the entrance, and incidentally looking that way, I saw a
|
|
"peach." A beautiful girl, tall, white-skinned, with her head done up
|
|
in "high-collared" style, was standing with a woman of about forty-five
|
|
or six, in front of the ticket window. I am not a fellow given to
|
|
describing a belle, but there was no need to repeat asserting that she
|
|
was beautiful. I felt as if I had warmed a crystal ball with perfume
|
|
and held it in my hand. The older woman was shorter, but as she
|
|
resembled the younger, they might be mother and daughter. The moment I
|
|
saw them, I forgot all about Hubbard Squash, and was intently gazing at
|
|
the young beauty. Then I was a bit startled to see Hubbard Squash
|
|
suddenly get up and start walking slowly toward them. I wondered if she
|
|
was not the Madonna. The three were courtesying in front of the ticket
|
|
window, some distance away from me, and I could not hear what they were
|
|
talking about.
|
|
The clock at the station showed the next train to start in five
|
|
minutes. Having lost my partner, I became impatient and longed for the
|
|
train to start as soon as possible, when a fellow rushed into the
|
|
station excited. It was Red Shirt. He had on some fluffy clothes,
|
|
loosely tied round with a silk-crepe girdle, and wound to it the same
|
|
old gold chain. That gold chain is stuffed. Red Shirt thinks nobody
|
|
knows it and is making a big show of it, but I have been wise. Red
|
|
Shirt stopped short, stared around, and then after bowing politely to
|
|
the three still in front of the ticket window, made a remark or two,
|
|
and hastily turned toward me. He came up to me, walking in his usual
|
|
cat's style, and hallooed.
|
|
"You too going to bath? I was afraid of missing the train and
|
|
hurried up, but we have three or four minutes yet. Wonder if that
|
|
clock is right?"
|
|
He took out his gold watch, and remarking it wrong about two minutes sat
|
|
down beside me. He never turned toward the belle, but with his chin on
|
|
the top of a cane, steadily looked straight before him. The older woman
|
|
would occasionally glance toward Red Shirt, but the younger kept her
|
|
profile away. Surely she was the Madonna.
|
|
The train now arrived with a shrill whistle and the passengers hastened
|
|
to board. Red Shirt jumped into the first class coach ahead of all. One
|
|
cannot brag much about boarding the first class coach here. It cost only
|
|
five sen for the first and three sen for the second to Sumida; even I
|
|
paid for the first and a white ticket. The country fellows, however,
|
|
being all close, seemed to regard the expenditure of the extra two sen a
|
|
serious matter and mostly boarded the second class. Following Red Shirt,
|
|
the Madonna and her mother entered the first class. Hubbard Squash
|
|
regularly rides in the second class. He stood at the door of a second
|
|
class coach and appeared somewhat hesitating, but seeing me coming, took
|
|
decisive steps and jumped into the second. I felt sorry for him--I do
|
|
not know why--and followed him into the same coach. Nothing wrong in
|
|
riding on the second with a ticket for the first, I believe.
|
|
At the hot springs, going down from the third floor to the bath room in
|
|
bathing gown, again I met Hubbard Squash. I feel my throat clogged up
|
|
and unable to speak at a formal gathering, but otherwise I am rather
|
|
talkative; so I opened conversation with him. He was so pathetic and my
|
|
compassion was aroused to such an extent that I considered it the duty
|
|
of a Yedo kid to console him to the best of my ability. But Hubbard
|
|
Squash was not responsive. Whatever I said, he would only answer "eh?"
|
|
or "umh," and even these with evident effort. Finally I gave up my
|
|
sympathetic attempt and cut off the conversation.
|
|
I did not meet Red Shirt at the bath. There are many bath rooms, and one
|
|
does not necessarily meet the fellows at the same bath room though he
|
|
might come on the same train. I thought it nothing strange. When I got
|
|
out of the bath, I found the night bright with the moon. On both sides
|
|
of the street stood willow trees which cast their shadows on the road. I
|
|
would take a little stroll, I thought. Coming up toward north, to the
|
|
end of the town, one sees a large gate to the left. Opposite the gate
|
|
stands a temple and both sides of the approach to the temple are lined
|
|
with houses with red curtains. A tenderloin inside a temple gate is an
|
|
unheard-of phenomenon. I wanted to go in and have a look at the place,
|
|
but for fear I might get another kick from Badger, I passed it by. A
|
|
flat house with narrow lattice windows and black curtain at the
|
|
entrance, near the gate, is the place where I ate dango and committed
|
|
the blunder. A round lantern with the signs of sweet meats hung outside
|
|
and its light fell on the trunk of a willow tree close by. I hungered to
|
|
have a bite of dango, but went away forbearing.
|
|
To be unable to eat dango one is so fond of eating, is tragic. But to
|
|
have one's betrothed change her love to another, would be more tragic.
|
|
When I think of Hubbard Squash, I believe that I should, not complain if
|
|
I cannot eat dango or anything else for three days. Really there is
|
|
nothing so unreliable a creature as man. As far as her face goes, she
|
|
appears the least likely to commit so stony-hearted an act as this. But
|
|
the beautiful person is cold-blooded and Koga-san who is swollen like a
|
|
pumpkin soaked in water, is a gentleman to the core,--that's where we
|
|
have to be on the look-out. Porcupine whom I had thought candid was said
|
|
to have incited the students and he whom then I regarded an agitator,
|
|
demanded of the principal a summary punishment of the students. The
|
|
disgustingly snobbish Red Shirt is unexpectedly considerate and warns me
|
|
in ways more than one, but then he won the Madonna by crooked means. He
|
|
denies, however, having schemed anything crooked about the Madonna, and
|
|
says he does not care to marry her unless her engagement with Koga is
|
|
broken. When Ikagin beat me out of his house, Clown enters and takes my
|
|
room. Viewed from any angle, man is unreliable. If I write these things
|
|
to Kiyo, it would surprise her. She would perhaps say that because it is
|
|
the west side of Hakone that the town had all the freaks and crooks
|
|
dumped in together.[7]
|
|
[Footnote 7: An old saying goes that east of the Hakone pass, there are
|
|
no apparitions or freaks.]
|
|
I do not by nature worry about little things, and had come so far
|
|
without minding anything. But hardly a month had passed since I came
|
|
here, and I have begun to regard the world quite uneasily. I have not
|
|
met with any particularly serious affairs, but I feel as if I had grown
|
|
five or six years older. Better say "good by" to this old spot soon and
|
|
return to Tokyo, I thought. While strolling thus thinking on various
|
|
matters, I had passed the stone bridge and come up to the levy of the
|
|
Nozeri river. The word river sounds too big; it is a shallow stream of
|
|
about six feet wide. If one goes on along the levy for about twelve
|
|
blocks, he reaches the Aioi village where there is a temple of Kwanon.
|
|
Looking back at the town of the hot springs, I see red lights gleaming
|
|
amid the pale moon beams. Where the sound of the drum is heard must be
|
|
the tenderloin. The stream is shallow but fast, whispering incessantly.
|
|
When I had covered about three blocks walking leisurely upon the bank,
|
|
I perceived a shadow ahead. Through the light of the moon, I found
|
|
there were two shadows. They were probably village youngsters returning
|
|
from the hot springs, though they did not sing, and were exceptionally
|
|
quiet for that.
|
|
I kept on walking, and I was faster than they. The two shadows became
|
|
larger. One appeared like a woman. When I neared them within about sixty
|
|
feet, the man, on hearing my footsteps, turned back. The moon was
|
|
shining from behind me. I could see the manner of the man then and
|
|
something queer struck me. They resumed their walk as before. And I
|
|
chased them on a full speed. The other party, unconscious, walked
|
|
slowly. I could now hear their voice distinctly. The levy was about six
|
|
feet wide, and would allow only three abreast. I easily passed them, and
|
|
turning back gazed squarely into the face of the man. The moon
|
|
generously bathed my face with its beaming light. The fellow uttered a
|
|
low "ah," and suddenly turning sideway, said to the woman "Let's go
|
|
back." They traced their way back toward the hot springs town.
|
|
Was it the intention of Red Shirt to hush the matter up by pretending
|
|
ignorance, or was it lack of nerve? I was not the only fellow who
|
|
suffered the consequence of living in a small narrow town.
|
|
CHAPTER VIII.
|
|
On my way back from the fishing to which I was invited by Red Shirt, and
|
|
since then, I began to suspect Porcupine. When the latter wanted me to
|
|
get out of Ikagin's house on sham pretexts, I regarded him a decidedly
|
|
unpleasant fellow. But as Porcupine, at the teachers' meeting, contrary
|
|
to my expectation, stood firmly for punishing the students to the
|
|
fullest extent of the school regulations, I thought it queer. When I
|
|
heard from the old lady about Porcupine volunteering himself for the
|
|
sake of Hubbard Squash to stop Red Shirt meddling with the Madonna, I
|
|
clapped my hands and hoorayed for him. Judging by these facts, I began
|
|
to wonder if the wrong-doer might be not Porcupine, but Red Shirt the
|
|
crooked one. He instilled into my head some flimsy hearsay plausibly and
|
|
in a roundabout-way. At this juncture I saw Red Shirt taking a walk with
|
|
the Madonna on the levy of the Nozeri river, and I decided that Red
|
|
Shirt may be a scoundrel. I am not sure of his being really scoundrel at
|
|
heart, but at any rate he is not a good fellow. He is a fellow with a
|
|
double face. A man deserves no confidence unless he is as straight as
|
|
the bamboo. One may fight a straight fellow, and feel satisfied. We
|
|
cannot lose sight of the fact that Red Shirt or his kind who is kind,
|
|
gentle, refined, and takes pride in his pipe had to be looked sharp, for
|
|
I could not be too careful in getting into a scrap with the fellow of
|
|
this type. I may fight, but I would not get square games like the
|
|
wrestling matches it the Wrestling Amphitheatre in Tokyo. Come to think
|
|
of it, Porcupine who turned against me and startled the whole teachers'
|
|
room over the amount of one sen and a half is far more like a man. When
|
|
he stared at me with owlish eyes at the teachers' meeting, I branded him
|
|
as a spiteful guy, but as I consider the matter now, he is better than
|
|
the feline voice of Red Shirt. To tell the truth, I tried to get
|
|
reconciled with Porcupine, and after the meeting, spoke a word or two to
|
|
him, but he shut up like a clam and kept glaring at me. So I became
|
|
sore, and let it go at that.
|
|
Porcupine has not spoken to me since. The one sen and a half which I
|
|
paid him back upon the desk, is still there, well covered with dust. I
|
|
could not touch it, nor would Porcupine take it. This one sen and a
|
|
half has become a barrier between us two. We two were cursed with this
|
|
one sen and a half. Later indeed I got sick of its sight that I hated
|
|
to see it.
|
|
While Porcupine and I were thus estranged, Red Shirt and I continued
|
|
friendly relations and associated together. On the day following my
|
|
accidental meeting with him near the Nozeri river, for instance, Red
|
|
Shirt came to my desk as soon as he came to the school, and asked me how
|
|
I liked the new boarding house. He said we would go together for fishing
|
|
Russian literature again, and talked on many things. I felt a bit
|
|
piqued, and said, "I saw you twice last night," and he answered, "Yes,
|
|
at the station. Do you go there at that time every day? Isn't it late?"
|
|
I startled him with the remark; "I met you on the levy of the Nozeri
|
|
river too, didn't I?" and he replied, "No, I didn't go in that
|
|
direction. I returned right after my bath."
|
|
What is the use of trying to keep it dark. Didn't we meet actually face
|
|
to face? He tells too many lies. If one can hold the job of a head
|
|
teacher and act in this fashion, I should be able to run the position of
|
|
Chancellor of a university. From this time on, my confidence in Red
|
|
Shirt became still less. I talk with Red Shirt whom I do not trust, and
|
|
I keep silent with Porcupine whom I respect. Funny things do happen in
|
|
this world.
|
|
One day Red Shirt asked me to come over to his house as he had something
|
|
to tell me, and much as I missed the trip to the hot springs, I started
|
|
for his house at about 4 o'clock. Red Shirt is single, but in keeping
|
|
with the dignity of a head teacher, he gave up the boarding house life
|
|
long ago, and lives in a fine house. The house rent, I understood, was
|
|
nine yen and fifty sen. The front entrance was so attractive that I
|
|
thought if one can live in such a splendid house at nine yen and a half
|
|
in the country, it would be a good game to call Kiyo from Tokyo and make
|
|
her heart glad. The younger brother of Red Shirt answered my bell. This
|
|
brother gets his lessons on algebra and mathematics from me at the
|
|
school. He stands no show in his school work, and being a "migratory
|
|
bird" is more wicked than the native boys.
|
|
I met Red Shirt. Smoking the same old unsavory amber pipe, he said
|
|
something to the following effect:
|
|
"Since you've been with us, our work has been more satisfactory than it
|
|
was under your predecessor, and the principal is very glad to have got
|
|
the right person in the right place. I wish you to work as hard as you
|
|
can, for the school is depending upon you."
|
|
"Well, is that so. I don't think I can work any harder than now......."
|
|
"What you're doing now is enough. Only don't forget what I told you the
|
|
other day."
|
|
"Meaning that one who helps me find a boarding house is dangerous?"
|
|
"If you state it so baldly, there is no meaning to it....... But that's
|
|
all right,...... I believe you understand the spirit of my advice. And
|
|
if you keep on in the way you're going to-day ...... We have not been
|
|
blind ...... we might offer you a better treatment later on if we can
|
|
manage it."
|
|
"In salary? I don't care about the salary, though the more the better."
|
|
"And fortunately there is going to be one teacher transferred,......
|
|
however, I can't guarantee, of course, until I talk it over with the
|
|
principal ...... and we might give you something out of his salary."
|
|
"Thank you. Who is going to be transferred?"
|
|
"I think I may tell you now; 'tis going to be Announced soon. Koga
|
|
is the man."
|
|
"But isn't Koga-san a native of this town?"
|
|
"Yes, he is. But there are some circumstances ...... and it is partly by
|
|
his own preference."
|
|
"Where is he going?"
|
|
"To Nobeoka in Hiuga province. As the place is so far away, he is going
|
|
there with his salary raised a grade higher."
|
|
"Is some one coming to take his place?"
|
|
"His successor is almost decided upon."
|
|
"Well, that's fine, though I'm not very anxious to have my salary
|
|
raised."
|
|
"I'm going to talk to the principal about that anyway. And, we may have
|
|
to ask you to work more some time later ...... and the principal appears
|
|
to be of the same opinion....... I want you to go[I] ahead with that in
|
|
your mind."
|
|
"Going to increase my working hours?"
|
|
"No. The working hours may be reduced......"
|
|
"The working hours shortened and yet work more? Sounds funny."
|
|
"It does sound funny ...... I can't say definitely just yet ...... it
|
|
means that we way have to ask you to assume more responsibility."
|
|
I could not make out what he meant. To assume more responsibility might
|
|
mean my appointment to the senior instructor of mathematics, but
|
|
Porcupine is the senior instructor and there is no danger of his
|
|
resigning. Besides, he is so very popular among the students that his
|
|
transfer or discharge would be inadvisable. Red Shirt always misses the
|
|
point. And though he did not get to the point, the object of my visit
|
|
was ended. We talked a while on sundry matters, Red Shirt proposing a
|
|
farewell dinner party for Hubbard Squash, asking me if I drink liquor
|
|
and praising Hubbard Squash as an amiable gentleman, etc. Finally he
|
|
changed the topic and asked me if I take an interest in "haiku"[8] Here
|
|
is where I beat it, I thought, and, saying "No, I don't, good by,"
|
|
hastily left the house. The "haiku" should be a diversion of Baseo[9] or
|
|
the boss of a barbershop. It would not do for the teacher of mathematics
|
|
to rave over the old wooden bucket and the morning glory.[10]
|
|
[Footnote 8: The 17-syllable poem]
|
|
[Footnote 9: A famous composer of the poem.]
|
|
[Footnote 10: There is a well-known 17-syllable poem describing the
|
|
scene of morning glories entwining around the wooden bucket.]
|
|
I returned home and thought it over. Here is a man whose mental process
|
|
defies a layman's understanding. He is going to court hardships in a
|
|
strange part of the country in preference of his home and the school
|
|
where he is working,--both of which should satisfy most
|
|
anybody,--because he is tired of them. That may be all right if the
|
|
strange place happens to be a lively metropolis where electric cars
|
|
run,--but of all places, why Nobeoka in Hiuga province? This town here
|
|
has a good steamship connection, yet I became sick of it and longed for
|
|
home before one month had passed. Nobeoka is situated in the heart of a
|
|
most mountainous country. According to Red Shirt, one has to make an
|
|
all-day ride in a wagonette to Miyazaki, after he had left the vessel,
|
|
and from Miyazaki another all-day ride in a rikisha to Nobeoka. Its name
|
|
alone does not commend itself as civilized. It sounds like a town
|
|
inhabited by men and monkeys in equal numbers. However sage-like Hubbard
|
|
Squash might be I thought he would not become a friend of monkeys of his
|
|
own choice. What a curious slant!
|
|
Just then the old lady brought in my supper--"Sweet potatoes again?" I
|
|
asked, and she said, "No, Sir, it is tofu to-night." They are about the
|
|
same thing.
|
|
"Say, I understand Koga-san is going to Nobeoka."
|
|
"Isn't it too bad?"
|
|
"Too bad? But it can't be helped if he goes there by his own
|
|
preference."
|
|
"Going there by his own preference? Who, Sir?"
|
|
"Who? Why, he! Isn't Professor Koga going there by his own choice?"
|
|
"That's wrong Mr. Wright, Sir."
|
|
"Ha, Mr. Wright, is it? But Red Shirt told me so just now. If that's
|
|
wrong Mr. Wright, then Red Shirt is blustering Mr. Bluff."
|
|
"What the head-teacher says is believable, but so Koga-san does not
|
|
wish to go."
|
|
"Our old lady is impartial, and that is good. Well, what's the matter?"
|
|
"The mother of Koga-san was here this morning, and told me all the
|
|
circumstances."
|
|
"Told you what circumstances?"
|
|
"Since the father of Koga-san died, they have not been quite well off as
|
|
we might have supposed, and the mother asked the principal if his salary
|
|
could not be raised a little as Koga-san has been in service for four
|
|
years. See?"
|
|
"Well?"
|
|
"The principal said that he would consider the matter, and she felt
|
|
satisfied and expected the announcement of the increase before long. She
|
|
hoped for its coming this month or next. Then the principal called
|
|
Koga-san to his office one day and said that he was sorry but the school
|
|
was short of money and could not raise his salary. But he said there is
|
|
an opening in Nobeoka which would give him five yen extra a month and he
|
|
thought that would suit his purpose, and the principal had made all
|
|
arrangements and told Koga-san he had better go......."
|
|
"That wasn't a friendly talk but a command. Wasn't it?"
|
|
"Yes, Sir, Koga-san told the principal that he liked to stay here better
|
|
at the old salary than go elsewhere on an increased salary, because he
|
|
has his own house and is living with his mother. But the matter has all
|
|
been settled, and his successor already appointed and it couldn't be
|
|
helped, said the principal."
|
|
"Hum, that's a jolly good trick, I should say. Then Koga-san has no
|
|
liking to go there? No wonder I thought it strange. We would have to go
|
|
a long way to find any blockhead to do a job in such a mountain village
|
|
and get acquainted with monkeys for five yen extra."
|
|
"What is a blockhead, Sir?"
|
|
"Well, let go at that. It was all the scheme of Red Shirt. Deucedly
|
|
underhand scheme, I declare. It was a stab from behind. And he means to
|
|
raise my salary by that; that's not right. I wouldn't take that raise.
|
|
Let's see if he can raise it."
|
|
"Is your salary going to be raised, Sir?"
|
|
"Yes, they said they would raise mine, but I'm thinking of refusing it."
|
|
"Why do you refuse?"
|
|
"Why or no why, it's going to be refused. Say, Red Shirt is a fool; he
|
|
is a coward."
|
|
"He may be a coward, but if he raises your salary, it would be best for
|
|
you to make no fuss, but accept it. One is apt to get grouchy when
|
|
young, but will always repent when he is grown up and thinks that it was
|
|
pity he hadn't been a little more patient. Take an old woman's advice
|
|
for once, and if Red Shirt-san says he will raise your salary, just take
|
|
it with thanks."
|
|
"It's none of business of you old people."
|
|
The old lady withdrew in silence. The old man is heard singing "utai" in
|
|
the off-key voice. "Utai," I think, is a stunt which purposely makes a
|
|
whole show a hard nut to crack by giving to it difficult tunes, whereas
|
|
one could better understand it by reading it. I cannot fathom what is in
|
|
the mind of the old man who groans over it every night untired. But I'm
|
|
not in a position to be fooling with "utai." Red Shirt said he would
|
|
have my salary raised, and though I did not care much about it, I
|
|
accepted it because there was no use of leaving the money lying around.
|
|
But I cannot, for the love of Mike, be so inconsiderate as to skin the
|
|
salary of a fellow teacher who is being transferred against his will.
|
|
What in thunder do they mean by sending him away so far as Nobeoka when
|
|
the fellow prefers to remain in his old position? Even
|
|
Dazai-no-Gonnosutsu did not have to go farther than about Hakata; even
|
|
Matagoro Kawai [11] stopped at Sagara. I shall not feel satisfied unless
|
|
I see Red Shirt and tell him I refuse the raise.
|
|
[Footnote 11: The persons in exile, well-known in Japanese history.]
|
|
I dressed again and went to his house. The same younger brother of Red
|
|
Shirt again answered the bell, and looked at me with eyes which plainly
|
|
said, "You here again?" I will come twice or thrice or as many times as
|
|
I want to if there is business. I might rouse them out of their beds at
|
|
midnight;--it is possible, who knows. Don't mistake me for one coming to
|
|
coax the head teacher. I was here to give back my salary. The younger
|
|
brother said that there is a visitor just now, and I told him the front
|
|
door will do; won't take more than a minute, and he went in. Looking
|
|
about my feet, I found a pair of thin, matted wooden clogs, and I heard
|
|
some one in the house saying, "Now we're banzai." I noticed that the
|
|
visitor was Clown. Nobody but Clown could make such a squeaking voice
|
|
and wear such clogs as are worn by cheap actors.
|
|
After a while Red Shirt appeared at the door with a lamp in his hand,
|
|
and said, "Come in; it's no other than Mr. Yoshikawa."
|
|
"This is good enough," I said, "it won't take long." I looked at his
|
|
face which was the color of a boiled lobster. He seemed to have been
|
|
drinking with Clown.
|
|
"You told me that you would raise my salary, but I've changed my mind,
|
|
and have come here to decline the offer."
|
|
Red Shirt, thrusting out the lamp forward, and intently staring at me,
|
|
was unable to answer at the moment. He appeared blank. Did he think it
|
|
strange that here was one fellow, only one in the world, who does not
|
|
want his salary raised, or was he taken aback that I should come back so
|
|
soon even if I wished to decline it, or was it both combined, he stood
|
|
there silent with his mouth in a queer shape.
|
|
"I accepted your offer because I understood that Mr. Koga was being
|
|
transferred by his own preference......."
|
|
"Mr. Koga is really going to be transferred by his own preference."
|
|
"No, Sir. He would like to stay here. He doesn't mind his present salary
|
|
if he can stay."
|
|
"Have you heard it from Mr. Koga himself?"
|
|
"No, not from him."
|
|
"Then, from who?"
|
|
"The old lady in my boarding house told me what she heard from the
|
|
mother of Mr. Koga."
|
|
"Then the old woman in your boarding house told you so?"
|
|
"Well, that's about the size of it."
|
|
"Excuse me, but I think you are wrong. According to what you say, it
|
|
seems as if you believe what the old woman in the boarding house tells
|
|
you, but would not believe what your head teacher tells you. Am I right
|
|
to understand it that way?"
|
|
I was stuck. A Bachelor of Arts is confoundedly good in oratorical
|
|
combat. He gets hold of unexpected point, and pushes the other backward.
|
|
My father used to tell me that I am too careless and no good, and now
|
|
indeed I look that way. I ran out of the house on the moment's impulse
|
|
when I heard the story from the old lady, and in fact I had not heard
|
|
the story from either Hubbard Squash or his mother. In consequence, when
|
|
I was challenged in this Bachelor-of-Arts fashion, it was a bit
|
|
difficult to defend myself.
|
|
I could not defend his frontal attack, but I had already declared in my
|
|
mind a lack of confidence on Red Shirt. The old lady in the boarding
|
|
house may be tight and a grabber, I do not doubt it, but she is a woman
|
|
who tells no lie. She is not double faced like Red Shirt, I was
|
|
helpless, so I answered.
|
|
"What you say might be right,--anyway, I decline the raise."
|
|
"That's still funnier. I thought your coming here now was because you
|
|
had found a certain reason for which you could not accept the raise.
|
|
Then it is hard to understand to see you still insisting on declining
|
|
the raise in spite of the reason having been eradicated by my
|
|
explanation."
|
|
"It may be hard to understand, but anyway I don't want it."
|
|
"If you don't like it so much, I wouldn't force it on you. But if you
|
|
change your mind within two or three hours with no particular reason, it
|
|
would affect your credit in future."
|
|
"I don't care if it does affect it."
|
|
"That can't be. Nothing is more important than credit for us. Supposing,
|
|
the boss of the boarding house......."
|
|
"Not the boss, but the old lady."
|
|
"Makes no difference,--suppose what the old woman in the boarding house
|
|
told you was true, the raise of your salary is not to be had by reducing
|
|
the income of Mr. Koga, is it? Mr. Koga is going to Nobeoka; his
|
|
successor is coming. He comes on a salary a little less than that of Mr.
|
|
Koga, and we propose to add the surplus money to your salary, and you
|
|
need not be shy. Mr. Koga will be promoted; the successor is to start on
|
|
less pay, and if you could be raised, I think everything be satisfactory
|
|
to all concerned. If you don't like it, that's all right, but suppose
|
|
you think it over once more at home?"
|
|
My brain is not of the best stuff, and if another fellow flourishes his
|
|
eloquence like this, I usually think, "Well, perhaps I was wrong," and
|
|
consider myself defeated, but not so to-night. From the time I came to
|
|
this town I felt prejudiced against Red Shirt. Once I had thought of him
|
|
in a different light, taking him for a fellow kind-hearted and
|
|
feminished. His kindness, however, began to look like anything but
|
|
kindness, and as a result, I have been getting sick of him. So no matter
|
|
how he might glory himself in logical grandiloquence, or how he might
|
|
attempt to out-talk me in a head-teacher-style, I don't care a snap. One
|
|
who shines in argument is not necessarily a good fellow, while the other
|
|
who is out-talked is not necessarily a bad fellow, either. Red Shirt is
|
|
very, very reasonable as far as his reasoning goes, but however graceful
|
|
he may appear, he cannot win my respect. If money, authority or
|
|
reasoning can command admiration, loansharks, police officers or college
|
|
professors should be liked best by all. I cannot be moved in the least
|
|
by the logic by so insignificant a fellow as the head teacher of a
|
|
middle school. Man works by preference, not by logic.
|
|
"What you say is right, but I have begun to dislike the raise, so I
|
|
decline. It will be the same if I think it over. Good by." And I left
|
|
the house of Red Shirt. The solitary milky way hung high in the sky.
|
|
CHAPTER IX.
|
|
When I went to the school, in the morning of the day the farewell dinner
|
|
party was to be held, Porcupine suddenly spoke to me;
|
|
"The other day I asked you to quit the Ikagins because Ikagin begged of
|
|
me to have you leave there as you were too tough, and I believed him.
|
|
But I heard afterward that Ikagin is a crook and often passes imitation
|
|
of famous drawings for originals. I think what he told me about you must
|
|
be a lie. He tried to sell pictures and curios to you, but as you shook
|
|
him off, he told some false stories on you. I did very wrong by you
|
|
because I did not know his character, and wish you would forgive me."
|
|
And he offered me a lengthy apology.
|
|
Without saying a word, I took up the one sen and a half which was lying
|
|
on the desk of Porcupine, and put it into my purse. He asked me in a
|
|
wondering tone, if I meant to take it back. I explained, "Yes. I didn't
|
|
like to have you treat me and expected to pay this back at all hazard,
|
|
but as I think about it, I would rather have you treated me after all;
|
|
so I'm going to take it back."
|
|
Porcupine laughed heartily and asked me why I had not taken it back
|
|
sooner. I told him that I wanted to more than once, in fact, but somehow
|
|
felt shy and left it there. I was sick of that one sen and a half these
|
|
days that I shunned the sight of it when I came to the school, I said.
|
|
He said "You're a deucedly unyielding sport," and I answered "You're
|
|
obstinate." Then ensued the following give-and-take between us two;
|
|
"Where were you born anyway?"
|
|
"I'm a Yedo kid."
|
|
"Ah, a Yedo kid, eh? No wonder I thought you a pretty stiff neck."
|
|
"And you?"
|
|
"I'm from Aizu."
|
|
"Ha, Aizu guy, eh? You've got reason to be obstinate. Going to the
|
|
farewell dinner to-day?"
|
|
"Sure. You?"
|
|
"Of course I am. I intend to go down to the beach to see Koga-san off
|
|
when he leaves."
|
|
"The farewell dinner should be a big blow-out. You come and see. I'm
|
|
going to get soused to the neck."
|
|
"You get loaded all you want. I quit the place right after I finish my
|
|
plates. Only fools fight booze."
|
|
"You're a fellow who picks up a fight too easy. It shows up the
|
|
characteristic of the Yedo kid well."
|
|
"I don't care. Say, before you go to the farewell dinner, come to see
|
|
me. I want to tell you something."
|
|
Porcupine came to my room as promised. I had been in full sympathy with
|
|
Hubbard Squash these days, and when it came to his farewell dinner, my
|
|
pity for him welled up so much that I wished I could go to Nobeoka for
|
|
him myself. I thought of making a parting address of burning eloquence
|
|
at the dinner to grace the occasion, but my speech which rattles off
|
|
like that of the excited spieler of New York would not become the place.
|
|
I planned to take the breath out of Red Shirt by employing Porcupine who
|
|
has a thunderous voice. Hence my invitation to him before we started for
|
|
the party.
|
|
I commenced by explaining the Madonna affair, but Porcupine, needless to
|
|
say, knew more about it than I. Telling about my meeting Red Shirt on
|
|
the Nozeri river, I called him a fool. Porcupine then said; "You call
|
|
everybody a fool. You called me a fool to-day at the school. If I'm a
|
|
fool, Red Shirt isn't," and insisted that he was not in the same group
|
|
with Red Shirt. "Then Red Shirt may be a four-flusher," I said and he
|
|
approved this new alias with enthusiasm. Porcupine is physically strong,
|
|
but when it comes to such terms, he knows less than I do. I guess all
|
|
Aizu guys are about the same.
|
|
Then, when I disclosed to him about the raise of my salary and the
|
|
advance hint on my promotion by Red Shirt, Porcupine pished, and said,
|
|
"Then he means to discharge me." "Means to discharge you? But you mean
|
|
to get discharged?" I asked. "Bet you, no. If I get fired, Red Shirt
|
|
will have to go with me," he remarked with a lordly air. I insisted on
|
|
knowing how he was going to get Red Shirt kicked out with him, and he
|
|
answered that he had not thought so far yet. Yes, Porcupine looks
|
|
strong, but seems to be possessed of no abundance of brain power. I told
|
|
him about my refusal of the raise of my salary, and the Gov'nur was much
|
|
pleased, praising me with the remark, "That's the stuff for Yedo kids."
|
|
"If Hubbard Squash does not like to go down to Nobeoka, why didn't you
|
|
do something to enable him remain here," I asked, and Porcupine said
|
|
that when he heard the story from Hubbard Squash, everything had been
|
|
settled already, but he had asked the principal twice and Red Shirt once
|
|
to have the transfer order cancelled, but to no purpose. Porcupine
|
|
bitterly condemned Hubbard Squash for being too good-natured. If Hubbard
|
|
Squash, he said, had either flatly refused or delayed the answer on the
|
|
pretext of considering it, when Red Shirt raised the question of
|
|
transfer, it would have been better for him. But he was fooled by the
|
|
oily tongue of Red Shirt, had accepted the transfer outright, and all
|
|
efforts by Porcupine who was moved by the tearful appeal of the mother,
|
|
proved unavailing.
|
|
I said; "The transfer of Koga is nothing but a trick of Red Shirt to cop
|
|
the Madonna by sending Hubbard Squash away."
|
|
"Yes," said Porcupine "That must be. Red Shirt looks gentle, but plays
|
|
nasty tricks. He is a sonovagun for when some one finds fault with him,
|
|
he has excuses prepared already. Nothing but a sound thumping will be
|
|
effective for fellows like him."
|
|
He rolled up his sleeves over his plump arms as he spoke. I asked him,
|
|
by the way, if he knew jiujitsu, because his arms looked powerful. Then
|
|
he put force in his forearm, and told me to touch it. I felt its swelled
|
|
muscle which was hard as the pumic stone in the public bathhouse.
|
|
I was deeply impressed by his massive strength, and asked him if he
|
|
could not knock five or six of Red Shirt in a bunch. "Of course," he
|
|
said, and as he extended and bent back the arm, the lumpy muscle rolled
|
|
round and round, which was very amusing. According to the statement of
|
|
Porcupine himself, this muscle, if he bends the arm back with force,
|
|
would snap a paper-string wound around it twice. I said I might do the
|
|
same thing if it were a paper-string, and he challenged me. "No, you
|
|
can't," he said. "See if you can." As it would not look well if I
|
|
failed, I did not try.
|
|
"Say, after you have drunk all you want to-night at the dinner, take a
|
|
fall out of Red Shirt and Clown, eh?" I suggested to him for fun.
|
|
Porcupine thought for a moment and said, "Not to-night, I guess." I
|
|
wanted to know why, and he pointed out that it would be bad for Koga.
|
|
"Besides, if I'm going to give it to them at all, I've to get them red
|
|
handed in their dirty scheme, or all the blame will be on me," he added
|
|
discretely. Even Porcupine seems to have wiser judgment than I.
|
|
"Then make a speech and praise Mr. Koga sky-high. My speech becomes sort
|
|
of jumpy, wanting dignity. And at any formal gathering, I get lumpy in
|
|
my throat, and can't speak. So I leave it to you," I said.
|
|
"That's a strange disease. Then you can't speak in the presence of other
|
|
people? It would be awkward, I suppose," he said, and I told him not
|
|
quite as much awkward as he might think.
|
|
About then, the time for the farewell dinner party arrived, and I went
|
|
to the hall with Porcupine. The dinner party was to be held at
|
|
Kashin-tei which is said to be the leading restaurant in the town, but I
|
|
had never been in the house before. This restaurant, I understood, was
|
|
formerly the private residence of the chief retainer of the daimyo of
|
|
the province, and its condition seemed to confirm the story. The
|
|
residence of a chief retainer transformed into a restaurant was like
|
|
making a saucepan out of warrior's armor.
|
|
When we two came there, about all of the guests were present. They
|
|
formed two or three groups in the spacious room of fifty mats. The
|
|
alcove in this room, in harmony with its magnificence, was very large.
|
|
The alcove in the fifteen-mat room which I occupied at Yamashiro-ya made
|
|
a small showing beside it. I measured it and found it was twelve feet
|
|
wide. On the right, in the alcove, there was a seto-ware flower vase,
|
|
painted with red designs, in which was a large branch of pine tree. Why
|
|
the pine twigs, I did not know, except that they are in no danger of
|
|
withering for many a month to come, and are economical. I asked the
|
|
teacher of natural history where that seto-ware flower vase is made. He
|
|
told me it was not a seto-ware but an imari. Isn't imari seto-ware? I
|
|
wondered audibly, and the natural history man laughed. I heard afterward
|
|
that we call it a seto-ware because it is made in Seto. I'm a Yedo kid,
|
|
and thought all china was seto-wares. In the center of the alcove was
|
|
hung a panel on which were written twenty eight letters, each letter as
|
|
large as my face. It was poorly written; so poorly indeed that I
|
|
enquired of the teacher of Confucius why such a poor work be hung in
|
|
apparent show of pride. He explained that it was written by Kaioku a
|
|
famous artist in the writing, but Kaioku or anyone else, I still declare
|
|
the work poorly done.
|
|
By and by, Kawamura, the clerk, requested all to be seated. I chose one
|
|
in front of a pillar so I could lean against it. Badger sat in front of
|
|
the panel of Kaioku in Japanese full dress. On his left sat Red Shirt
|
|
similarly dressed, and on his right Hubbard Squash, as the guest of
|
|
honor, in the same kind of dress. I was dressed in a European suit, and
|
|
being unable to sit down, squatted on my legs at once. The teacher of
|
|
physical culture next to me, though in the same kind of rags as mine,
|
|
sat squarely in Japanese fashion. As a teacher of his line he appeared
|
|
to have well trained himself. Then the dinner trays were served and the
|
|
bottles placed beside them. The manager of the day stood up and made a
|
|
brief opening address. He was followed by Badger and Red Shirt. These
|
|
two made farewell addresses, and dwelt at length on Hubbard Squash being
|
|
an ideal teacher and gentleman, expressing their regret, saying his
|
|
departure was a great loss not only to the school but to them in person.
|
|
They concluded that it could not be helped, however, since the transfer
|
|
was due to his own earnest desire and for his own convenience. They
|
|
appeared to be ashamed not in the least by telling such a lie at a
|
|
farewell dinner. Particularly, Red Shirt, of these three, praised Hubard
|
|
Squash in lavish terms. He went so far as to declare that to lose this
|
|
true friend was a great personal loss to him. Moreover, his tone was so
|
|
impressive in its same old gentle tone that one who listens to him for
|
|
the first time would be sure to be misled. Probably he won the Madonna
|
|
by this same trick. While Red Shirt was uttering his farewell buncomb,
|
|
Porcupine who sat on the other side across me, winked at me. As an
|
|
answer of this, I "snooked" at him.
|
|
No sooner had Red Shirt sat down than Porcupine stood up, and highly
|
|
rejoiced, I clapped hands. At this Badger and others glanced at me, and
|
|
I felt that I blushed a little.
|
|
"Our principal and other gentlemen," he said, "particularly the head
|
|
teacher, expressed their sincere regret at Mr. Koga's transfer. I am of
|
|
a different opinion, and hope to see him leave the town at the earliest
|
|
possible moment. Nobeoka is an out-of-the-way, backwoods town, and
|
|
compared with this town, it may have more material inconveniences, but
|
|
according to what I have heard, Nobeoka is said to be a town where the
|
|
customs are simple and untainted, and the teachers and students still
|
|
strong in the straightforward characteristics of old days. I am
|
|
convinced that in Nobeoka there is not a single high-collared guy who
|
|
passes round threadbare remarks, or who with smooth face, entraps
|
|
innocent people. I am sure that a man like Mr. Koga, gentle and honest,
|
|
will surely be received with an enthusiastic welcome there. I heartily
|
|
welcome this transfer for the sake of Mr. Koga. In concluding, I hope
|
|
that when he is settled down at Nobeoka, he will find a lady qualified
|
|
to become his wife, and form a sweet home at an early date and
|
|
incidentally let the inconstant, unchaste sassy old wench die ashamed
|
|
...... a'hum, a'hum!"
|
|
He coughed twice significantly and sat down. I thought of clapping my
|
|
hands again, but as it would draw attention, I refrained. When
|
|
Porcupine finished his speech, Hubbard Squash arose politely, slipped
|
|
out of his seat, went to the furthest end of the room, and having bowed
|
|
to all in a most respectful manner, acknowledged the compliments in the
|
|
following way;
|
|
"On the occasion of my going to Kyushu for my personal convenience, I am
|
|
deeply impressed and appreciate the way my friends have honored me with
|
|
this magnificent dinner....... The farewell addresses by our principal
|
|
and other gentlemen will be long held in my fondest recollection.......
|
|
I am going far away now, but I hope my name be included in the future as
|
|
in the past in the list of friends of the gentlemen here to-night."
|
|
Then again bowing, he returned to his seat. There was no telling how far
|
|
the "good-naturedness" of Hubbard Squash might go. He had respectfully
|
|
thanked the principal and the head teacher who had been fooling him. And
|
|
it was not a formal, cut-and-dried reply he made, either; by his manner,
|
|
tone and face, he appeared to have been really grateful from his heart.
|
|
Badger and Red Shirt should have blushed when they were addressed so
|
|
seriously by so good a man as Hubbard Squash, but they only listened
|
|
with long faces.
|
|
After the exchange of addresses, a sizzling sound was heard here and
|
|
there, and I too tried the soup which tasted like anything but soup.
|
|
There was kamaboko in the kuchitori dish, but instead of being snow
|
|
white as it should be, it looked grayish, and was more like a poorly
|
|
cooked chikuwa. The sliced tunny was there, but not having been sliced
|
|
fine, passed the throat like so many pieces of chopped raw tunny. Those
|
|
around me, however, ate with ravenous appetite. They have not tasted, I
|
|
guess, the real Yedo dinner.
|
|
Meanwhile the bottles began passing round, and all became more or less
|
|
"jacked up." Clown proceeded to the front of the principal and
|
|
submissively drank to his health. A beastly fellow, this! Hubbard Squash
|
|
made a round of all the guests, drinking to their health. A very onerous
|
|
job, indeed. When he came to me and proposed my health, I abandoned the
|
|
squatting posture and sat up straight.
|
|
"Too bad to see you go away so soon. When are you going? I want to see
|
|
you off at the beach," I said.
|
|
"Thank you, Sir. But never mind that. You're busy," he declined. He
|
|
might decline, but I was determined to get excused for the day and give
|
|
him a rousing send-off.
|
|
Within about an hour from this, the room became pretty lively.
|
|
"Hey, have another, hic; ain't goin', hic, have one on me?" One or two
|
|
already in a pickled state appeared on the scene. I was little tired,
|
|
and going out to the porch, was looking at the old fashioned garden by
|
|
the dim star light, when Porcupine came.
|
|
"How did you like my speech? Wasn't it grand, though!" he remarked in a
|
|
highly elated tone. I protested that while I approved 99 per cent, of
|
|
his speech, there was one per cent, that I did not. "What's that one per
|
|
cent?" he asked.
|
|
"Well, you said,...... there is not a single high-collared guy who with
|
|
smooth face entraps innocent people......."
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
"A 'high-collared guy' isn't enough."
|
|
"Then what should I say?"
|
|
"Better say,--'a high-collared guy; swindler, bastard,
|
|
super-swanker, doubleface, bluffer, totempole, spotter, who looks
|
|
like a dog as he yelps.'"
|
|
"I can't get my tongue to move so fast. You're eloquent. In the first
|
|
place, you know a great many simple words. Strange that you can't make
|
|
a speech."
|
|
"I reserve these words for use when I chew the rag. If it comes to
|
|
speech-making, they don't come out so smoothly."
|
|
"Is that so? But they simply come a-running. Repeat that again for me."
|
|
"As many times as you like. Listen,--a high-collared guy, swindler,
|
|
bastard, super-swanker ..."
|
|
While I was repeating this, two shaky fellows came out of the room
|
|
hammering the floor.
|
|
"Hey, you two gents, if won't do to run away. Won't let you off while
|
|
I'm here. Come and have a drink. Bastard? That's fine. Bastardly fine.
|
|
Now, come on."
|
|
And they pulled Porcupine and me away. These two fellows really had come
|
|
to the lavatory, but soaked as they were, in booze bubbles, they
|
|
apparently forgot to proceed to their original destination, and were
|
|
pulling us hard. All booze fighters seem to be attracted by whatever
|
|
comes directly under their eyes for the moment and forget what they had
|
|
been proposing to do.
|
|
"Say, fellows, we've got bastards. Make them drink. Get them loaded. You
|
|
gents got to stay here."
|
|
And they pushed me who never attempted to escape against the wall.
|
|
Surveying the scene, I found there was no dish in which any edibles were
|
|
left. Some one had eaten all his share, and gone on a foraging
|
|
expedition. The principal was not there,--I did not know when he left.
|
|
At that time, preceded by a coquetish voice, three or four geishas
|
|
entered the room. I was a bit surprised, but having been pushed against
|
|
the wall, I had to look on quietly. At the instant, Red Shirt who had
|
|
been leaning against a pillar with the same old amber pipe stuck into
|
|
his mouth with some pride, suddenly got up and started to leave the
|
|
room. One of the geishas who was advancing toward him smiled and
|
|
courtesied at him as she passed by him. The geisha was the youngest and
|
|
prettiest of the bunch. They were some distance away from me and I could
|
|
not see very well, but it seemed that she might have said "Good
|
|
evening." Red Shirt brushed past as if unconscious, and never showed
|
|
again. Probably he followed the principal.
|
|
The sight of the geishas set the room immediately in a buzz and it
|
|
became noisy as they all raised howls of welcome. Some started the game
|
|
of "nanko" with a force that beat the sword-drawing practice. Others
|
|
began playing morra, and the way they shook their hands, intently
|
|
absorbed in the game, was a better spectacle than a puppet show.
|
|
One in the corner was calling "Hey, serve me here," but shaking the
|
|
bottle, corrected it to "Hey, fetch me more sake." The whole room
|
|
became so infernally noisy that I could scarcely stand it. Amid this
|
|
orgy, one, like a fish out of water, sat down with his head bowed. It
|
|
was Hubbard Squash. The reason they have held this farewell dinner
|
|
party was not in order to bid him a farewell, but because they wanted
|
|
to have a jolly good time for themselves with John Barleycorn. He had
|
|
come to suffer only. Such a dinner party would have been better had it
|
|
not been started at all.
|
|
After a while, they began singing ditties in outlandish voices. One of
|
|
the geishas came in front of me, and taking up a samisen, asked me to
|
|
sing something. I told her I didn't sing, but I'd like to hear, and she
|
|
droned out:
|
|
"If one can go round and meet the one he wants, banging gongs and drums
|
|
...... bang, bang, bang, bang, bing, shouting after wandering Santaro,
|
|
there is some one I'd like to meet by banging round gongs and drums
|
|
...... bang, bang, bang, bang, b-i-n-g."
|
|
She dashed this off in two breaths, and sighed, "O, dear!" She should
|
|
have sung something easier.
|
|
Clown who had come near us meanwhile, remarked in his flippant tone:
|
|
"Hello, dear Miss Su-chan, too bad to see your beau go away so soon."
|
|
The geisha pouted, "I don't know." Clown, regardless, began imitating
|
|
"gidayu" with a dismal voice,--"What a luck, when she met her sweet
|
|
heart by a rare chance...."
|
|
The geisha slapped the lap of Clown with a "Cut that out," and Clown
|
|
gleefully laughed. This geisha is the one who made goo-goo eyes[J] at
|
|
Red Shirt. What a simpleton, to be pleased by the slap of a geisha, this
|
|
Clown. He said:
|
|
"Say, Su-chan, strike up the string. I'm going to dance the Kiino-kuni."
|
|
He seemed yet to dance.
|
|
On other side of the room, the old man of Confucius, twisting round his
|
|
toothless mouth, had finished as far as "...... dear Dembei-san" and is
|
|
asking a geisha who sat in front of him to couch him for the rest. Old
|
|
people seem to need polishing up their memorizing system. One geisha is
|
|
talking to the teacher of natural history:
|
|
"Here's the latest. I'll sing it. Just listen. 'Margaret, the
|
|
high-collared head with a white ribbon; she rides on a bike, plays a
|
|
violin, and talks in broken English,--I am glad to see you.'" Natural
|
|
history appears impressed, and says;
|
|
"That's an interesting piece. English in it too."
|
|
Porcupine called "geisha, geisha," in a loud voice, and commanded; "Bang
|
|
your samisen; I'm going to dance a sword-dance."
|
|
His manner was so rough that the geishas were startled and did not
|
|
answer. Porcupine, unconcerned, brought out a cane, and began performing
|
|
the sword-dance in the center of the room. Then Clown, having danced the
|
|
Kii-no-kuni, the Kap-pore[K] and the Durhma-san on the Shelf, almost
|
|
stark-naked, with a palm-fibre broom, began turkey-trotting about the
|
|
room, shouting "The Sino-Japanese negotiations came to a break......."
|
|
The whole was a crazy sight.
|
|
I had been feeling sorry for Hubbard Squash, who up to this time had sat
|
|
up straight in his full dress. Even were this a farewell dinner held in
|
|
his honor, I thought he was under no obligation to look patiently in a
|
|
formal dress at the naked dance. So I went to him and persuaded him with
|
|
"Say, Koga-san, let's go home." Hubbard Squash said the dinner was in
|
|
his honor, and it would be improper for him to leave the room before the
|
|
guests. He seemed to be determined to remain.
|
|
"What do you care!" I said, "If this is a farewell dinner, make it like
|
|
one. Look at those fellows; they're just like the inmates of a lunatic
|
|
asylum. Let's go."
|
|
And having forced hesitating Hubbard Squash to his feet, we were
|
|
just leaving the room, when Clown, marching past, brandishing the
|
|
broom, saw us.
|
|
"This won't do for the guest of honor to leave before us," he hollered,
|
|
"this is the Sino-Japanese negotiations. Can't let you off." He enforced
|
|
his declaration by holding the broom across our way. My temper had been
|
|
pretty well aroused for some time, and I felt impatient.
|
|
"The Sino-Japanese negotiation, eh? Then you're a Chink," and I whacked
|
|
his head with a knotty fist.
|
|
This sudden blow left Clown staring blankly speechless for a second or
|
|
two; then he stammered out:
|
|
"This is going some! Mighty pity to knock my head. What a blow on this
|
|
Yoshikawa! This makes the Sino-Japanese negotiations the sure stuff."
|
|
While Clown was mumbling these incoherent remarks, Porcupine, believing
|
|
some kind of row had been started, ceased his sword-dance and came
|
|
running toward us. On seeing us, he grabbed the neck of Clown and
|
|
pulled him back.
|
|
"The Sino-Japane......ouch!......ouch! This is outrageous," and Clown
|
|
writhed under the grip of Porcupine who twisted him sideways and threw
|
|
him down on the floor with a bang. I do not know the rest. I parted from
|
|
Hubbard Squash on the way, and it was past eleven when I returned home.
|
|
CHAPTER X.
|
|
The town is going to celebrate a Japanese victory to-day, and there is
|
|
no school. The celebration is to be held at the parade ground, and
|
|
Badger is to take out all the students and attend the ceremony. As one
|
|
of the instructors, I am to go with them. The streets are everywhere
|
|
draped with flapping national flags almost enough to dazzle the eyes.
|
|
There were as many as eight hundred students in all, and it was
|
|
arranged, under the direction of the teacher of physical culture to
|
|
divide them into sections with one teacher or two to lead them. The
|
|
arrangement itself was quite commendable, but in its actual operation
|
|
the whole thing went wrong. All students are mere kiddies who, ever too
|
|
fresh, regard it as beneath their dignity not to break all regulations.
|
|
This rendered the provision of teachers among them practically useless.
|
|
They would start marching songs without being told to, and if they
|
|
ceased the marching songs, they would raise devilish shouts without
|
|
cause. Their behavior would have done credit to the gang of tramps
|
|
parading the streets demanding work. When they neither sing nor shout,
|
|
they tee-hee and giggle. Why they cannot walk without these disorder,
|
|
passes my understanding, but all Japanese are born with their mouths
|
|
stuck out, and no kick will ever be strong enough to stop it. Their
|
|
chatter is not only of simple nature, but about the teachers when their
|
|
back is turned. What a degraded bunch! I made the students apologize to
|
|
me on the dormitory affair, and considered the incident closed. But I
|
|
was mistaken. To borrow the words of the old lady in the boarding house,
|
|
I was surely wrong Mr. Wright. The apology they offered was not prompted
|
|
by repentance in their hearts. They had kowtowed as a matter of form by
|
|
the command of the principal. Like the tradespeople who bow their heads
|
|
low but never give up cheating the public, the students apologize but
|
|
never stop their mischiefs. Society is made up, I think it probable, of
|
|
people just like those students. One may be branded foolishly honest if
|
|
he takes seriously the apologies others might offer. We should regard
|
|
all apologies a sham and forgiving also as a sham; then everything would
|
|
be all right. If one wants to make another apologize from his heart, he
|
|
has to pound him good and strong until he begs for mercy from his heart.
|
|
As I walked along between the sections, I could hear constantly the
|
|
voices mentioning "tempura" or "dango." And as there were so many of
|
|
them, I could not tell which one mentioned it. Even if I succeeded in
|
|
collaring the guilty one I was sure of his saying, "No, I didn't mean
|
|
you in saying tempura or dango. I fear you suffer from nervousness and
|
|
make wrong inferences." This dastardly spirit has been fostered from the
|
|
time of the feudal lords, and is deep-rooted. No amount of teaching or
|
|
lecturing will cure it. If I stay in a town like this for one year or
|
|
so, I may be compelled to follow their example, who knows,--clean and
|
|
honest though I have been. I do not propose to make a fool of myself by
|
|
remaining quiet when others attempt to play games on me, with all their
|
|
excuses ready-made. They are men and so am I--students or kiddies or
|
|
whatever they may be. They are bigger than I, and unless I get even with
|
|
them by punishment, I would cut a sorry figure. But in the attempt to
|
|
get even, if I resort to ordinary means, they are sure to make it a
|
|
boomerang. If I tell them, "You're wrong," they will start an eloquent
|
|
defence, because they are never short of the means of sidestepping.
|
|
Having defended themselves, and made themselves appear suffering
|
|
martyrs, they would begin attacking me. As the incident would have been
|
|
started by my attempting to get even with them, my defence would not be
|
|
a defence until I can prove their wrong. So the quarrel, which they had
|
|
started, might be mistaken, after all, as one begun by me. But the more
|
|
I keep silent the more they would become insolent, which, speaking
|
|
seriously, could not be permitted for the sake of public morale. In
|
|
consequence, I am obliged to adopt an identical policy so they cannot
|
|
catch men in playing it back on them. If the situation comes to that, it
|
|
would be the last day of the Yedo kid. Even so, if I am to be subjected
|
|
to these pin-pricking[L] tricks, I am a man and got to risk losing off
|
|
the last remnant of the honor of the Yedo kid. I became more convinced
|
|
of the advisability of returning to Tokyo quickly and living with Kiyo.
|
|
To live long in such a countrytown would be like degrading myself for a
|
|
purpose. Newspaper delivering would be preferable to being degraded so
|
|
far as that.
|
|
I walked along with a sinking heart, thinking like this, when the head
|
|
of our procession became suddenly noisy, and the whole came to a full
|
|
stop. I thought something has happened, stepped to the right out of the
|
|
ranks, and looked toward the direction of the noise. There on the corner
|
|
of Otemachi, turning to Yakushimachi, I saw a mass packed full like
|
|
canned sardines, alternately pushing back and forth. The teacher of
|
|
physical culture came down the line hoarsely shouting to all to be
|
|
quiet. I asked him what was the matter, and he said the middle school
|
|
and the normal had come to a clash at the corner.
|
|
The middle school and the normal, I understood, are as much friendly as
|
|
dogs and monkeys. It is not explained why but their temper was
|
|
hopelessly crossed, and each would try to knock the chip off the
|
|
shoulder of the other on all occasions. I presume they quarrel so much
|
|
because life gets monotonous in this backwoods town. I am fond of
|
|
fighting, and hearing of the clash, darted forward to make the most of
|
|
the fun. Those foremost in the line are jeering, "Get out of the way,
|
|
you country tax!"[12] while those in the rear are hollowing "Push them
|
|
out!" I passed through the students, and was nearing the corner, when I
|
|
heard a sharp command of "Forward!" and the line of the normal school
|
|
began marching on. The clash which had resulted from contending for the
|
|
right of way was settled, but it was settled by the middle school giving
|
|
way to the normal. From the point of school-standing the normal is said
|
|
to rank above the middle.
|
|
[Footnote 12: The normal school in the province maintains the students
|
|
mostly on the advance-expense system, supported by the country tax.]
|
|
The ceremony was quite simple. The commander of the local brigade read a
|
|
congratulatory address, and so did the governor, and the audience
|
|
shouted banzais. That was all. The entertainments were scheduled for the
|
|
afternoon, and I returned home once and started writing to Kiyo an
|
|
answer which had been in my mind for some days. Her request had been
|
|
that I should write her a letter with more detailed news; so I must get
|
|
it done with care. But as I took up the rolled letter-paper, I did not
|
|
know with what I should begin, though I have many things to write about.
|
|
Should I begin with that? That is too much trouble. Or with this? It is
|
|
not interesting. Isn't there something which will come out smoothly, I
|
|
reflected, without taxing my head too much, and which will interest
|
|
Kiyo. There seemed, however, no such item as I wanted I grated the
|
|
ink-cake, wetted the writing brush, stared at the letter-paper--stared
|
|
at the letter-paper, wetted the writing brush, grated the ink-cake--and,
|
|
having repeated the same thing several times, I gave up the letter
|
|
writing as not in my line, and covered the lid of the stationery box. To
|
|
write a letter was a bother. It would be much simpler to go back to
|
|
Tokyo and see Kiyo. Not that I am unconcerned about the anxiety of Kiyo,
|
|
but to get up a letter to please the fancy of Kiyo is a harder job than
|
|
to fast for three weeks.
|
|
I threw down the brush and letter-paper, and lying down with my bent
|
|
arms as a pillow, gazed at the garden. But the thought of the letter to
|
|
Kiyo would come back in my mind. Then I thought this way; If I am
|
|
thinking of her from my heart, even at such a distance, my sincerity
|
|
would find responsive appreciation in Kiyo. If it does find response,
|
|
there is no need of sending letters. She will regard the absence of
|
|
letters from me as a sign of my being in good health. If I write in case
|
|
of illness or when something unusual happens, that will be sufficient.
|
|
The garden is about thirty feet square, with no particular plants worthy
|
|
of name. There is one orange tree which is so tall as to be seen above
|
|
the board fence from outside. Whenever I returned from the school I used
|
|
to look at this orange tree. For to those who had not been outside of
|
|
Tokyo, oranges on the tree are rather a novel sight. Those oranges now
|
|
green will ripen by degrees and turn to yellow, when the tree would
|
|
surely be beautiful. There are some already ripened. The old lady told
|
|
me that they are juicy, sweet oranges. "They will all soon be ripe, and
|
|
then help yourself to all you want," she said. I think I will enjoy a
|
|
few every day. They will be just right in about three weeks. I do not
|
|
think I will have to leave the town in so short a time as three weeks.
|
|
While my attention was centered on the oranges, Porcupine[M] came in.
|
|
"Say, to-day being the celebration[N] of victory, I thought I would get
|
|
something good to eat with you, and bought some beef."
|
|
So saying, he took out a package covered with a bamboo-wrapper, and
|
|
threw it down in the center of the room. I had been denied the pleasure
|
|
of patronizing the noodle house or dango shop, on top of getting sick of
|
|
the sweet potatoes and tofu, and I welcomed the suggestion with "That's
|
|
fine," and began cooking it with a frying pan and some sugar borrowed
|
|
from the old lady.
|
|
Porcupine, munching the beef to the full capacity of his mouth, asked me
|
|
if I knew Red Shirt having a favorite geisha. I asked if that was not
|
|
one of the geishas who came to our dinner the other night, and he
|
|
answered, "Yes, I got the wind of the fact only recently; you're sharp."
|
|
"Red Shirt always speaks of refinement of character or of mental
|
|
consolation, but he is making a fool of himself by chasing round a
|
|
geisha. What a dandy rogue. We might let that go if he wouldn't make
|
|
fuss about others making fools of themselves. I understand through the
|
|
principal he stopped your going even to noodle houses or dango shops as
|
|
unbecoming to the dignity of the school, didn't he?"
|
|
"According to his idea, running after a geisha is a mental consolation
|
|
but tempura or dango is a material pleasure, I guess. If that's mental
|
|
consolation, why doesn't the fool do it above board? You ought to see
|
|
the jacknape skipping out of the room when the geisha came into it the
|
|
other night,--I don't like his trying to deceive us, but if one were to
|
|
point it out for him, he would deny it or say it was the Russian
|
|
literature or that the haiku is a half-brother of the new poetry, and
|
|
expect to hush it up by twaddling soft nonsense. A weak-knee like him is
|
|
not a man. I believe he lived the life of a court-maid in former life.
|
|
Perhaps his daddy might have been a kagema at Yushima in old days."
|
|
"What is a kagema?"
|
|
"I suppose something very unmanly,--sort of emasculated chaps. Say, that
|
|
part isn't cooked enough. It might give you tape worm."
|
|
"So? I think it's all right. And, say, Red Shirt is said to frequent
|
|
Kadoya at the springs town and meet his geisha there, but he keeps
|
|
it in dark."
|
|
"Kadoya? That hotel?"
|
|
"Also a restaurant. So we've got to catch him there with his geisha and
|
|
make it hot for him right to his face."
|
|
"Catch him there? Suppose we begin a kind of night watch?"
|
|
"Yes, you know there is a rooming house called Masuya in front of
|
|
Kadoya. We'll rent one room upstairs of the house, and keep peeping
|
|
through a loophole we could make in the shoji."
|
|
"Will he come when we keep peeping at him?"
|
|
"He may. We will have to do it more than one night. Must expect to keep
|
|
it up for at least two weeks."
|
|
"Say, that would make one pretty well tired, I tell you. I sat up every
|
|
night for about one week attending my father when he died, and it left
|
|
me thoroughly down and out for some time afterward."
|
|
"I don't care if I do get tired some. A crook like Red Shirt should not
|
|
go unpunished that way for the honor of Japan, and I am going to
|
|
administer a chastisement in behalf of heaven."
|
|
"Hooray! If things are decided upon that way, I am game. And we are
|
|
going to start from to-night?"
|
|
"I haven't rented a room at Masuya yet, so can't start it to-night."
|
|
"Then when?"
|
|
"Will start before long. I'll let you know, and want you help me."
|
|
"Right-O. I will help you any time. I am not much myself at scheming,
|
|
but I am IT when it comes to fighting."
|
|
While Porcupine and I were discussing the plan of subjugating Red Shirt,
|
|
the old lady appeared at the door, announcing that a student was wanting
|
|
to see Professor Hotta. The student had gone to his house, but seeing
|
|
him out, had come here as probable to find him. Porcupine went to the
|
|
front door himself, and returning to the room after a while, said:
|
|
"Say, the boy came to invite us to go and see the entertainment of the
|
|
celebration. He says there is a big bunch of dancers from Kochi to dance
|
|
something, and it would be a long time before we could see the like of
|
|
it again. Let's go."
|
|
Porcupine seemed enthusiastic over the prospect of seeing that dance,
|
|
and induced me to go with him. I have seen many kinds of dance in Tokyo.
|
|
At the annual festival of the Hachiman Shrine, moving stages come around
|
|
the district, and I have seen the Shiokukmi and almost any other
|
|
variety. I was little inclined to see that dance by the sturdy fellows
|
|
from Tosa province, but as Porcupine was so insistent, I changed my mind
|
|
and followed him out. I did not know the student who came to invite
|
|
Porcupine, but found he was the younger brother of Red Shirt. Of all
|
|
students, what a strange choice for a messenger!
|
|
The celebration ground was decorated, like the wrestling amphitheater at
|
|
Ryogoku during the season, or the annual festivity of the Hommonji
|
|
temple, with long banners planted here and there, and on the ropes that
|
|
crossed and recrossed in the mid-air were strung the colors of all
|
|
nations, as if they were borrowed from as many nations for the occasion
|
|
and the large roof presented unusually cheerful aspect. On the eastern
|
|
corner there was built a temporary stage upon which the dance of Koehi
|
|
was to be performed. For about half a block, with the stage on the
|
|
right, there was a display of flowers and plant settings arranged on
|
|
shelves sheltered with reed screens. Everybody was looking at the
|
|
display seemingly much impressed, but it failed to impress me. If
|
|
twisted grasses or bamboos afforded so much pleasure, the gallantry of a
|
|
hunchback or the husband of a wrong pair should give as much pleasure to
|
|
their eyes.
|
|
In the opposite direction, aerial bombs and fire works were steadily
|
|
going on. A balloon shot out on which was written "Long Live the
|
|
Empire!" It floated leisurely over the pine trees near the castle
|
|
tower, and fell down inside the compound of the barracks. Bang! A black
|
|
ball shot up against the serene autumn sky; burst open straight above
|
|
my head, streams of luminous green smoke ran down in an umbrella-shape,
|
|
and finally faded. Then another balloon. It was red with "Long Live the
|
|
Army and Navy" in white. The wind slowly carried it from the town
|
|
toward the Aioi village. Probably it would fall into the yard of Kwanon
|
|
temple there.
|
|
At the formal celebration this morning there were not quite so many as
|
|
here now. It was surging mass that made me wonder how so many people
|
|
lived in the place. There were not many attractive faces among the
|
|
crowd, but as far as the numerical strength went, it was a formidable
|
|
one. In the meantime that dance had begun. I took it for granted that
|
|
since they call it a dance, it would be something similar to the kind of
|
|
dance by the Fujita troupe, but I was greatly mistaken.
|
|
Thirty fellows, dressed up in a martial style, in three rows of ten
|
|
each, stood with glittering drawn swords. The sight was an eye-opener,
|
|
indeed. The space between the rows measured about two feet, and that
|
|
between the men might have been even less. One stood apart from the
|
|
group. He was similarly dressed but instead of a drawn sword, he carried
|
|
a drum hung about his chest. This fellow drawled out signals the tone of
|
|
which suggested a mighty easy-life, and then croaking a strange song, he
|
|
would strike the drum. The tune was outlandishly unfamiliar. One might
|
|
form the idea by thinking it a combination of the Mikawa Banzai and the
|
|
Fudarakuya.
|
|
The song was drowsy, and like syrup in summer is dangling and slovenly.
|
|
He struck the drum to make stops at certain intervals. The tune was kept
|
|
with regular rhythmical order, though it appeared to have neither head
|
|
nor tail. In response to this tune, the thirty drawn swords flash, with
|
|
such dexterity and speed that the sight made the spectator almost
|
|
shudder. With live men within two feet of their position, the sharp
|
|
drawn blades, each flashing them in the same manner, they looked as if
|
|
they might make a bloody mess unless they were perfectly accurate in
|
|
their movements. If it had been brandishing swords alone without moving
|
|
themselves, the chances of getting slashed or cut might have been less,
|
|
but sometimes they would turn sideways together, or clear around, or
|
|
bend their knees. Just one second's difference in the movement, either
|
|
too quick or too late, on the part of the next fellow, might have meant
|
|
sloughing off a nose or slicing off the head of the next fellow. The
|
|
drawn swords moved in perfect freedom, but the sphere of action was
|
|
limited to about two feet square, and to cap it all, each had to keep
|
|
moving with those in front and back, at right and left, in the same
|
|
direction at the same speed. This beats me! The dance of the Shiokumi or
|
|
the Sekinoto would make no show compared with this! I heard them say the
|
|
dance requires much training, and it could not be an easy matter to make
|
|
so many dancers move in a unison like this. Particularly difficult part
|
|
in the dance was that of the fellow with drum stuck to his chest. The
|
|
movement of feet, action of hands, or bending of knees of those thirty
|
|
fellows were entirely directed by the tune with which he kept them
|
|
going. To the spectators this fellow's part appeared the easiest. He
|
|
sang in a lazy tune, but it was strange that he was the fellow who takes
|
|
the heaviest responsibility.
|
|
While Porcupine and I, deeply impressed, were looking at the dance with
|
|
absorbing interest, a sudden hue and cry was raised about half a block
|
|
off. A commotion was started among those who had been quietly enjoying
|
|
the sights and all ran pell-mell in every direction. Some one was heard
|
|
saying "fight!" Then the younger brother of Red Shirt came running
|
|
forward through the crowd.
|
|
"Please, Sir," he panted, "a row again! The middles are going to get
|
|
even with the normals and have just begun fighting. Come quick, Sir!"
|
|
And he melted somewhere into the crowd.
|
|
"What troublesome brats! So they're at it again, eh? Why can't
|
|
they stop it!"
|
|
Porcupine, as he spoke, dashed forward, dodging among the running crowd.
|
|
He meant, I think, to stop the fight, because he could not be an idle
|
|
spectator once he was informed of the fact. I of course had no intention
|
|
of turning tail, and hastened on the heels of Porcupine. The fight was
|
|
in its fiercest. There were about fifty to sixty normals, and the
|
|
middles numbered by some ninety. The normals wore uniform, but the
|
|
middles had discarded their uniform and put on Japanese civilian
|
|
clothes, which made the distinction between the two hostile camps easy.
|
|
But they were so mixed up, and wrangling with such violence, that we did
|
|
not know how and where we could separate them.
|
|
Porcupine, apparently at a loss what to do, looked at the wild scene
|
|
awhile, then turned to me, saying:
|
|
"Let's jump in and separate them. It will be hell if cops get on them."
|
|
I did not answer, but rushed to the spot where the scuffle appeared
|
|
most violent.
|
|
"Stop there! Cut this out! You're ruining the name of the school! Stop
|
|
this, dash you!"
|
|
Shouting at the top of my voice, I attempted to penetrate the line which
|
|
seemed to separate the hostile sides, but this attempt did not succeed.
|
|
When about ten feet into the turmoil, I could neither advance nor
|
|
retreat. Right in my front, a comparatively large normal was grappling
|
|
with a middle about sixteen years of ago.
|
|
"Stop that!"
|
|
I grabbed the shoulder of the normal and tried to force them apart when
|
|
some one whacked my feet. On this sudden attack, I let go the normal and
|
|
fell down sideways. Some one stepped on my back with heavy shoes. With
|
|
both hands and knees upon the ground, I jumped up and the fellow on my
|
|
back rolled off to my right. I got up, and saw the big body of Porcupine
|
|
about twenty feet away, sandwiched between the students, being pushed
|
|
back and forth, shouting, "Stop the fight! Stop that!"
|
|
"Say, we can't do anything!" I hollered at him, but unable to hear, I
|
|
think, he did not answer.
|
|
A pebble-stone whiffled through the air and hit squarely on my cheek
|
|
bone; the same moment some one banged my back with a heavy stick
|
|
from behind.
|
|
"Profs mixing in!" "Knock them down!" was shouted.
|
|
"Two of them; big one and small. Throw stones at them!" Another shout.
|
|
"Drat you fresh jackanapes!" I cried as I wallopped the head of a normal
|
|
nearby. Another stone grazed my head, and passed behind me. I did not
|
|
know what had become of Porcupine, I could not find him. Well, I could
|
|
not help it but jumped into the teapot to stop the tempest. I wasn't[O]
|
|
a Hottentot to skulk away on being shot at with pebble-stones. What did
|
|
they think I was anyway! I've been through all kinds of fighting in
|
|
Tokyo, and can take in all fights one may care to give me. I slugged,
|
|
jabbed and banged the stuffing out of the fellow nearest to me. Then
|
|
some one cried, "Cops! Cops! Cheese it! Beat it!" At that moment, as if
|
|
wading through a pond of molasses, I could hardly move, but the next I
|
|
felt suddenly released and both sides scampered off simultaneously. Even
|
|
the country fellows do creditable work when it comes to retreating, more
|
|
masterly than General Kuropatkin, I might say.
|
|
I searched for Porcupine who, I found his overgown torn to shreds, was
|
|
wiping his nose. He bled considerably, and his nose having swollen was a
|
|
sight. My clothes were pretty well massed with dirt, but I had not
|
|
suffered quite as much damage as Porcupine. I felt pain in my cheek and
|
|
as Porcupine said, it bled some.
|
|
About sixteen police officers arrived at the scene but, all the students
|
|
having beat it in opposite directions, all they were able to catch were
|
|
Porcupine and me. We gave them our names and explained the whole story.
|
|
The officers requested us to follow them to the police station which we
|
|
did, and after stating to the chief of police what had happened, we
|
|
returned home.
|
|
CHAPTER XI.
|
|
The next morning on awakening I felt pains all over my body, due, I
|
|
thought, to having had no fight for a long time. This is not creditable
|
|
to my fame as regards fighting, so I thought while in bed, when the old
|
|
lady brought me a copy of the Shikoku Shimbun. I felt so weak as to need
|
|
some effort even reaching for the paper. But what should be man so
|
|
easily upset by such a trifling affair,--so I forced myself to turn in
|
|
bed, and, opening its second page, I was surprised. There was the whole
|
|
story of the fight of yesterday in print. Not that I was surprised by
|
|
the news of the fight having been published, but it said that one
|
|
teacher Hotta of the Middle School and one certain saucy Somebody,
|
|
recently from Tokyo, of the same institution, not only started this
|
|
trouble by inciting the students, but were actually present at the scene
|
|
of the trouble, directing the students and engaged themselves against
|
|
the students of the Normal School. On top of this, something of the
|
|
following effect was added.
|
|
"The Middle School in this prefecture has been an object of admiration
|
|
by all other schools for its good and ideal behavior. But since this
|
|
long-cherished honor has been sullied by these two irresponsible
|
|
persons, and this city made to suffer the consequent indignity, we have
|
|
to bring the perpetrators to full account. We trust that before we take
|
|
any step in this matter, the authorities will have those 'toughs'
|
|
properly punished, barring them forever from our educational circles."
|
|
All the types were italicized, as if they meant to administer
|
|
typographical chastisement upon us. "What the devil do I care!" I
|
|
shouted, and up I jumped out of bed. Strange to say, the pain in my
|
|
joints became tolerable.
|
|
I rolled up the newspaper and threw it into the garden. Not satisfied, I
|
|
took that paper to the cesspool and dumped it there. Newspapers tell
|
|
such reckless lies. There is nothing so adept, I believe, as the
|
|
newspaper in circulating lies. It has said what I should have said. And
|
|
what does it mean by "one saucy Somebody who is recently from Tokyo?" Is
|
|
there any one in this wide world with the name of Somebody? Don't
|
|
forget, I have a family and personal name of my own which I am proud of.
|
|
If they want to look at my family-record, they will bow before every one
|
|
of my ancestors from Mitsunaka Tada down. Having washed my face, my
|
|
cheek began suddenly smarting. I asked the old lady for a mirror, and
|
|
she asked if I had read the paper of this morning. "Yes," I said, "and
|
|
dumped it in the cesspool; go and pick it up if you want it,"--and she
|
|
withdrew with a startled look. Looking in the mirror, I saw bruises on
|
|
my cheek. Mine is a precious face to me. I get my face bruised, and am
|
|
called a saucy Somebody as if I were nobody. That is enough.
|
|
It will be a reflection on my honor to the end of my days if it is said
|
|
that I shunned the public gaze and kept out of the school on account of
|
|
the write-up in the paper. So, after the breakfast, I attended the
|
|
school ahead of all. One after the other, all coming to the school would
|
|
grin at my face. What is there to laugh about! This face is my own,
|
|
gotten up, I am sure, without the least obligation on their part. By and
|
|
by, Clown appeared.
|
|
"Ha, heroic action yesterday. Wounds of honor, eh?"
|
|
He made this sarcastic remark, I suppose, in revenge for the knock he
|
|
received on his head from me at the farewell dinner.
|
|
"Cut out nonsense; you get back there and suck your old drawing
|
|
brushes!" Then he answered "that was going some," and enquired if it
|
|
pained much?
|
|
"Pain or no pain, this is my face. That's none of your business," I
|
|
snapped back in a furious temper. Then Clown took his seat on the other
|
|
side, and still keeping his eye on me, whispered and laughed with the
|
|
teacher of history next to him.
|
|
Then came Porcupine. His nose had swollen and was purple,--it was a
|
|
tempting object for a surgeon's knife. His face showed far worse (is it
|
|
my conceit that make this comparison?) than mine. I and Porcupine are
|
|
chums with desks next to each other, and moreover, as ill-luck would
|
|
have it, the desks are placed right facing the door. Thus were two
|
|
strange faces placed together. The other fellows, when in want of
|
|
something to divert them, would gaze our way with regularity. They say
|
|
"too bad," but they are surely laughing in their minds as "ha, these
|
|
fools!" If that is not so, there is no reason for their whispering
|
|
together and grinning like that. In the class room, the boys clapped
|
|
their hands when I entered; two or three of them banzaied. I could not
|
|
tell whether it was an enthusiastic approval or open insult. While I and
|
|
Porcupine were thus being made the cynosures of the whole school, Red
|
|
Shirt came to me as usual.
|
|
"Too bad, my friend; I am very sorry indeed for you gentlemen," he said
|
|
in a semi-apologetic manner. "I've talked with the principal in regard
|
|
to the story in the paper, and have arranged to demand that the paper
|
|
retract the report, so you needn't worry on that score. You were plunged
|
|
into the trouble because my brother invited Mr. Hotta, and I don't know
|
|
how I can apologize you! I'm going to do my level best in this matter;
|
|
you gentlemen please depend on that." At the third hour recess the
|
|
principal came out of his room, and seemed more or less perturbed,
|
|
saying, "The paper made a bad mess of it, didn't it? I hope the matter
|
|
will not become serious."
|
|
As to anxiety, I have none. If they propose to relieve me, I intend
|
|
to tender my resignation before I get fired,--that's all. However, if
|
|
I resign with no fault on my part, I would be simply giving the paper
|
|
advantage. I thought it proper to make the paper take back what it
|
|
had said, and stick to my position. I was going to the newspaper
|
|
office to give them a piece of my mind on my way back but having been
|
|
told that the school had already taken steps to have the story
|
|
retracted, I did not.
|
|
Porcupine and I saw the principal and Red Shirt at a convenient hour,
|
|
giving them a faithful version of the incident. The principal and Red
|
|
Shirt agreed that the incident must have been as we said and that the
|
|
paper bore some grudge against the school and purposely published such a
|
|
story. Red Shirt made a round of personal visits on each teacher in the
|
|
room, defending and explaining our action in the affair. Particularly he
|
|
dwelt upon the fact that his brother invited Porcupine and it was his
|
|
fault. All teachers denounced the paper as infamous and agreed that we
|
|
two deserved sympathy.
|
|
On our way home, Porcupine warned me that Red Shirt smelt suspicious,
|
|
and we would be done unless we looked out. I said he had been smelling
|
|
some anyway,--it was not necessarily so just from to-day. Then he said
|
|
that it was his trick to have us invited and mixed in the fight
|
|
yesterday,--"Aren't you on to that yet?" Well, I was not. Porcupine was
|
|
quite a Grobian but he was endowed, I was impressed, with a better
|
|
brain than I.
|
|
"He made us mix into the trouble, and slipped behind and contrived to
|
|
have the paper publish the story. What a devil!"
|
|
"Even the newspaper in the band wagon of Red Shirt? That surprises me.
|
|
But would the paper listen to Red Shirt so easily?"
|
|
"Wouldn't it, though. Darn easy thing if one has friends in the
|
|
paper."[P]
|
|
"Has he any?"
|
|
"Suppose he hasn't, still that's easy. Just tell lies and say such and
|
|
such are facts, and the paper will take it up."
|
|
"A startling revelation, this. If that was really a trick of Red Shirt,
|
|
we're likely to be discharged on account of this affair."
|
|
"Quite likely we may be discharged."
|
|
"Then I'll tender my resignation tomorrow, and back to Tokyo I go. I am
|
|
sick of staying in such a wretched hole."
|
|
"Your resignation wouldn't make Red Shirt squeal."
|
|
"That's so. How can he be made to squeal?"
|
|
"A wily guy like him always plots not to leave any trace behind, and it
|
|
would be difficult to follow his track."
|
|
"What a bore! Then we have to stand in a false light, eh? Damn it! I
|
|
call all kinds of god to witness if this is just and right!"
|
|
"Let's wait for two or three days and see how it turns out. And if
|
|
we can't do anything else, we will have to catch him at the hot
|
|
springs town."
|
|
"Leaving this fight affair a separate case?"
|
|
"Yes. We'll have to his hit weak spot with our own weapon."
|
|
"That may be good. I haven't much to say in planning it out; I leave it
|
|
to you and will do anything at your bidding."
|
|
I parted from Porcupine then. If Red Shirt was really instrumental in
|
|
bringing us two into the trouble as Porcupine supposed, he certainly
|
|
deserves to be called down. Red Shirt outranks us in brainy work. And
|
|
there is no other course open but to appeal to physical force. No wonder
|
|
we never see the end of war in the world. Among individuals, it is,
|
|
after all, the question of superiority of the fist.
|
|
Next day I impatiently glanced over the paper, the arrival of which I
|
|
had been waiting with eagerness, but not a correction of the news or
|
|
even a line of retraction could be found. I pressed the matter on
|
|
Badger when I went to the school, and he said it might probably appear
|
|
tomorrow. On that "tomorrow" a line of retraction was printed in tiny
|
|
types. But the paper did not make any correction of the story. I called
|
|
the attention of Badger to the fact, and he replied that that was about
|
|
all that could be done under the circumstance. The principal, with the
|
|
face like a badger and always swaggering, is surprisingly, wanting in
|
|
influence. He has not even as much power as to bring down a country
|
|
newspaper, which had printed a false story. I was so thoroughly
|
|
indignant that I declared I would go alone to the office and see the
|
|
editor-in-chief on the subject, but Badger said no.
|
|
"If you go there and have a blowup with the editor," he continued, "it
|
|
would only mean of your being handed out worse stuff in the paper again.
|
|
Whatever is published in a paper, right or wrong, nothing can be done
|
|
with it." And he wound up with a remark that sounded like a piece of
|
|
sermon by a Buddhist bonze that "We must be contented by speedily
|
|
despatching the matter from our minds and forgetting it."
|
|
If newspapers are of that character, it would be beneficial for us all
|
|
to have them suspended,--the sooner the better. The similarity of the
|
|
unpleasant sensation of being written-up in a paper and being
|
|
bitten-down by a turtle became plain for the first time by the
|
|
explanation of Badger.
|
|
About three days afterward, Porcupine came to me excited, and said that
|
|
the time has now come, that he proposes to execute that thing we had
|
|
planned out. Then I will do so, I said, and readily agreed to join him.
|
|
But Porcupine jerked his head, saying that I had better not. I asked him
|
|
why, and he asked if I had been requested by the principal to tender my
|
|
resignation. No, I said, and asked if he had. He told me that he was
|
|
called by the principal who was very, very sorry for him but under the
|
|
circumstance requested him to decide to resign.
|
|
"That isn't fair. Badger probably had been pounding his belly-drum too
|
|
much and his stomach is upside down," I said, "you and I went to the
|
|
celebration, looked at the glittering sword dance together, and jumped
|
|
into the fight together to stop it. Wasn't it so? If he wants you to
|
|
tender your resignation, he should be impartial and should have asked me
|
|
to also. What makes everything in the country school so dull-head. This
|
|
is irritating!"
|
|
"That's wire-pulling by Red Shirt," he said. "I and Red Shirt cannot go
|
|
along together, but they think you can be left as harmless."
|
|
"I wouldn't get along with that Red Shirt either. Consider me harmless,
|
|
eh? They're getting too gay with me."
|
|
"You're so simple and straight that they think they can handle you in
|
|
any old way."
|
|
"Worse still. I wouldn't get along with him, I tell you."
|
|
"Besides, since the departure of Koga, his successor has not arrived.
|
|
Furthermore, if they fire me and you together, there will be blank spots
|
|
in the schedule hours at the school."
|
|
"Then they expect me to play their game. Darn the fellow! See if they
|
|
can make me."
|
|
On going to the school next day I made straightway for the room of the
|
|
principal and started firing;
|
|
"Why don't you ask me to put in my resignation?" I said.
|
|
"Eh?" Badger stared blankly.
|
|
"You requested Hotta to resign, but not me. Is that right?"
|
|
"That is on account of the condition of the school......"
|
|
"That condition is wrong, I dare say. If I don't have to resign, there
|
|
should be no necessity for Hotta to resign either."
|
|
"I can't offer a detailed explanation about that......as to Hotta, it
|
|
cannot be helped if he goes...... ......we see no need of your
|
|
resigning."
|
|
Indeed, he is a badger. He jabbers something, dodging the point, but
|
|
appears complacent. So I had to say:
|
|
"Then, I will tender my resignation. You might have thought that I
|
|
would remain peacefully while Mr. Hotta is forced to resign, but I
|
|
cannot do it"
|
|
"That leaves us in a bad fix. If Hotta goes away and you follow him, we
|
|
can't teach mathematics here."
|
|
"None of my business if you can't."
|
|
"Say, don't be so selfish. You ought to consider the condition of the
|
|
school. Besides, if it is said that you resigned within one month of
|
|
starting a new job, it would affect your record in the future. You
|
|
should consider that point also."
|
|
"What do I care about my record. Obligation is more important
|
|
than record."
|
|
"That's right. What you say is right, but be good enough to take our
|
|
position into consideration. If you insist on resigning, then resign,
|
|
but please stay until we get some one to take your place. At any rate,
|
|
think the matter over once more, please."
|
|
The reason was so plain as to discourage any attempt to think it over,
|
|
but as I took some pity on Badger whose face reddened or paled
|
|
alternately as he spoke, I withdrew on the condition that I would think
|
|
the matter over. I did not talk with Red Shirt. If I have to land him
|
|
one, it was better, I thought, to have it bunched together and make it
|
|
hot and strong.
|
|
I acquainted Porcupine with the details of my meeting with Badger. He
|
|
said he had expected it to be about so, and added that the matter of
|
|
resignation can be left alone without causing me any embarrassment
|
|
until the time comes. So I followed his advice. Porcupine appears
|
|
somewhat smarter than I, and I have decided to accept whatever advices
|
|
he may give.
|
|
Porcupine finally tendered his resignation, and having bidden farewell
|
|
of all the fellow teachers, went down to Minato-ya on the beach. But he
|
|
stealthily returned to the hot springs town, and having rented a front
|
|
room upstairs of Masuya, started peeping through the hole he fingered
|
|
out in the shoji. I am the only person who knows of this. If Red Shirt
|
|
comes round, it would be night anyway, and as he is liable to be seen by
|
|
students or some others during the early part in the evening, it would
|
|
surely be after nine. For the first two nights, I was on the watch till
|
|
about 11 o'clock, but no sight of Red Shirt was seen. On the third
|
|
night, I kept peeping through from nine to ten thirty, but he did not
|
|
come. Nothing made me feel more like a fool than returning to the
|
|
boarding house at midnight after a fruitless watch. In four or five
|
|
days, our old lady began worrying about me and advised me to quit night
|
|
prowling,--being married. My night prowling is different from that kind
|
|
of night prowling. Mine is that of administering a deserved
|
|
chastisement. But then, when no encouragement is in sight after one
|
|
week, it becomes tiresome. I am quick tempered, and get at it with all
|
|
zeal when my interest is aroused, and would sit up all night to work it
|
|
out, but I have never shone in endurance. However loyal a member of the
|
|
heavenly-chastisement league I may be, I cannot escape monotony. On the
|
|
sixth night I was a little tired, and on the seventh thought I would
|
|
quit. Porcupine, however, stuck to it with bull-dog tenacity. From early
|
|
in the evening up to past twelve, he would glue his eye to the shoji and
|
|
keep steadily watching under the gas globe of Kadoya. He would surprise
|
|
me, when I come into the room, with figures showing how many patrons
|
|
there were to-day, how many stop-overs and how many women, etc. Red
|
|
Shirt seems never to be coming, I said, and he would fold his arms,
|
|
audibly sighing, "Well, he ought to." If Red Shirt would not come just
|
|
for once, Porcupine would be deprived of the chance of handing out a
|
|
deserved and just punishment.
|
|
I left my boarding house about 7 o'clock on the eighth night and after
|
|
having enjoyed my bath, I bought eight raw eggs. This would counteract
|
|
the attack of sweet potatoes by the old lady. I put the eggs into my
|
|
right and left pockets, four in each, with the same old red towel hung
|
|
over my shoulder, my hands inside my coat, went to Masuya. I opened the
|
|
shoji of the room and Porcupine greeted me with his Idaten-like face
|
|
suddenly radiant, saying:
|
|
"Say, there's hope! There's hope!" Up to last night, he had been
|
|
downcast, and even I felt gloomy. But at his cheerful countenance, I too
|
|
became cheerful, and before hearing anything, I cried, "Hooray! Hooray!"
|
|
"About half past seven this evening," he said, "that geisha named Kosuzu
|
|
has gone into Kadoya."
|
|
"With Red Shirt?"
|
|
"No."
|
|
"That's no good then."
|
|
"There were two geishas......seems to me somewhat hopeful."
|
|
"How?"
|
|
"How? Why, the sly old fox is likely to send his girls ahead[Q], and
|
|
sneak round behind later."
|
|
"That may be the case. About nine now, isn't it?"
|
|
"About twelve minutes past nine," said he, pulling out a watch with
|
|
a nickel case, "and, say put out the light. It would be funny to
|
|
have two silhouettes of bonze heads on the shoji. The fox is too
|
|
ready to suspect."
|
|
I blew out the lamp which stood upon the lacquer-enameled table. The
|
|
shoji alone was dimly plain by the star light. The moon has not come up
|
|
yet. I and Porcupine put our faces close to the shoji, watching almost
|
|
breathless. A wall clock somewhere rang half past nine.
|
|
"Say, will he come to-night, do you think? If he doesn't show up, I
|
|
quit."
|
|
"I'm going to keep this up while my money lasts."
|
|
"Money? How much have you?"
|
|
"I've paid five yen and sixty sen up to to-day for eight days. I pay my
|
|
bill every night, so I can jump out anytime."
|
|
"That's well arranged. The people of this hotel must have been rather
|
|
put out, I suppose."
|
|
"That's all right with the hotel; only I can't take my mind off
|
|
the house."
|
|
"But you take some sleep in daytime."
|
|
"Yes, I take a nap, but it's nuisance because I can't go out."
|
|
"Heavenly chastisement is a hard job, I'm sure," I said. "If he gives
|
|
us the slip after giving us such trouble, it would have been a
|
|
thankless task."
|
|
"Well, I'm sure he will come to-night...--... Look, look!" His voice
|
|
changed to whisper and I was alert in a moment. A fellow with a black
|
|
hat looked up at the gas light of Kadoya and passed on into the
|
|
darkness. No, it was not Red Shirt. Disappointing, this! Meanwhile the
|
|
clock at the office below merrily tinkled off ten. It seems to be
|
|
another bum watch to-night.
|
|
The streets everywhere had become quiet. The drum playing in the
|
|
tenderloin reached our ears distinctively. The moon had risen from
|
|
behind the hills of the hot springs. It is very light outside. Then
|
|
voices were heard below. We could not poke our heads out of the window,
|
|
so were unable to see the owners of the voices, but they were evidently
|
|
coming nearer. The dragging of komageta (a kind of wooden footwear) was
|
|
heard. They approached so near we could see their shadows.
|
|
"Everything is all right now. We've got rid of the stumbling block." It
|
|
was undoubtedly the voice of Clown.
|
|
"He only glories in bullying but has no tact." This from Red Shirt.
|
|
"He is like that young tough, isn't he? Why, as to that young tough, he
|
|
is a winsome, sporty Master Darling."
|
|
"I don't want my salary raised, he says, or I want to tender
|
|
resignation,--I'm sure something is wrong with his nerves."
|
|
I was greatly inclined to open the window, jump out of the second story
|
|
and make them see more stars than they cared to, but I restrained myself
|
|
with some effort. The two laughed, and passed below the gas light, and
|
|
into Kadoya.
|
|
"Say."
|
|
"Well."
|
|
"He's here."
|
|
"Yes, he has come at last."
|
|
"I feel quite easy now."
|
|
"Damned Clown called me a sporty Master Darling."
|
|
"The stumbling[R] block means me. Hell!"
|
|
I and Porcupine had to waylay them on their return. But we knew no more
|
|
than the man in the moon when they would come out. Porcupine went down
|
|
to the hotel office, notifying them to the probability of our going out
|
|
at midnight, and requesting them to leave the door unfastened so we
|
|
could get out anytime. As I think about it now, it is wonderful how the
|
|
hotel people complied with our request. In most cases, we would have
|
|
been taken for burglars.
|
|
It was trying to wait for the coming of Red Shirt, but it was still more
|
|
trying to wait for his coming out again. We could not go to sleep, nor
|
|
could we remain with our faces stuck to the shoji all the time our minds
|
|
constantly in a state of feverish agitation. In all my life, I never
|
|
passed such fretful, mortifying hours. I suggested that we had better go
|
|
right into his room and catch him but Porcupine rejected the proposal
|
|
outright. If we get in there at this time of night, we are likely to be
|
|
prevented from preceding much further, he said, and if we ask to see
|
|
him, they will either answer that he is not there or will take us into a
|
|
different room. Supposing we do break into a room, we cannot tell of all
|
|
those many rooms, where we can find him. There is no other way but to
|
|
wait for him to come out, however tiresome it may be. So we sat up till
|
|
five in the morning.
|
|
The moment we saw them emerging from Kadoya, I and Porcupine followed
|
|
them. It was some time before the first train started and they had to
|
|
walk up to town. Beyond the limit of the hot springs town, there is a
|
|
road for about one block running through the rice fields, both sides of
|
|
which are lined with cedar trees. Farther on are thatch-roofed farm
|
|
houses here and there, and then one comes upon a dyke leading straight
|
|
to the town through the fields. We can catch them anywhere outside the
|
|
town, but thinking it would be better to get them, if possible, on the
|
|
road lined with cedar trees where we may not be seen by others, we
|
|
followed them cautiously. Once out of the town limit, we darted on a
|
|
double-quick time, and caught up with them. Wondering what was coming
|
|
after them, they turned back, and we grabbed their shoulders. We cried,
|
|
"Wait!" Clown, greatly rattled, attempted to escape, but I stepped in
|
|
front of him to cut off his retreat.
|
|
"What makes one holding the job of a head teacher stay over night at
|
|
Kadoya!" Porcupine directly fired the opening gun.
|
|
"Is there any rule that a head teacher should not stay over night at
|
|
Kadoya?" Red Shirt met the attack in a polite manner. He looked a
|
|
little pale.
|
|
"Why the one who is so strict as to forbid others from going even to
|
|
noodle house or dango shop as unbecoming to instructors, stayed over
|
|
night at a hotel with a geisha!"
|
|
Clown was inclined to run at the first opportunity; so kept I
|
|
before him.
|
|
"What's that Master Darling of a young tough!" I roared.
|
|
"I didn't mean you. Sir. No, Sir, I didn't mean you, sure." He insisted
|
|
on this brazen excuse. I happened to notice at that moment that I had
|
|
held my pockets with both hands. The eggs in both pockets jerked so when
|
|
I ran, that I had been holding them, I thrust my hand into the pocket,
|
|
took out two and dashed them on the face of Clown. The eggs crushed, and
|
|
from the tip of his nose the yellow streamed down. Clown was taken
|
|
completely surprised, and uttering a hideous cry, he fell down on the
|
|
ground and begged for mercy. I had bought those eggs to eat, but had not
|
|
carried them for the purpose of making "Irish Confetti" of them.
|
|
Thoroughly roused, in the moment of passion, I had dashed them at him
|
|
before I knew what I was doing. But seeing Clown down and finding my
|
|
hand grenade successful, I banged the rest of the eggs on him,
|
|
intermingled with "Darn you, you sonovagun!" The face of Clown was
|
|
soaked in yellow.
|
|
While I was bombarding Clown with the eggs, Porcupine was firing at
|
|
Red[S] Shirt.
|
|
"Is there any evidence that I stayed there over night with a geisha?"
|
|
"I saw your favorite old chicken go there early in the evening, and am
|
|
telling you so. You can't fool me!"
|
|
"No need for us of fooling anybody. I stayed there with Mr. Yoshikawa,
|
|
and whether any geisha had gone there early in the evening or not,
|
|
that's none of my business."
|
|
"Shut up!" Porcupine wallopped him one. Red Shirt tottered.
|
|
"This is outrageous! It is rough to resort to force before deciding the
|
|
right or wrong of it!"
|
|
"Outrageous indeed!" Another clout. "Nothing but wallopping will be
|
|
effective on you scheming guys." The remark was followed by a shower
|
|
of blows. I soaked Clown at the same time, and made him think he saw
|
|
the way to the Kingdom-Come. Finally the two crawled and crouched at
|
|
the foot of a cedar tree, and either from inability to move or to
|
|
see, because their eyes had become hazy, they did not even attempt to
|
|
break away.
|
|
"Want more? If so, here goes some more!" With that we gave him more
|
|
until he cried enough. "Want more? You?" we turned to Clown, and he
|
|
answered "Enough, of course."
|
|
"This is the punishment of heaven on you grovelling wretches. Keep
|
|
this in your head and be more careful hereafter. You can never talk
|
|
down justice."
|
|
The two said nothing. They were so thoroughly cowed that they could
|
|
not speak.
|
|
"I'm going to neither, run away nor hide. You'll find me at Minato-ya on
|
|
the beach up to five this evening. Bring police officers or any old
|
|
thing you want," said Porcupine.
|
|
"I'm not going to run away or hide either. Will wait for you at the same
|
|
place with Hotta. Take the case to the police station if you like, or do
|
|
as you damn please," I said, and we two walked our own way.
|
|
It was a little before seven when I returned to my room. I started
|
|
packing as soon as I was in the room, and the astonished old lady asked
|
|
me what I was trying to do. I'm going to Tokyo to fetch my Madam, I
|
|
said, and paid my bill. I boarded a train and came to Minato-ya on the
|
|
beach and found Porcupine asleep upstairs. I thought of writing my
|
|
resignation, but not knowing how, just scribbled off that "because of
|
|
personal affairs, I have to resign and return, to Tokyo. Yours truly,"
|
|
and addressed and mailed it to the principal.
|
|
The steamer leaves the harbor at six in the evening. Porcupine and I,
|
|
tired out, slept like logs, and when we awoke it was two o'clock. We
|
|
asked the maid if the police had called on us, and she said no. Red
|
|
Shirt and Clown had not taken it to the police, eh? We laughed.
|
|
That night I and Porcupine left the town. The farther the vessel steamed
|
|
away from the shore, the more refreshed we felt. From Kobe to Tokyo we
|
|
boarded a through train and when we made Shimbashi, we breathed as if we
|
|
were once more in congenial human society. I parted from Porcupine at
|
|
the station, and have not had the chance of meeting him since.
|
|
I forgot to tell you about Kiyo. On my arrival at Tokyo, I rushed into
|
|
her house swinging my valise, before going to a hotel, with "Hello,
|
|
Kiyo, I'm back!"
|
|
"How good of you to return so soon!" she cried and hot tears streamed
|
|
down her cheeks. I was overjoyed, and declared that I would not go to
|
|
the country any more but would start housekeeping with Kiyo in Tokyo.
|
|
Some time afterward, some one helped me to a job as assistant engineer
|
|
at the tram car office. The salary was 25 yen a month, and the house
|
|
rent six. Although the house had not a magnificent front entrance, Kiyo
|
|
seemed quite satisfied, but, I am sorry to say, she was a victim of
|
|
pneumonia and died in February this year. On the day preceding her
|
|
death, she asked me to bedside, and said, "Please, Master Darling, if
|
|
Kiyo is dead, bury me in the temple yard of Master Darling. I will be
|
|
glad to wait in the grave for my Master Darling."
|
|
So Kiyo's grave is in the Yogen temple at Kobinata.
|
|
--(THE END)--
|
|
[A: Insitent]
|
|
[B: queershaped]
|
|
[C: The original just had the Japanese character, Unicode U+5927, sans
|
|
description]
|
|
[D: aweinspiring]
|
|
[E: about about]
|
|
[F: atomosphere]
|
|
[G: Helloo]
|
|
[H: you go]
|
|
[I: goo-goo eyes]
|
|
[J: proper hyphenation unknown]
|
|
[K: pin-princking]
|
|
[L: Procupine]
|
|
[M: celabration]
|
|
[N: wans't]
|
|
[O: paper.]
|
|
[P: girl shead]
|
|
[Q: stumblieg]
|
|
[R: Rad]
|
|
End of Project Gutenberg's Botchan (Master Darling), by Kin-nosuke Natsume
|
|
*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BOTCHAN (MASTER DARLING) ***
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