You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a chinese character,a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.

botchan.txt 274 kB

1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647484950515253545556575859606162636465666768697071727374757677787980818283848586878889909192939495969798991001011021031041051061071081091101111121131141151161171181191201211221231241251261271281291301311321331341351361371381391401411421431441451461471481491501511521531541551561571581591601611621631641651661671681691701711721731741751761771781791801811821831841851861871881891901911921931941951961971981992002012022032042052062072082092102112122132142152162172182192202212222232242252262272282292302312322332342352362372382392402412422432442452462472482492502512522532542552562572582592602612622632642652662672682692702712722732742752762772782792802812822832842852862872882892902912922932942952962972982993003013023033043053063073083093103113123133143153163173183193203213223233243253263273283293303313323333343353363373383393403413423433443453463473483493503513523533543553563573583593603613623633643653663673683693703713723733743753763773783793803813823833843853863873883893903913923933943953963973983994004014024034044054064074084094104114124134144154164174184194204214224234244254264274284294304314324334344354364374384394404414424434444454464474484494504514524534544554564574584594604614624634644654664674684694704714724734744754764774784794804814824834844854864874884894904914924934944954964974984995005015025035045055065075085095105115125135145155165175185195205215225235245255265275285295305315325335345355365375385395405415425435445455465475485495505515525535545555565575585595605615625635645655665675685695705715725735745755765775785795805815825835845855865875885895905915925935945955965975985996006016026036046056066076086096106116126136146156166176186196206216226236246256266276286296306316326336346356366376386396406416426436446456466476486496506516526536546556566576586596606616626636646656666676686696706716726736746756766776786796806816826836846856866876886896906916926936946956966976986997007017027037047057067077087097107117127137147157167177187197207217227237247257267277287297307317327337347357367377387397407417427437447457467477487497507517527537547557567577587597607617627637647657667677687697707717727737747757767777787797807817827837847857867877887897907917927937947957967977987998008018028038048058068078088098108118128138148158168178188198208218228238248258268278288298308318328338348358368378388398408418428438448458468478488498508518528538548558568578588598608618628638648658668678688698708718728738748758768778788798808818828838848858868878888898908918928938948958968978988999009019029039049059069079089099109119129139149159169179189199209219229239249259269279289299309319329339349359369379389399409419429439449459469479489499509519529539549559569579589599609619629639649659669679689699709719729739749759769779789799809819829839849859869879889899909919929939949959969979989991000100110021003100410051006100710081009101010111012101310141015101610171018101910201021102210231024102510261027102810291030103110321033103410351036103710381039104010411042104310441045104610471048104910501051105210531054105510561057105810591060106110621063106410651066106710681069107010711072107310741075107610771078107910801081108210831084108510861087108810891090109110921093109410951096109710981099110011011102110311041105110611071108110911101111111211131114111511161117111811191120112111221123112411251126112711281129113011311132113311341135113611371138113911401141114211431144114511461147114811491150115111521153115411551156115711581159116011611162116311641165116611671168116911701171117211731174117511761177117811791180118111821183118411851186118711881189119011911192119311941195119611971198119912001201120212031204120512061207120812091210121112121213121412151216121712181219122012211222122312241225122612271228122912301231123212331234123512361237123812391240124112421243124412451246124712481249125012511252125312541255125612571258125912601261126212631264126512661267126812691270127112721273127412751276127712781279128012811282128312841285128612871288128912901291129212931294129512961297129812991300130113021303130413051306130713081309131013111312131313141315131613171318131913201321132213231324132513261327132813291330133113321333133413351336133713381339134013411342134313441345134613471348134913501351135213531354135513561357135813591360136113621363136413651366136713681369137013711372137313741375137613771378137913801381138213831384138513861387138813891390139113921393139413951396139713981399140014011402140314041405140614071408140914101411141214131414141514161417141814191420142114221423142414251426142714281429143014311432143314341435143614371438143914401441144214431444144514461447144814491450145114521453145414551456145714581459146014611462146314641465146614671468146914701471147214731474147514761477147814791480148114821483148414851486148714881489149014911492149314941495149614971498149915001501150215031504150515061507150815091510151115121513151415151516151715181519152015211522152315241525152615271528152915301531153215331534153515361537153815391540154115421543154415451546154715481549155015511552155315541555155615571558155915601561156215631564156515661567156815691570157115721573157415751576157715781579158015811582158315841585158615871588158915901591159215931594159515961597159815991600160116021603160416051606160716081609161016111612161316141615161616171618161916201621162216231624162516261627162816291630163116321633163416351636163716381639164016411642164316441645164616471648164916501651165216531654165516561657165816591660166116621663166416651666166716681669167016711672167316741675167616771678167916801681168216831684168516861687168816891690169116921693169416951696169716981699170017011702170317041705170617071708170917101711171217131714171517161717171817191720172117221723172417251726172717281729173017311732173317341735173617371738173917401741174217431744174517461747174817491750175117521753175417551756175717581759176017611762176317641765176617671768176917701771177217731774177517761777177817791780178117821783178417851786178717881789179017911792179317941795179617971798179918001801180218031804180518061807180818091810181118121813181418151816181718181819182018211822182318241825182618271828182918301831183218331834183518361837183818391840184118421843184418451846184718481849185018511852185318541855185618571858185918601861186218631864186518661867186818691870187118721873187418751876187718781879188018811882188318841885188618871888188918901891189218931894189518961897189818991900190119021903190419051906190719081909191019111912191319141915191619171918191919201921192219231924192519261927192819291930193119321933193419351936193719381939194019411942194319441945194619471948194919501951195219531954195519561957195819591960196119621963196419651966196719681969197019711972197319741975197619771978197919801981198219831984198519861987198819891990199119921993199419951996199719981999200020012002200320042005200620072008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202420252026202720282029203020312032203320342035203620372038203920402041204220432044204520462047204820492050205120522053205420552056205720582059206020612062206320642065206620672068206920702071207220732074207520762077207820792080208120822083208420852086208720882089209020912092209320942095209620972098209921002101210221032104210521062107210821092110211121122113211421152116211721182119212021212122212321242125212621272128212921302131213221332134213521362137213821392140214121422143214421452146214721482149215021512152215321542155215621572158215921602161216221632164216521662167216821692170217121722173217421752176217721782179218021812182218321842185218621872188218921902191219221932194219521962197219821992200220122022203220422052206220722082209221022112212221322142215221622172218221922202221222222232224222522262227222822292230223122322233223422352236223722382239224022412242224322442245224622472248224922502251225222532254225522562257225822592260226122622263226422652266226722682269227022712272227322742275227622772278227922802281228222832284228522862287228822892290229122922293229422952296229722982299230023012302230323042305230623072308230923102311231223132314231523162317231823192320232123222323232423252326232723282329233023312332233323342335233623372338233923402341234223432344234523462347234823492350235123522353235423552356235723582359236023612362236323642365236623672368236923702371237223732374237523762377237823792380238123822383238423852386238723882389239023912392239323942395239623972398239924002401240224032404240524062407240824092410241124122413241424152416241724182419242024212422242324242425242624272428242924302431243224332434243524362437243824392440244124422443244424452446244724482449245024512452245324542455245624572458245924602461246224632464246524662467246824692470247124722473247424752476247724782479248024812482248324842485248624872488248924902491249224932494249524962497249824992500250125022503250425052506250725082509251025112512251325142515251625172518251925202521252225232524252525262527252825292530253125322533253425352536253725382539254025412542254325442545254625472548254925502551255225532554255525562557255825592560256125622563256425652566256725682569257025712572257325742575257625772578257925802581258225832584258525862587258825892590259125922593259425952596259725982599260026012602260326042605260626072608260926102611261226132614261526162617261826192620262126222623262426252626262726282629263026312632263326342635263626372638263926402641264226432644264526462647264826492650265126522653265426552656265726582659266026612662266326642665266626672668266926702671267226732674267526762677267826792680268126822683268426852686268726882689269026912692269326942695269626972698269927002701270227032704270527062707270827092710271127122713271427152716271727182719272027212722272327242725272627272728272927302731273227332734273527362737273827392740274127422743274427452746274727482749275027512752275327542755275627572758275927602761276227632764276527662767276827692770277127722773277427752776277727782779278027812782278327842785278627872788278927902791279227932794279527962797279827992800280128022803280428052806280728082809281028112812281328142815281628172818281928202821282228232824282528262827282828292830283128322833283428352836283728382839284028412842284328442845284628472848284928502851285228532854285528562857285828592860286128622863286428652866286728682869287028712872287328742875287628772878287928802881288228832884288528862887288828892890289128922893289428952896289728982899290029012902290329042905290629072908290929102911291229132914291529162917291829192920292129222923292429252926292729282929293029312932293329342935293629372938293929402941294229432944294529462947294829492950295129522953295429552956295729582959296029612962296329642965296629672968296929702971297229732974297529762977297829792980298129822983298429852986298729882989299029912992299329942995299629972998299930003001300230033004300530063007300830093010301130123013301430153016301730183019302030213022302330243025302630273028302930303031303230333034303530363037303830393040304130423043304430453046304730483049305030513052305330543055305630573058305930603061306230633064306530663067306830693070307130723073307430753076307730783079308030813082308330843085308630873088308930903091309230933094309530963097309830993100310131023103310431053106310731083109311031113112311331143115311631173118311931203121312231233124312531263127312831293130313131323133313431353136313731383139314031413142314331443145314631473148314931503151315231533154315531563157315831593160316131623163316431653166316731683169317031713172317331743175317631773178317931803181318231833184318531863187318831893190319131923193319431953196319731983199320032013202320332043205320632073208320932103211321232133214321532163217321832193220322132223223322432253226322732283229323032313232323332343235323632373238323932403241324232433244324532463247324832493250325132523253325432553256325732583259326032613262326332643265326632673268326932703271327232733274327532763277327832793280328132823283328432853286328732883289329032913292329332943295329632973298329933003301330233033304330533063307330833093310331133123313331433153316331733183319332033213322332333243325332633273328332933303331333233333334333533363337333833393340334133423343334433453346334733483349335033513352335333543355335633573358335933603361336233633364336533663367336833693370337133723373337433753376337733783379338033813382338333843385338633873388338933903391339233933394339533963397339833993400340134023403340434053406340734083409341034113412341334143415341634173418341934203421342234233424342534263427342834293430343134323433343434353436343734383439344034413442344334443445344634473448344934503451345234533454345534563457345834593460346134623463346434653466346734683469347034713472347334743475347634773478347934803481348234833484348534863487348834893490349134923493349434953496349734983499350035013502350335043505350635073508350935103511351235133514351535163517351835193520352135223523352435253526352735283529353035313532353335343535353635373538353935403541354235433544354535463547354835493550355135523553355435553556355735583559356035613562356335643565356635673568356935703571357235733574357535763577357835793580358135823583358435853586358735883589359035913592359335943595359635973598359936003601360236033604360536063607360836093610361136123613361436153616361736183619362036213622362336243625362636273628362936303631363236333634363536363637363836393640364136423643364436453646364736483649365036513652365336543655365636573658365936603661366236633664366536663667366836693670367136723673367436753676367736783679368036813682368336843685368636873688368936903691369236933694369536963697369836993700370137023703370437053706370737083709371037113712371337143715371637173718371937203721372237233724372537263727372837293730373137323733373437353736373737383739374037413742374337443745374637473748374937503751375237533754375537563757375837593760376137623763376437653766376737683769377037713772377337743775377637773778377937803781378237833784378537863787378837893790379137923793379437953796379737983799380038013802380338043805380638073808380938103811381238133814381538163817381838193820382138223823382438253826382738283829383038313832383338343835383638373838383938403841384238433844384538463847384838493850385138523853385438553856385738583859386038613862386338643865386638673868386938703871387238733874387538763877387838793880388138823883388438853886388738883889389038913892389338943895389638973898389939003901390239033904390539063907390839093910391139123913391439153916391739183919392039213922392339243925392639273928392939303931393239333934393539363937393839393940394139423943394439453946394739483949395039513952395339543955395639573958395939603961396239633964396539663967396839693970397139723973397439753976397739783979398039813982398339843985398639873988398939903991399239933994399539963997399839994000400140024003400440054006400740084009401040114012401340144015401640174018401940204021402240234024402540264027402840294030403140324033403440354036403740384039404040414042404340444045404640474048404940504051405240534054405540564057405840594060406140624063406440654066406740684069407040714072407340744075407640774078407940804081408240834084408540864087408840894090409140924093409440954096409740984099410041014102410341044105410641074108410941104111411241134114411541164117411841194120412141224123412441254126412741284129413041314132413341344135413641374138413941404141414241434144414541464147414841494150415141524153415441554156415741584159416041614162416341644165416641674168416941704171417241734174417541764177417841794180418141824183418441854186418741884189419041914192419341944195419641974198419942004201420242034204420542064207420842094210421142124213421442154216421742184219422042214222422342244225422642274228422942304231423242334234423542364237423842394240424142424243424442454246424742484249425042514252425342544255425642574258425942604261426242634264426542664267426842694270427142724273427442754276427742784279428042814282428342844285428642874288
  1. Project Gutenberg's Botchan (Master Darling), by Kin-nosuke Natsume
  2. This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
  3. almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
  4. re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
  5. with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
  6. Title: Botchan (Master Darling)
  7. Author: Kin-nosuke Natsume
  8. Translator: Yasotaro Morri
  9. Posting Date: October 14, 2012 [EBook #8868]
  10. Release Date: September, 2005
  11. First Posted: August 17, 2003
  12. Language: English
  13. *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BOTCHAN (MASTER DARLING) ***
  14. Produced by David Starner and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
  15. BOTCHAN (MASTER DARLING)
  16. By The Late Mr. Kin-nosuke Natsume
  17. TRANSLATED By Yasotaro Morri
  18. Revised by J. R. KENNEDY
  19. 1919
  20. A NOTE BY THE TRANSLATOR
  21. No translation can expect to equal, much less to excel, the original.
  22. The excellence of a translation can only be judged by noting how far it
  23. has succeeded in reproducing the original tone, colors, style, the
  24. delicacy of sentiment, the force of inert strength, the peculiar
  25. expressions native to the language with which the original is written,
  26. or whatever is its marked characteristic. The ablest can do no more, and
  27. to want more than this will be demanding something impossible. Strictly
  28. speaking, the only way one can derive full benefit or enjoyment from a
  29. foreign work is to read the original, for any intelligence at
  30. second-hand never gives the kind of satisfaction which is possible only
  31. through the direct touch with the original. Even in the best translated
  32. work is probably wanted the subtle vitality natural to the original
  33. language, for it defies an attempt, however elaborate, to transmit all
  34. there is in the original. Correctness of diction may be there, but
  35. spontaneity is gone; it cannot be helped.
  36. The task of the translator becomes doubly hazardous in case of
  37. translating a European language into Japanese, or vice versa. Between
  38. any of the European languages and Japanese there is no visible kinship
  39. in word-form, significance, grammatical system, rhetorical arrangements.
  40. It may be said that the inspiration of the two languages is totally
  41. different. A want of similarity of customs, habits, traditions, national
  42. sentiments and traits makes the work of translation all the more
  43. difficult. A novel written in Japanese which had attained national
  44. popularity might, when rendered into English, lose its captivating
  45. vividness, alluring interest and lasting appeal to the reader.
  46. These remarks are made not in way of excuse for any faulty dictions that
  47. may be found in the following pages. Neither are they made out of
  48. personal modesty nor of a desire to add undue weight to the present
  49. work. They are made in the hope that whoever is good enough to go
  50. through the present translation will remember, before he may venture to
  51. make criticisms, the kind and extent of difficulties besetting him in
  52. his attempts so as not to judge the merit of the original by this
  53. translation. Nothing would afford the translator a greater pain than any
  54. unfavorable comment on the original based upon this translation. If
  55. there be any deserving merits in the following pages the credit is due
  56. to the original. Any fault found in its interpretation or in the English
  57. version, the whole responsibility is on the translator.
  58. For the benefit of those who may not know the original, it must be
  59. stated that "Botchan" by the late Mr. K. Natsume was an epoch-making
  60. piece of work. On its first appearance, Mr. Natsume's place and name as
  61. the foremost in the new literary school were firmly established. He had
  62. written many other novels of more serious intent, of heavier thoughts
  63. and of more enduring merits, but it was this "Botchan" that secured him
  64. the lasting fame. Its quaint style, dash and vigor in its narration
  65. appealed to the public who had become somewhat tired of the stereotyped
  66. sort of manner with which all stories had come to be handled.
  67. In its simplest understanding, "Botchan" may be taken as an episode in
  68. the life of a son born in Tokyo, hot-blooded, simple-hearted, pure as
  69. crystal and sturdy as a towering rock, honest and straight to a fault,
  70. intolerant of the least injustice and a volunteer ever ready to champion
  71. what he considers right and good. Children may read it as a "story of
  72. man who tried to be honest." It is a light, amusing and, at the name
  73. time, instructive story, with no tangle of love affairs, no scheme of
  74. blood-curdling scenes or nothing startling or sensational in the plot or
  75. characters. The story, however, may be regarded as a biting sarcasm on a
  76. hypocritical society in which a gang of instructors of dark character at
  77. a middle school in a backwoods town plays a prominent part. The hero of
  78. the story is made a victim of their annoying intrigues, but finally
  79. comes out triumphant by smashing the petty red tapism, knocking down the
  80. sham pretentions and by actual use of the fist on the Head Instructor
  81. and his henchman.
  82. The story will be found equally entertaining as a means of studying the
  83. peculiar traits of the native of Tokyo which are characterised by their
  84. quick temper, dashing spirit, generosity and by their readiness to
  85. resist even the lordly personage if convinced of their own justness, or
  86. to kneel down even to a child if they acknowledge their own wrong.
  87. Incidently the touching devotion of the old maid servant Kiyo to the
  88. hero will prove a standing reproach to the inconstant, unfaithful
  89. servants of which the number is ever increasing these days in Tokyo. The
  90. story becomes doubly interesting by the fact that Mr. K. Natsume, when
  91. quite young, held a position of teacher of English at a middle school
  92. somewhere about the same part of the country described in the story,
  93. while he himself was born and brought up in Tokyo.
  94. It may be added that the original is written in an autobiographical
  95. style. It is profusely interladed with spicy, catchy colloquials patent
  96. to the people of Tokyo for the equals of which we may look to the
  97. rattling speeches of notorious Chuck Conners of the Bowery of New York.
  98. It should be frankly stated that much difficulty was experienced in
  99. getting the corresponding terms in English for those catchy expressions.
  100. Strictly speaking, some of them have no English equivalents. Care has
  101. been exercised to select what has been thought most appropriate in the
  102. judgment or the translator in converting those expressions into English
  103. but some of them might provoke disapproval from those of the "cultured"
  104. class with "refined" ears. The slangs in English in this translation
  105. were taken from an American magazine of world-wide reputation editor of
  106. which was not afraid to print of "damn" when necessary, by scorning the
  107. timid, conventional way of putting it as "d--n." If the propriety of
  108. printing such short ugly words be questioned, the translator is sorry to
  109. say that no means now exists of directly bringing him to account for he
  110. met untimely death on board the Lusitania when it was sunk by the German
  111. submarine.
  112. Thanks are due to Mr. J. R. Kennedy, General Manager, and Mr. Henry
  113. Satoh, Editor-in-Chief, both of the Kokusai Tsushin-sha (the
  114. International News Agency) of Tokyo and a host of personal friends of
  115. the translator whose untiring assistance and kind suggestions have made
  116. the present translation possible. Without their sympathetic interests,
  117. this translation may not have seen the daylight.
  118. Tokyo, September, 1918.
  119. BOTCHAN (MASTER DARLING)
  120. CHAPTER I
  121. Because of an hereditary recklessness, I have been playing always a
  122. losing game since my childhood. During my grammar school days, I was
  123. once laid up for about a week by jumping from the second story of the
  124. school building. Some may ask why I committed such a rash act. There was
  125. no particular reason for doing such a thing except I happened to be
  126. looking out into the yard from the second floor of the newly-built
  127. school house, when one of my classmates, joking, shouted at me; "Say,
  128. you big bluff, I'll bet you can't jump down from there! O, you
  129. chicken-heart, ha, ha!" So I jumped down. The janitor of the school had
  130. to carry me home on his back, and when my father saw me, he yelled
  131. derisively, "What a fellow you are to go and get your bones dislocated
  132. by jumping only from a second story!"
  133. "I'll see I don't get dislocated next time," I answered.
  134. One of my relatives once presented me with a pen-knife. I was showing it
  135. to my friends, reflecting its pretty blades against the rays of the sun,
  136. when one of them chimed in that the blades gleamed all right, but seemed
  137. rather dull for cutting with.
  138. "Rather dull? See if they don't cut!" I retorted.
  139. "Cut your finger, then," he challenged. And with "Finger nothing! Here
  140. goes!" I cut my thumb slant-wise. Fortunately the knife was small and
  141. the bone of the thumb hard enough, so the thumb is still there, but the
  142. scar will be there until my death.
  143. About twenty steps to the east edge of our garden, there was a
  144. moderate-sized vegetable yard, rising toward the south, and in the
  145. centre of which stood a chestnut tree which was dearer to me than life.
  146. In the season when the chestnuts were ripe, I used to slip out of the
  147. house from the back door early in the morning to pick up the chestnuts
  148. which had fallen during the night, and eat them at the school. On the
  149. west side of the vegetable yard was the adjoining garden of a pawn shop
  150. called Yamashiro-ya. This shopkeeper's son was a boy about 13 or 14
  151. years old named Kantaro. Kantaro was, it happens, a mollycoddle.
  152. Nevertheless he had the temerity to come over the fence to our yard and
  153. steal my chestnuts.
  154. One certain evening I hid myself behind a folding-gate of the fence and
  155. caught him in the act. Having his retreat cut off he grappled with me in
  156. desperation. He was about two years older than I, and, though
  157. weak-kneed, was physically the stronger. While I wallopped him, he
  158. pushed his head against my breast and by chance it slipped inside my
  159. sleeve. As this hindered the free action of my arm, I tried to shake him
  160. loose, though, his head dangled the further inside, and being no longer
  161. able to stand the stifling combat, he bit my bare arm. It was painful. I
  162. held him fast against the fence, and by a dexterous foot twist sent him
  163. down flat on his back. Kantaro broke the fence and as the ground
  164. belonging to Yamashiro-ya was about six feet lower than the vegetable
  165. yard, he fell headlong to his own territory with a thud. As he rolled
  166. off he tore away the sleeve in which his head had been enwrapped, and my
  167. arm recovered a sudden freedom of movement. That night when my mother
  168. went to Yamashiro-ya to apologize, she brought back that sleeve.
  169. Besides the above, I did many other mischiefs. With Kaneko of a
  170. carpenter shop and Kaku of a fishmarket, I once ruined a carrot patch of
  171. one Mosaku. The sprouts were just shooting out and the patch was covered
  172. with straws to ensure their even healthy growth. Upon this straw-covered
  173. patch, we three wrestled for fully half a day, and consequently
  174. thoroughly smashed all the sprouts. Also I once filled up a well which
  175. watered some rice fields owned by one Furukawa, and he followed me with
  176. kicks. The well was so devised that from a large bamboo pole, sunk deep
  177. into the ground, the water issued and irrigated the rice fields.
  178. Ignorant of the mechanical side of this irrigating method at that time,
  179. I stuffed the bamboo pole with stones and sticks, and satisfied that no
  180. more water came up, I returned home and was eating supper when Furukawa,
  181. fiery red with anger, burst into our house with howling protests. I
  182. believe the affair was settled on our paying for the damage.
  183. Father did not like me in the least, and mother always sided with my big
  184. brother. This brother's face was palish white, and he had a fondness for
  185. taking the part of an actress at the theatre.
  186. "This fellow will never amount to much," father used to remark when
  187. he saw me.
  188. "He's so reckless that I worry about his future," I often heard mother
  189. say of me. Exactly; I have never amounted to much. I am just as you see
  190. me; no wonder my future used to cause anxiety to my mother. I am living
  191. without becoming but a jailbird.
  192. Two or three days previous to my mother's death, I took it into my head
  193. to turn a somersault in the kitchen, and painfully hit my ribs against
  194. the corner of the stove. Mother was very angry at this and told me not
  195. to show my face again, so I went to a relative to stay with. While
  196. there, I received the news that my mother's illness had become very
  197. serious, and that after all efforts for her recovery, she was dead. I
  198. came home thinking that I should have behaved better if I had known the
  199. conditions were so serious as that. Then that big brother of mine
  200. denounced me as wanting in filial piety, and that I had caused her
  201. untimely death. Mortified at this, I slapped his face, and thereupon
  202. received a sound scolding from father.
  203. After the death of mother, I lived with father and brother. Father did
  204. nothing, and always said "You're no good" to my face. What he meant by
  205. "no good" I am yet to understand. A funny dad he was. My brother was to
  206. be seen studying English hard, saying that he was going to be a
  207. businessman. He was like a girl by nature, and so "sassy" that we two
  208. were never on good terms, and had to fight it out about once every ten
  209. days. When we played a chess game one day, he placed a chessman as a
  210. "waiter,"--a cowardly tactic this,--and had hearty laugh on me by seeing
  211. me in a fix. His manner was so trying that time that I banged a chessman
  212. on his forehead which was injured a little bit and bled. He told all
  213. about this to father, who said he would disinherit me.
  214. Then I gave up myself for lost, and expected to be really disinherited.
  215. But our maid Kiyo, who had been with us for ten years or so, interceded
  216. on my behalf, and tearfully apologized for me, and by her appeal my
  217. father's wrath was softened. I did not regard him, however, as one to be
  218. afraid of in any way, but rather felt sorry for our Kiyo. I had heard
  219. that Kiyo was of a decent, well-to-do family, but being driven to
  220. poverty at the time of the Restoration, had to work as a servant. So she
  221. was an old woman by this time. This old woman,--by what affinity, as
  222. the Buddhists say, I don't know,--loved me a great deal. Strange,
  223. indeed! She was almost blindly fond of me,--me, whom mother, became
  224. thoroughly disgusted with three days before her death; whom father
  225. considered a most aggravating proposition all the year round, and whom
  226. the neighbors cordially hated as the local bully among the youngsters. I
  227. had long reconciled myself to the fact that my nature was far from being
  228. attractive to others, and so didn't mind if I were treated as a piece of
  229. wood; so I thought it uncommon that Kiyo should pet me like that.
  230. Sometimes in the kitchen, when there was nobody around, she would praise
  231. me saying that I was straightforward and of a good disposition. What she
  232. meant by that exactly, was not clear to me, however. If I were of so
  233. good a nature as she said, I imagined those other than Kiyo should
  234. accord me a better treatment. So whenever Kiyo said to me anything of
  235. the kind, I used to answer that I did not like passing compliments. Then
  236. she would remark; "That's the very reason I say you are of a good
  237. disposition," and would gaze at me with absorbing tenderness. She seemed
  238. to recreate me by her own imagination, and was proud of the fact. I felt
  239. even chilled through my marrow at her constant attention to me.
  240. After my mother was dead, Kiyo loved me still more. In my simple
  241. reasoning, I wondered why she had taken such a fancy to me. Sometimes I
  242. thought it quite futile on her part, that she had better quit that sort
  243. of thing, which was bad for her. But she loved me just the same. Once
  244. in, a while she would buy, out of her own pocket, some cakes or
  245. sweetmeats for me. When the night was cold, she would secretly buy some
  246. noodle powder, and bring all unawares hot noodle gruel to my bed; or
  247. sometimes she would even buy a bowl of steaming noodles from the
  248. peddler. Not only with edibles, but she was generous alike with socks,
  249. pencils, note books, etc. And she even furnished me,--this happened some
  250. time later,--with about three yen, I did not ask her for the money; she
  251. offered it from her own good will by bringing it to my room, saying that
  252. I might be in need of some cash. This, of course, embarrassed me, but as
  253. she was so insistent I consented to borrow it. I confess I was really
  254. glad of the money. I put it in a bag, and carried it in my pocket. While
  255. about the house, I happened to drop the bag into a cesspool. Helpless, I
  256. told Kiyo how I had lost the money, and at once she fetched a bamboo
  257. stick, and said she will get it for me. After a while I heard a
  258. splashing sound of water about our family well, and going there, saw
  259. Kiyo washing the bag strung on the end of the stick. I opened the bag
  260. and found the edict of the three one-yen bills turned to faint yellow
  261. and designs fading. Kiyo dried them at an open fire and handed them over
  262. to me, asking if they were all right. I smelled them and said; "They
  263. stink yet."
  264. "Give them to me; I'll get them changed." She took those three bills,
  265. and,--I do not know how she went about it,--brought three yen in silver.
  266. I forget now upon what I spent the three yen. "I'll pay you back soon,"
  267. I said at the time, but didn't. I could not now pay it back even if I
  268. wished to do so with ten times the amount.
  269. When Kiyo gave me anything she did so always when both father and
  270. brother were out. Many things I do not like, but what I most detest is
  271. the monopolizing of favors behind some one else's back. Bad as my
  272. relations were with my brother, still I did not feel justified in
  273. accepting candies or color-pencils from Kiyo without my brother's
  274. knowledge. "Why do you give those things only to me and not to my
  275. brother also?" I asked her once, and she answered quite unconcernedly
  276. that my brother may be left to himself as his father bought him
  277. everything. That was partiality; father was obstinate, but I am sure he
  278. was not a man who would indulge in favoritism. To Kiyo, however, he
  279. might have looked that way. There is no doubt that Kiyo was blind to the
  280. extent of her undue indulgence with me. She was said to have come from a
  281. well-to-do family, but the poor soul was uneducated, and it could not be
  282. helped. All the same, you cannot tell how prejudice will drive one to
  283. the extremes. Kiyo seemed quite sure that some day I would achieve high
  284. position in society and become famous. Equally she was sure that my
  285. brother, who was spending his hours studiously, was only good for his
  286. white skin, and would stand no show in the future. Nothing can beat an
  287. old woman for this sort of thing, I tell you. She firmly believed that
  288. whoever she liked would become famous, while whoever she hated would
  289. not. I did not have at that time any particular object in my life. But
  290. the persistency with which Kiyo declared that I would be a great man
  291. some day, made me speculate myself that after all I might become one.
  292. How absurd it seems to me now when I recall those days. I asked her once
  293. what kind of a man I should be, but she seemed to have formed no
  294. concrete idea as to that; only she said that I was sure to live in a
  295. house with grand entrance hall, and ride in a private rikisha.
  296. And Kiyo seemed to have decided for herself to live with me when I
  297. became independent and occupy my own house. "Please let me live with
  298. you,"--she repeatedly asked of me. Feeling somewhat that I should
  299. eventually be able to own a house, I answered her "Yes," as far as such
  300. an answer went. This woman, by the way, was strongly imaginative. She
  301. questioned me what place I liked,--Kojimachi-ku or Azabu-ku?--and
  302. suggested that I should have a swing in our garden, that one room be
  303. enough for European style, etc., planning everything to suit her own
  304. fancy. I did not then care a straw for anything like a house; so neither
  305. Japanese nor European style was much of use to me, and I told her to
  306. that effect. Then she would praise me as uncovetous and clean of heart.
  307. Whatever I said, she had praise for me.
  308. I lived, after the death of mother, in this fashion for five or six
  309. years. I had kicks from father, had rows with brother, and had candies
  310. and praise from Kiyo. I cared for nothing more; I thought this was
  311. enough. I imagined all other boys were leading about the same kind of
  312. life. As Kiyo frequently told me, however, that I was to be pitied, and
  313. was unfortunate, I imagined that that might be so. There was nothing
  314. that particularly worried me except that father was too tight with my
  315. pocket money, and this was rather hard on me.
  316. In January of the 6th year after mother's death, father died of
  317. apoplexy. In April of the same year, I graduated from a middle school,
  318. and two months later, my brother graduated from a business college. Soon
  319. he obtained a job in the Kyushu branch of a certain firm and had to go
  320. there, while I had to remain in Tokyo and continue my study. He proposed
  321. the sale of our house and the realization of our property, to which I
  322. answered "Just as you like it." I had no intention of depending upon him
  323. anyway. Even were he to look after me, I was sure of his starting
  324. something which would eventually end in a smash-up as we were prone to
  325. quarrel on the least pretext. It was because in order to receive his
  326. protection that I should have to bow before such a fellow, that I
  327. resolved that I would live by myself even if I had to do milk delivery.
  328. Shortly afterwards he sent for a second-hand dealer and sold for a song
  329. all the bric-a-bric which had been handed down from ages ago in our
  330. family. Our house and lot were sold, through the efforts of a middleman
  331. to a wealthy person. This transaction seemed to have netted a goodly sum
  332. to him, but I know nothing as to the detail.
  333. For one month previous to this, I had been rooming in a boarding house
  334. in Kanda-ku, pending a decision as to my future course. Kiyo was greatly
  335. grieved to see the house in which she had lived so many years change
  336. ownership, but she was helpless in the matter.
  337. "If you were a little older, you might have inherited this house," she
  338. once remarked in earnest.
  339. If I could have inherited the house through being a little older, I
  340. ought to have been able to inherit the house right then. She knew
  341. nothing, and believed the lack of age only prevented my coming into the
  342. possession of the house.
  343. Thus I parted from my brother, but the disposal of Kiyo was a difficult
  344. proposition. My brother was, of course, unable to take her along, nor
  345. was there any danger of her following him so far away as Kyushu, while I
  346. was in a small room of a boarding house, and might have to clear out
  347. anytime at that. There was no way out, so I asked her if she intended to
  348. work somewhere else. Finally she answered me definitely that she would
  349. go to her nephew's and wait until I started my own house and get
  350. married. This nephew was a clerk in the Court of Justice, and being
  351. fairly well off, had invited Kiyo before more than once to come and live
  352. with him, but Kiyo preferred to stay with us, even as a servant, since
  353. she had become well used to our family. But now I think she thought it
  354. better to go over to her nephew than to start a new life as servant in a
  355. strange house. Be that as it may, she advised me to have my own
  356. household soon, or get married, so she would come and help me in
  357. housekeeping. I believe she liked me more than she did her own kin.
  358. My brother came to me, two days previous to his departure for Kyushu,
  359. and giving me 600 yen, said that I might begin a business with it, or go
  360. ahead with my study, or spend it in any way I liked, but that that would
  361. be the last he could spare. It was a commendable act for my brother.
  362. What! about only 600 yen! I could get along without it, I thought, but
  363. as this unusually simple manner appealed to me, I accepted the offer
  364. with thanks. Then he produced 50 yen, requesting me to give it to Kiyo
  365. next time I saw her, which I readily complied with. Two days after, I
  366. saw him off at the Shimbashi Station, and have not set my eyes on him
  367. ever since.
  368. Lying in my bed, I meditated on the best way to spend that 600 yen. A
  369. business is fraught with too much trouble, and besides it was not my
  370. calling. Moreover with only 600 yen no one could open a business worth
  371. the name. Were I even able to do it, I was far from being educated, and
  372. after all, would lose it. Better let investments alone, but study more
  373. with the money. Dividing the 600 yen into three, and by spending 200 yen
  374. a year, I could study for three years. If I kept at one study with
  375. bull-dog tenacity for three years, I should be able to learn something.
  376. Then the selection of a school was the next problem. By nature, there is
  377. no branch of study whatever which appeals to my taste. Nix on languages
  378. or literature! The new poetry was all Greek to me; I could not make out
  379. one single line of twenty. Since I detested every kind of study, any
  380. kind of study should have been the same to me. Thinking thus, I happened
  381. to pass front of a school of physics, and seeing a sign posted for the
  382. admittance of more students, I thought this might be a kind of
  383. "affinity," and having asked for the prospectus, at once filed my
  384. application for entrance. When I think of it now, it was a blunder due
  385. to my hereditary recklessness.
  386. For three years I studied about as diligently as ordinary fellows, but
  387. not being of a particularly brilliant quality, my standing in the class
  388. was easier to find by looking up from the bottom. Strange, isn't it,
  389. that when three years were over, I graduated? I had to laugh at myself,
  390. but there being no reason for complaint, I passed out.
  391. Eight days after my graduation, the principal of the school asked me to
  392. come over and see him. I wondered what he wanted, and went. A middle
  393. school in Shikoku was in need of a teacher of mathematics for forty yen
  394. a month, and he sounded me to see if I would take it. I had studied for
  395. three years, but to tell the truth, I had no intention of either
  396. teaching or going to the country. Having nothing in sight, however,
  397. except teaching, I readily accepted the offer. This too was a blunder
  398. due to hereditary recklessness.
  399. I accepted the position, and so must go there. The three years of my
  400. school life I had seen confined in a small room, but with no kick coming
  401. or having no rough house. It was a comparatively easy going period in my
  402. life. But now I had to pack up. Once I went to Kamakura on a picnic with
  403. my classmates while I was in the grammar school, and that was the first
  404. and last, so far, that I stepped outside of Tokyo since I could
  405. remember. This time I must go darn far away, that it beats Kamakura by a
  406. mile. The prospective town is situated on the coast, and looked the size
  407. of a needle-point on the map. It would not be much to look at anyway. I
  408. knew nothing about the place or the people there. It did not worry me or
  409. cause any anxiety. I had simply to travel there and that was the
  410. annoying part.
  411. Once in a while, since our house was no more, I went to Kiyo's
  412. nephew's to see her. Her nephew was unusually good-natured, and
  413. whenever I called upon her, he treated me well if he happened to be at
  414. home. Kiyo would boost me sky-high to her nephew right to my face. She
  415. went so far once as to say that when I had graduated from school, I
  416. would purchase a house somewhere in Kojimachi-ku and get a position in
  417. a government office. She decided everything in her own way, and talked
  418. of it aloud, and I was made an unwilling and bashful listener. I do
  419. not know how her nephew weighed her tales of self-indulgence on me.
  420. Kiyo was a woman of the old type, and seemed, as if it was still the
  421. days of Feudal Lords, to regard her nephew equally under obligation to
  422. me even as she was herself.
  423. After settling about my new position, I called upon her three days
  424. previous to my departure. She was sick abed in a small room, but, on
  425. seeing me she got up and immediately inquired;
  426. "Master Darling, when do you begin housekeeping?"
  427. She evidently thought as soon as a fellow finishes school, money comes
  428. to his pocket by itself. But then how absurd to call such a "great man"
  429. "Darling." I told her simply that I should let the house proposition go
  430. for some time, as I had to go to the country. She looked greatly
  431. disappointed, and blankly smoothed her gray-haired sidelocks. I felt
  432. sorry for her, and said comfortingly; "I am going away but will come
  433. back soon. I'll return in the vacation next summer, sure." Still as she
  434. appeared not fully satisfied, I added;
  435. "Will bring you back a surprise. What do you like?"
  436. She wished to eat "sasa-ame"[1] of Echigo province. I had never heard of
  437. "sasa-ame" of Echigo. To begin with, the location is entirely different.
  438. [Footnote 1: Sasa-ame is a kind of rice-jelly wrapped with sasa, or the
  439. bamboo leaves, well-known as a product of Echigo province.]
  440. "There seems to be no 'sasa-ame' in the country where I'm going," I
  441. explained, and she rejoined; "Then, in what direction?" I answered
  442. "westward" and she came back with "Is it on the other side of Hakone?"
  443. This give-and-take conversation proved too much for me.
  444. On the day of my departure, she came to my room early in the morning and
  445. helped me to pack up. She put into my carpet-bag tooth powder,
  446. tooth-brush and towels which she said she had bought at a dry goods
  447. store on her way. I protested that I did not want them, but she was
  448. insistent.[A] We rode in rikishas to the station. Coming up the
  449. platform, she gazed at me from outside the car, and said in a low voice;
  450. "This may be our last good-by. Take care of yourself."
  451. Her eyes were full of tears. I did not cry, but was almost going to.
  452. After the train had run some distance, thinking it would be all right
  453. now, I poked my head out of the window and looked back. She was still
  454. there. She looked very small.
  455. CHAPTER II.
  456. With a long, sonorous whistle the steamer which I was aboard came to a
  457. standstill, and a boat was seen making toward us from the shore. The man
  458. rowing the boat was stark naked, except for a piece of red cloth girt
  459. round his loins. A barbarous place, this! though he may have been
  460. excused for it in such hot weather as it was. The sun's rays were strong
  461. and the water glimmered in such strange colors as to dazzle one's sight
  462. if gazed at it for long. I had been told by a clerk of the ship that I
  463. was to get off here. The place looked like a fishing village about the
  464. size of Omori. Great Scott! I wouldn't stay in such a hole, I thought,
  465. but I had to get out. So, down I jumped first into the boat, and I think
  466. five or six others followed me. After loading about four large boxes
  467. besides, the red-cloth rowed us ashore. When the boat struck the sand, I
  468. was again the first to jump out, and right away I accosted a skinny
  469. urchin standing nearby, asking him where the middle school was. The kid
  470. answered blankly that he did not know. Confound the dull-head! Not to
  471. know where the middle school was, living in such a tiny bit of a town.
  472. Then a man wearing a rig with short, queer shaped sleeves approached me
  473. and bade me follow. I walked after him and was taken to an inn called
  474. Minato-ya. The maids of the inn, who gave me a disagreeable impression,
  475. chorused at sight of me; "Please step inside." This discouraged me in
  476. proceeding further, and I asked them, standing at the door-way, to show
  477. me the middle school. On being told that the middle school was about
  478. four miles away by rail, I became still more discouraged at putting up
  479. there. I snatched my two valises from the man with queer-shaped [B]
  480. sleeves who had guided me so far, and strode away. The people of the inn
  481. looked after me with a dazed expression.
  482. The station was easily found, and a ticket bought without any fuss. The
  483. coach I got in was about as dignified as a match-box. The train rambled
  484. on for about five minutes, and then I had to get off. No wonder the fare
  485. was cheap; it cost only three sen. I then hired a rikisha and arrived at
  486. the middle school, but school was already over and nobody was there. The
  487. teacher on night-duty was out just for a while, said the janitor,--the
  488. night-watch was taking life easy, sure. I thought of visiting the
  489. principal, but being tired, ordered the rikishaman to take me to a
  490. hotel. He did this with much alacrity and led me to a hotel called
  491. Yamashiro-ya. I felt it rather amusing to find the name Yamashiro-ya the
  492. same as that of Kantaro's house.
  493. They ushered me to a dark room below the stairway. No one could stay in
  494. such a hot place! I said I did not like such a warm room, but the maid
  495. dumped my valises on the floor and left me, mumbling that all the other
  496. rooms were occupied. So I took the room though it took some resolution
  497. to stand the weltering heat. After a while the maid said the bath was
  498. ready, and I took one: On my way back from the bathroom, I peeped about,
  499. and found many rooms, which looked much cooler than mine, vacant.
  500. Sunnovagun! They had lied. By'm-by, she fetched my supper. Although the
  501. room was hot, the meal was a deal better than the kind I used to have in
  502. my boarding house. While waiting on me, she questioned me where I was
  503. from, and I said, "from Tokyo." Then she asked; "Isn't Tokyo a nice
  504. place?" and I shot back, "Bet 'tis." About the time the maid had reached
  505. the kitchen, loud laughs were heard. There was nothing doing, so I went
  506. to bed, but could not sleep. Not only was it hot, but noisy,--about five
  507. times noisier than my boarding house. While snoozing, I dreamed of Kiyo.
  508. She was eating "sasa-ame" of Echigo province without taking off the
  509. wrapper of bamboo leaves. I tried to stop her, saying bamboo leaves may
  510. do her harm, but she replied, "O, no, these leaves are very helpful for
  511. the health," and ate them with much relish. Astounded, I laughed "Ha,
  512. ha, ha!"--and so awoke. The maid was opening the outside shutters. The
  513. weather was just as clear as the previous day.
  514. I had heard once before that when travelling, one should give "tea
  515. money" to the hotel or inn where he stops; that unless this "tea
  516. money" is given, the hostelry would accord him rather rough treatment.
  517. It must have been on account of my being slow in the fork over of this
  518. "tea money" that they had huddled me into such a narrow, dark room.
  519. Likewise my shabby clothes and the carpet bags and satin umbrella must
  520. have been accountable for it. Took me for a piker, eh? those hayseeds!
  521. I would give them a knocker with "tea money." I left Tokyo with about
  522. 30 yen in my pocket, which remained from my school expenses. Taking
  523. off the railway and steamship fare, and other incidental expenses, I
  524. had still about 14 yen in my pocket. I could give them all I
  525. had;--what did I care, I was going to get a salary now. All country
  526. folk are tight-wads, and one 5-yen bill would hit them square. Now
  527. watch and see. Having washed myself, I returned to my room and waited,
  528. and the maid of the night before brought in my breakfast. Waiting on
  529. me with a tray, she looked at me with a sort of sulphuric smile. Rude!
  530. Is any parade marching on my face? I should say. Even my face is far
  531. better than that of the maid. I intended of giving "tea money" after
  532. breakfast, but I became disgusted, and taking out one 5-yen bill told
  533. her to take it to the office later. The face of the maid became then
  534. shy and awkward. After the meal, I left for the school. The maid did
  535. not have my shoes polished.
  536. I had had vague idea of the direction of the school as I rode to it the
  537. previous day, so turning two or three corners, I came to the front gate.
  538. From the gate to the entrance the walk was paved with granite. When I
  539. had passed to the entrance in the rikisha, this walk made so
  540. outlandishly a loud noise that I had felt coy. On my way to the school,
  541. I met a number of the students in uniforms of cotton drill and they all
  542. entered this gate. Some of them were taller than I and looked much
  543. stronger. When I thought of teaching fellows of this ilk, I was
  544. impressed with a queer sort of uneasiness. My card was taken to the
  545. principal, to whose room I was ushered at once. With scant mustache,
  546. dark-skinned and big-eyed, the principal was a man who looked like a
  547. badger. He studiously assumed an air of superiority, and saying he would
  548. like to see me do my best, handed the note of appointment, stamped big,
  549. in a solemn manner. This note I threw away into the sea on my way back
  550. to Tokyo. He said he would introduce me to all my fellow teachers, and I
  551. was to show to each one of them the note of appointment. What a bother!
  552. It would be far better to stick this note up in the teachers' room for
  553. three days instead of going through such a monkey process.
  554. The teachers would not be all in the room until the bugle for the first
  555. hour was sounded. There was plenty of time. The principal took out his
  556. watch, and saying that he would acquaint me particularly with the school
  557. by-and-bye, he would only furnish me now with general matters, and
  558. started a long lecture on the spirit of education. For a while I
  559. listened to him with my mind half away somewhere else, but about half
  560. way through his lecture, I began to realize that I should soon be in a
  561. bad fix. I could not do, by any means, all he expected of me. He
  562. expected that I should make myself an example to the students, should
  563. become an object of admiration for the whole school or should exert my
  564. moral influence, besides teaching technical knowledge in order to
  565. become a real educator, or something ridiculously high-sounding. No man
  566. with such admirable qualities would come so far away for only 40 yen a
  567. month! Men are generally alike. If one gets excited, one is liable to
  568. fight, I thought, but if things are to be kept on in the way the
  569. principal says, I could hardly open my mouth to utter anything, nor take
  570. a stroll around the place. If they wanted me to fill such an onerous
  571. post, they should have told all that before. I hate to tell a lie; I
  572. would give it up as having been cheated, and get out of this mess like a
  573. man there and then. I had only about 9 yen left in my pocket after
  574. tipping the hotel 5 yen. Nine yen would not take me back to Tokyo. I had
  575. better not have tipped the hotel; what a pity! However, I would be able
  576. to manage it somehow. I considered it better to run short in my return
  577. expenses than to tell a lie.
  578. "I cannot do it the way you want me to. I return this appointment."
  579. I shoved back the note. The principal winked his badger-like eyes and
  580. gazed at me. Then he said;
  581. "What I have said just now is what I desire of you. I know well that you
  582. cannot do all I want, So don't worry."
  583. And he laughed. If he knew it so well already, what on earth did he
  584. scare me for?
  585. Meanwhile the bugle sounded, being followed by bustling noises in the
  586. direction of the class rooms. All the teachers would be now ready, I was
  587. told, and I followed the principal to the teachers' room. In a spacious
  588. rectangular room, they sat each before a table lined along the walls.
  589. When I entered the room, they all glanced at me as if by previous
  590. agreement. Did they think my face was for a show? Then, as per
  591. instructions, I introduced myself and showed the note to each one of
  592. them. Most of them left their chairs and made a slight bow of
  593. acknowledgment. But some of the more painfully polite took the note and
  594. read it and respectfully returned it to me, just like the cheap
  595. performances at a rural show! When I came to the fifteenth, who was the
  596. teacher of physical training, I became impatient at repeating the same
  597. old thing so often. The other side had to do it only once, but my side
  598. had to do it fifteen times. They ought to have had some sympathy.
  599. Among those I met in the room there was Mr. Blank who was head teacher.
  600. Said he was a Bachelor of Arts. I suppose he was a great man since he
  601. was a graduate from Imperial University and had such a title. He talked
  602. in a strangely effeminate voice like a woman. But what surprised me most
  603. was that he wore a flannel shirt. However thin it might be, flannel is
  604. flannel and must have been pretty warm at that time of the year. What
  605. painstaking dress is required which will be becoming to a B.A.! And it
  606. was a red shirt; wouldn't that kill you! I heard afterwards that he
  607. wears a red shirt all the year round. What a strange affliction!
  608. According to his own explanation, he has his shirts made to order for
  609. the sake of his health as the red color is beneficial to the physical
  610. condition. Unnecessary worry, this, for that being the case, he should
  611. have had his coat and hakama also in red. And there was one Mr. Koga,
  612. teacher of English, whose complexion was very pale. Pale-faced people
  613. are usually thin, but this man was pale and fat. When I was attending
  614. grammar school, there was one Tami Asai in our class, and his father was
  615. just as pale as this Koga. Asai was a farmer, and I asked Kiyo if one's
  616. face would become pale if he took up farming. Kiyo said it was not so;
  617. Asai ate always Hubbard squash of "uranari" [2] and that was the reason.
  618. Thereafter when I saw any man pale and fat, I took it for granted that
  619. it was the result of his having eaten too much of squash of "uranari."
  620. This English teacher was surely subsisting upon squash. However, what
  621. the meaning of "uranari" is, I do not know. I asked Kiyo once, but she
  622. only laughed. Probably she did not know. Among the teachers of
  623. mathematics, there was one named Hotta. This was a fellow of massive
  624. body, with hair closely cropped. He looked like one of the old-time
  625. devilish priests who made the Eizan temple famous. I showed him the note
  626. politely, but he did not even look at it, and blurted out;
  627. "You're the man newly appointed, eh? Come and see me sometime,
  628. ha, ha, ha!"
  629. [Footnote 2: Means the last crop.]
  630. Devil take his "Ha, ha, ha!" Who would go to see a fellow so void of the
  631. sense of common decency! I gave this priest from this time the nickname
  632. of Porcupine.
  633. The Confucian teacher was strict in his manner as becoming to his
  634. profession. "Arrived yesterday? You must be tired. Start teaching
  635. already? Working hard, indeed!"--and so on. He was an old man, quite
  636. sociable and talkative.
  637. The teacher of drawing was altogether like a cheap actor. He wore a
  638. thin, flappy haori of sukiya, and, toying with a fan, he giggled; "Where
  639. from? eh? Tokyo? Glad to hear that. You make another of our group. I'm a
  640. Tokyo kid myself."
  641. If such a fellow prided himself on being a Tokyo kid, I wished I had
  642. never been born in Tokyo. I might go on writing about each one of
  643. them, for there are many, but I stop here otherwise there will be no
  644. end to it.
  645. When my formal introduction was over, the principal said that I might go
  646. for the day, but I should make arrangements as to the class hours, etc.,
  647. with the head teacher of mathematics and begin teaching from the day
  648. after the morrow. Asked who was the head teacher of mathematics, I found
  649. that he was no other than that Porcupine. Holy smokes! was I to serve
  650. under him? I was disappointed.
  651. "Say, where are you stopping? Yamashiro-ya? Well, I'll come and
  652. talk it over."
  653. So saying, Porcupine, chalk in hand, left the room to his class. That
  654. was rather humiliating for a head-teacher to come over and see his
  655. subordinate, but it was better than to call me over to him.
  656. After leaving the school, I thought of returning straight to the hotel,
  657. but as there was nothing to do, I decided to take in a little of the
  658. town, and started walking about following my nose. I saw prefectural
  659. building; it was an old structure of the last century. Also I saw the
  660. barracks; they were less imposing than those of the Azabu Regiment,
  661. Tokyo. I passed through the main street. The width of the street is
  662. about one half that of Kagurazaka, and its aspect is inferior. What
  663. about a castle-town of 250,000-koku Lord! Pity the fellows who get
  664. swell-headed in such a place as a castle-town!
  665. While I walked about musing like this, I found myself in front of
  666. Yamashiro-ya. The town was much narrower than I had been led to believe.
  667. "I think I have seen nearly all. Guess I'll return and eat." And I
  668. entered the gate. The mistress of the hotel who was sitting at the
  669. counter, jumped out of her place at my appearance and with "Are you
  670. back, Sire!" scraped the floor with her forehead. When I took my shoes
  671. off and stepped inside, the maid took me to an upstairs room that had
  672. became vacant. It was a front room of 15 mats (about 90 square feet). I
  673. had never before lived in so splendid a room as this. As it was quite
  674. uncertain when I should again be able to occupy such a room in future, I
  675. took off my European dress, and with only a single Japanese summer coat
  676. on, sprawled in the centre of the room in the shape of the Japanese
  677. letter "big" (arms stretched out and legs spread wide[D]). I found it
  678. very refreshing.
  679. After luncheon I at once wrote a letter to Kiyo. I hate most to write
  680. letters because I am poor at sentence-making and also poor in my stock
  681. of words. Neither did I have any place to which to address my letters.
  682. However, Kiyo might be getting anxious. It would not do to let her worry
  683. lest she think the steamer which I boarded had been wrecked and I was
  684. drowned,--so I braced up and wrote a long one. The body of the letter
  685. was as follows:
  686. "Arrived yesterday. A dull place. Am sleeping in a room of 15 mats.
  687. Tipped the hotel five yen as tea money. The house-wife of the hotel
  688. scraped the floor with her forehead. Couldn't sleep last night.
  689. Dreamed Kiyo eat sasa-ame together with the bamboo-leaf wrappers. Will
  690. return next summer. Went to the school to-day, and nicknamed all the
  691. fellows. 'Badger' for the principal, 'Red Shirt' for the head-teacher,
  692. 'Hubbard Squash' for the teacher of English, 'Porcupine' the teacher
  693. of mathematics and 'Clown' for that of drawing. Will write you many
  694. other things soon. Good bye."
  695. When I finished writing the letter, I felt better and sleepy. So I slept
  696. in the centre of the room, as I had done before, in the letter "big"
  697. shape ([D]). No dream this time, and I had a sound sleep.
  698. "Is this the room?"--a loud voice was heard,--a voice which woke me up,
  699. and Porcupine entered.
  700. "How do you do? What you have to do in the school----" he began talking
  701. shop as soon as I got up and rattled me much. On learning my duties in
  702. the school, there seemed to be no difficulty, and I decided to accept.
  703. If only such were what was expected of me, I would not be surprised were
  704. I told to start not only two days hence but even from the following day.
  705. The talk on business over, Porcupine said that he did not think it was
  706. my intention to stay in such a hotel all the time, that he would find a
  707. room for me in a good boarding house, and that I should move.
  708. "They wouldn't take in another from anybody else but I can do it
  709. right away. The sooner the better. Go and look at the room to-day,
  710. move tomorrow and start teaching from the next day. That'll be all
  711. nice and settled."
  712. He seemed satisfied by arranging all by himself. Indeed, I should not be
  713. able to occupy such a room for long. I might have to blow in all of my
  714. salary for the hotel bill and yet be short of squaring it. It was pity
  715. to leave the hotel so soon after I had just shone with a 5-yen tip.
  716. However, it being decidedly convenient to move and get settled early if
  717. I had to move at all, I asked Porcupine to get that room for me. He told
  718. me then to come over with him and see the house at any rate, and I did.
  719. The house was situated mid-way up a hill at the end of the town, and was
  720. a quiet. The boss was said to be a dealer in antique curios, called
  721. Ikagin, and his wife was about four years his senior. I learned the
  722. English word "witch" when I was in middle school, and this woman looked
  723. exactly like one. But as she was another man's wife, what did I care if
  724. she was a witch. Finally I decided to live in the house from the next
  725. day. On our way back Porcupine treated me to a cup of ice-water. When I
  726. first met him in the school, I thought him a disgustingly overbearing
  727. fellow, but judging by the way he had looked after me so far, he
  728. appeared not so bad after all. Only he seemed, like me, impatient by
  729. nature and of quick-temper. I heard afterward that he was liked most by
  730. all the students in the school.
  731. CHAPTER III.
  732. My teaching began at last. When I entered the class-room and stepped
  733. upon the platform for the first time, I felt somewhat strange. While
  734. lecturing, I wondered if a fellow like me could keep up the profession
  735. of public instructor. The students were noisy. Once in a while, they
  736. would holler "Teacher!" "Teacher,"--it was "going some." I had been
  737. calling others "teacher" every day so far, in the school of physics, but
  738. in calling others "teacher" and being called one, there is a wide gap of
  739. difference. It made me feel as if some one was tickling my soles. I am
  740. not a sneakish fellow, nor a coward; only--it's a pity--I lack audacity.
  741. If one calls me "teacher" aloud, it gives me a shock similar to that of
  742. hearing the noon-gun in Marunouchi when I was hungry. The first hour
  743. passed away in a dashing manner. And it passed away without encountering
  744. any knotty questions. As I returned to the teachers' room, Porcupine
  745. asked me how it was. I simply answered "well," and he seemed satisfied.
  746. When I left the teachers' room, chalk in hand, for the second hour
  747. class, I felt as if I was invading the enemy's territory. On entering
  748. the room, I found the students for this hour were all big fellows. I am
  749. a Tokyo kid, delicately built and small, and did not appear very
  750. impressive even in my elevated position. If it comes to a scraping, I
  751. can hold my own even with wrestlers, but I had no means of appearing
  752. awe-inspiring[E], merely by the aid of my tongue, to so many as forty
  753. such big chaps before me. Believing, however, that it would set a bad
  754. precedent to show these country fellows any weakness, I lectured rather
  755. loudly and in brusque tone. During the first part the students were
  756. taken aback and listened literally with their mouths open. "That's one
  757. on you!" I thought. Elated by my success, I kept on in this tone, when
  758. one who looked the strongest, sitting in the middle of the front row,
  759. stood up suddenly, and called "Teacher!" There it goes!--I thought, and
  760. asked him what it was.
  761. "A-ah sa-ay, you talk too quick. A-ah ca-an't you make it a leetle slow?
  762. A-ah?" "A-ah ca-an't you?" "A-ah?" was altogether dull.
  763. "If I talk too fast, I'll make it slow, but I'm a Tokyo fellow, and
  764. can't talk the way you do. If you don't understand it, better wait
  765. until you do."
  766. So I answered him. In this way the second hour was closed better than I
  767. had expected. Only, as I was about to leave the class, one of the
  768. students asked me, "A-ah say, won't you please do them for me?" and
  769. showed me some problems in geometry which I was sure I could not solve.
  770. This proved to be somewhat a damper on me. But, helpless, I told him I
  771. could not make them out, and telling him that I would show him how next
  772. time, hastily got out of the room. And all of them raised "Whee--ee!"
  773. Some of them were heard saying "He doesn't know much." Don't take a
  774. teacher for an encyclopaedia! If I could work out such hard questions as
  775. these easily, I would not be in such a backwoods town for forty yen a
  776. month. I returned to the teachers' room.
  777. "How was it this time?" asked Porcupine. I said "Umh." But not satisfied
  778. with "Umh" only, I added that all the students in this school were
  779. boneheads. He put up a whimsical face.
  780. The third and the fourth hour and the first hour in the afternoon were
  781. more or less the same. In all the classes I attended, I made some kind
  782. of blunder. I realised that the profession of teaching not quite so easy
  783. a calling as might have appeared. My teaching for the day was finished
  784. but I could not get away. I had to wait alone until three o'clock. I
  785. understood that at three o'clock the students of my classes would finish
  786. cleaning up the rooms and report to me, whereupon I would go over the
  787. rooms. Then I would run through the students' roll, and then be free to
  788. go home. Outrageous, indeed, to keep on chained to the school, staring
  789. at the empty space when he had nothing more to do, even though he was
  790. "bought" by a salary! Other fellow teachers, however, meekly submitted
  791. to the regulation, and believing it not well for me,--a new comer--to
  792. fuss about it, I stood it. On my way home, I appealed to Porcupine as to
  793. the absurdity of keeping me there till three o'clock regardless of my
  794. having nothing to do in the school. He said "Yes" and laughed. But he
  795. became serious and in an advisory manner told me not to make many
  796. complaints about the school.
  797. "Talk to me only, if you want to. There are some queer guys around."
  798. As we parted at the next corner, I did not have time to hear more from
  799. him.
  800. On reaching my room, the boss of the house came to me saying, "Let me
  801. serve you tea." I expected he was going to treat me to some good tea
  802. since he said "Let me serve you," but he simply made himself at home
  803. and drank my own tea. Judging by this, I thought he might be
  804. practising "Let me serve you" during my absence. The boss said that he
  805. was fond of antique drawings and curios and finally had decided to
  806. start in that business.
  807. "You look like one quite taken about art. Suppose you begin patronizing
  808. my business just for fun as er--connoisseur of art?"
  809. It was the least expected kind of solicitation. Two years ago, I went to
  810. the Imperial Hotel (Tokyo) on an errand, and I was taken for a
  811. locksmith. When I went to see the Daibutsu at Kamakura, haying wrapped
  812. up myself from head to toe with a blanket, a rikisha man addressed me as
  813. "Gov'ner." I have been mistaken on many occasions for as many things,
  814. but none so far has counted on me as a probable connoisseur of art. One
  815. should know better by my appearance. Any one who aspires to be a patron
  816. of art is usually pictured,--you may see in any drawing,--with either a
  817. hood on his head, or carrying a tanzaku[3] in his hand. The fellow who
  818. calls me a connoisseur of art and pretends to mean it, may be surely as
  819. crooked as a dog's hind legs. I told him I did not like such art-stuff,
  820. which is usually favored by retired people. He laughed, and remarking
  821. that that nobody liked it at first, but once in it, will find it so
  822. fascinating that he will hardly get over it, served tea for himself and
  823. drank it in a grotesque manner. I may say that I had asked him the night
  824. before to buy some tea for me, but I did not like such a bitter, heavy
  825. kind. One swallow seemed to act right on my stomach. I told him to buy a
  826. kind not so bitter as that, and he answered "All right, Sir," and drank
  827. another cup. The fellow seemed never to know of having enough of
  828. anything so long as it was another man's. After he left the room, I
  829. prepared for the morrow and went to bed.
  830. [Footnote 3: A tanzaku is a long, narrow strip of stiff paper on which a
  831. Japanese poem is written.]
  832. Everyday thereafter I attended at the school and worked as per
  833. regulations. Every day on my return, the boss came to my room with the
  834. same old "Let me serve you tea." In about a week I understood the school
  835. in a general way, and had my own idea as to the personality of the boss
  836. and his wife. I heard from one of my fellow teachers that the first week
  837. to one month after the receipt of the appointment worried them most as
  838. to whether they had been favorably received among the students. I never
  839. felt anything on that score. Blunders in the class room once in a while
  840. caused me chagrin, but in about half an hour everything would clear out
  841. of my head. I am a fellow who, by nature, can't be worrying long
  842. about[F] anything even if I try to. I was absolutely indifferent as how
  843. my blunders in the class room affected the students, or how much further
  844. they affected the principal or the head-teacher. As I mentioned before,
  845. I am not a fellow of much audacity to speak of, but I am quick to give
  846. up anything when I see its finish.
  847. I had resolved to go elsewhere at once if the school did not suit me. In
  848. consequence, neither Badger nor Red Shirt wielded any influence over me.
  849. And still less did I feel like coaxing or coddling the youngsters in the
  850. class room.
  851. So far it was O.K. with the school, but not so easy as that at my
  852. boarding house. I could have stood it if it had been only the boss
  853. coming to my room after my tea. But he would fetch many things to my
  854. room. First time he brought in seals.[4] He displayed about ten of them
  855. before me and persuaded me to buy them for three yen, which was very
  856. cheap, he said. Did he take me for a third rate painter making a round
  857. of the country? I told him I did not want them. Next time he brought in
  858. a panel picture of flowers and birds, drawn by one Kazan or somebody. He
  859. hung it against the wall of the alcove and asked me if it was not well
  860. done, and I echoed it looked well done. Then he started lecturing about
  861. Kazan, that there are two Kazans, one is Kazan something and the other
  862. is Kazan anything, and that this picture was the work of that Kazan
  863. something. After this nonsensical lecture, he insisted that he would
  864. make it fifteen yen for me to buy it. I declined the offer saying that I
  865. was shy of the money.
  866. [Footnote 4: Artists have several seals of stone with which to stamp on
  867. the picture they draw as a guarantee of their personal work or for
  868. identification. The shape and kind of seals are quite a hobby among
  869. artists, and sales or exchange are of common occurrence.]
  870. "You can pay any time." He was insistent. I settled him by telling him
  871. of my having no intention of purchasing it even if I had the necessary
  872. money. Again next time, he yanked in a big writing stone slab about the
  873. size of a ridge-tile.
  874. "This is a tankei,"[5] he said. As he "tankeied" two or three times, I
  875. asked for fun what was a tankei. Right away he commenced lecturing on
  876. the subject. "There are the upper, the middle and the lower stratum in
  877. tankei," he said. "Most of tankei slabs to-day are made from the upper
  878. stratum," he continued, "but this one is surely from the middle
  879. stratum. Look at this 'gan.'[6] 'Tis certainly rare to have three
  880. 'gans' like this. The ink-cake grates smoothly on it. Try it,
  881. sir,"--and he pushed it towards me. I asked him how much, and he
  882. answered that on account of its owner having brought it from China and
  883. wishing to sell if as soon as possible, he would make it very cheap,
  884. that I could have it for thirty yen. I was sure he was a fool. I seemed
  885. to be able to get through the school somehow, but I would soon give out
  886. if this "curio siege" kept on long.
  887. [Footnote 5: Tankei is the name of a place in China where a certain kind
  888. of stone suitable for writing purposes was produced.]
  889. [Footnote 6: "Gan" may be understood as a kind of natural mark on the
  890. stone peculiar to the stone from Tankei.]
  891. Shortly afterwards, I began to get sick of the school. One certain
  892. night, while I was strolling about a street named Omachi, I happened to
  893. notice a sign of noodles below of which was annotated "Tokyo" in the
  894. house next to the post office. I am very fond of noodles. While I was in
  895. Tokyo, if I passed by a noodle house and smelled the seasoning spices, I
  896. felt uncontrollable temptation to go inside at any cost. Up to this time
  897. I had forgotten the noodle on account of mathematics and antique curios,
  898. but since I had seen thus the sign of noodles, I could hardly pass it by
  899. unnoticed. So availing myself of this opportunity, I went in. It was not
  900. quite up to what I had judged by the sign. Since it claimed to follow
  901. the Tokyo style, they should have tidied up a little bit about the room.
  902. They did not either know Tokyo or have the means,--I did not know which,
  903. but the room was miserably dirty. The floor-mats had all seen better
  904. days and felt shaggy with sandy dust. The sootcovered walls defied the
  905. blackest black. The ceiling was not only smoked by the lamp black, but
  906. was so low as to force one involuntarily bend down his neck. Only the
  907. price-list, on which was glaringly written "Noodles" and which was
  908. pasted on the wall, was entirely new. I was certain that they bought an
  909. old house and opened the business just two or three days before. At the
  910. head of the price-list appeared "tempura" (noodles served with shrimp
  911. fried in batter).
  912. "Say, fetch me some tempura," I ordered in a loud voice. Then three
  913. fellows who had been making a chewing noise together in a corner, looked
  914. in my direction. As the room was dark I did not notice them at first.
  915. But when we looked at each other, I found them all to be boys in our
  916. school. They "how d'ye do'd" me and I acknowledged it. That night,
  917. having come across the noodle after so long a time, it tasted so fine
  918. that I ate four bowls.
  919. The next day as I entered the class room quite unconcernedly, I saw on
  920. the black board written in letters so large as to take up the whole
  921. space; "Professor Tempura." The boys all glanced at my face and made
  922. merry hee-haws at my cost. It was so absurd that I asked them if it was
  923. in any way funny for me to eat tempura noodle. Thereupon one of them
  924. said,--"But four bowls is too much." What did they care if I ate four
  925. bowls or five as long as I paid it with my own money,--and speedily
  926. finishing up my class, I returned to the teachers' room. After ten
  927. minutes' recess, I went to the next class, and there on the black board
  928. was newly written quite as large as before; "Four bowls of tempura
  929. noodles, but don't laugh."
  930. The first one did not arouse any ill-temper in me, but this time it made
  931. me feel irritating mad. A joke carried too far becomes mischievous. It
  932. is like the undue jealousy of some women who, like coal, look black and
  933. suggest flames. Nobody likes it. These country simpletons, unable to
  934. differentiate upon so delicate a boundary, would seem to be bent on
  935. pushing everything to the limit. As they lived in such a narrow town
  936. where one has no more to see if he goes on strolling about for one hour,
  937. and as they were capable of doing nothing better, they were trumpeting
  938. aloud this tempura incident in quite as serious a manner as the
  939. Russo-Japanese war. What a bunch of miserable pups! It is because they
  940. are raised in this fashion from their boyhood that there are many punies
  941. who, like the dwarf maple tree in the flower pot, mature gnarled and
  942. twisted. I have no objection to laugh myself with others over innocent
  943. jokes. But how's this? Boys as they are, they showed a "poisonous
  944. temper." Silently erasing off "tempura" from the board, I questioned
  945. them if they thought such mischief interesting, that this was a cowardly
  946. joke and if they knew the meaning of "cowardice." Some of them answered
  947. that to get angry on being laughed at over one's own doing, was
  948. cowardice. What made them so disgusting as this? I pitied myself for
  949. coming from far off Tokyo to teach such a lot.
  950. "Keep your mouth shut, and study hard," I snapped, and started the
  951. class. In the next class again there was written: "When one eats tempura
  952. noodles it makes him drawl nonsense." There seemed no end to it. I was
  953. thoroughly aroused with anger, and declaring that I would not teach such
  954. sassies, went home straight. The boys were glad of having an unexpected
  955. holiday, so I heard. When things had come to this pass, the antique
  956. curious seemed far more preferable to the school.
  957. My return home and sleep over night greatly rounded off my rugged temper
  958. over the tempura affair. I went to the school, and they were there also.
  959. I could not tell what was what. The three days thereafter were pacific,
  960. and on the night of the fourth day, I went to a suburb called Sumida and
  961. ate "dango" (small balls made of glutinous rice, dressed with
  962. sugar-paste). Sumida is a town where there are restaurants, hot-springs
  963. bath houses and a park, and in addition, the "tenderloin." The dango
  964. shop where I went was near the entrance to the tenderloin, and as the
  965. dango served there was widely known for its nice taste, I dropped in on
  966. my way back from my bath. As I did not meet any students this time, I
  967. thought nobody knew of it, but when I entered the first hour class next
  968. day, I found written on the black board; "Two dishes of dango--7 sen."
  969. It is true that I ate two dishes and paid seven sen. Troublesome kids! I
  970. declare. I expected with certainty that there would be something at the
  971. second hour, and there it was; "The dango in the tenderloin taste fine."
  972. Stupid wretches!
  973. No sooner I thought, the dango incident closed than the red towel became
  974. the topic for widespread gossip. Inquiry as to the story revealed it to
  975. be something unusually absurd. Since, my arrival here, I had made it a
  976. part of my routine to take in the hot springs bath every day. While
  977. there was nothing in this town which compared favorably with Tokyo, the
  978. hot springs were worthy of praise. So long as I was in the town, I
  979. decided that I would have a dip every day, and went there walking,
  980. partly for physical exercise, before my supper. And whenever I went
  981. there I used to carry a large-size European towel dangling from my hand.
  982. Added to somewhat reddish color the towel had acquired by its having
  983. been soaked in the hot-springs, the red color on its border, which was
  984. not fast enough, streaked about so that the towel now looked as if it
  985. were dyed red. This towel hung down from my hand on both ways whether
  986. afoot or riding in the train. For this reason, the students nicknamed me
  987. Red Towel. Honest, it is exasperating to live in a little town.
  988. There is some more. The bath house I patronized was a newly built
  989. three-story house, and for the patrons of the first class the house
  990. provided a bath-robe, in addition to an attendant, and the cost was only
  991. eight sen. On top of that, a maid would serve tea in a regular polite
  992. fashion. I always paid the first class. Then those gossipy spotters
  993. started saying that for one who made only forty yen a month to take a
  994. first class bath every day was extravagant. Why the devil should they
  995. care? It was none of their business.
  996. There is still some more. The bath-tub,--or the tank in this case,--was
  997. built of granite, and measured about thirty square feet. Usually there
  998. were thirteen or fourteen people in the tank, but sometimes there was
  999. none. As the water came up clear to the breast, I enjoyed, for athletic
  1000. purposes, swimming in the tank. I delighted in swimming in this
  1001. 30-square feet tank, taking chances of the total absence of other
  1002. people. Once, going downstairs from the third story with a light heart,
  1003. and peeping through the entrance of the tank to see if I should be able
  1004. to swim, I noticed a sign put up in which was boldly written: "No
  1005. swimming allowed in the tank." As there may not have been many who swam
  1006. in the tank, this notice was probably put up particularly for my sake.
  1007. After that I gave up swimming. But although I gave up swimming, I was
  1008. surprised, when I went to the school, to see on the board, as usual,
  1009. written: "No swimming allowed in the tank." It seemed as if all the
  1010. students united in tracking me everywhere. They made me sick. I was not
  1011. a fellow to stop doing whatever I had started upon no matter what
  1012. students might say, but I became thoroughly disgusted when I meditated
  1013. on why I had come to such a narrow, suffocating place. And, then, when I
  1014. returned home, the "antique curio siege" was still going on.
  1015. CHAPTER IV
  1016. For us teachers there was a duty of night watch in the school, and we
  1017. had to do it in turn. But Badger and Red Shirt were not in it. On
  1018. asking why these two were exempt from this duty, I was told that they
  1019. were accorded by the government treatment similar to officials of
  1020. "Sonin" rank. Oh, fudge! They were paid more, worked less, and were
  1021. then excused from this night watch. It was not fair. They made
  1022. regulations to suit their convenience and seemed to regard all this as
  1023. a matter of course. How could they be so brazen faced as this! I was
  1024. greatly dissatisfied relative to this question, but according to the
  1025. opinion of Porcupine, protests by a single person, with what insistency
  1026. they may be made, will not be heard. They ought to be heard whether
  1027. they are made by one person or by two if they are just. Porcupine
  1028. remonstrated with me by quoting "Might is right" in English. I did not
  1029. catch his point, so I asked him again, and he told me that it meant the
  1030. right of the stronger. If it was the right of the stronger I had known
  1031. it for long, and did not require Porcupine explain that to me at this
  1032. time. The right of the stronger was a question different from that of
  1033. the night watch. Who would agree that Badger and Red Shirt were the
  1034. stronger? But argument or no argument, the turn of this night watch at
  1035. last fell upon me. Being quite fastidious, I never enjoyed sound sleep
  1036. unless I slept comfortably in my own bedding. From my childhood, I
  1037. never stayed out overnight. When I did not find sleeping under the roof
  1038. of my friends inviting, night watch in the school, you may be sure, was
  1039. still worse. However repulsive, if this was a part of the forty yen a
  1040. month, there was no alternative. I had to do it.
  1041. To remain alone in the school after the faculty and students had gone
  1042. home, was something particularly awkward. The room for the night watch
  1043. was in the rear of the school building at the west end of the dormitory.
  1044. I stepped inside to see how it was, and finding it squarely facing the
  1045. setting sun, I thought I would melt. In spite of autumn having already
  1046. set in, the hot spell still lingered, quite in keeping with the
  1047. dilly-dally atmosphere of the country. I ordered the same kind of meal
  1048. as served for the students, and finished my supper. The meal was
  1049. unspeakably poor. It was a wonder they could subsist on such miserable
  1050. stuff and keep on "roughing it" in that lively fashion. Not only that,
  1051. they were always hungry for supper, finishing it at 4.30 in the
  1052. afternoon. They must be heroes in a sense. I had thus my supper, but the
  1053. sun being still high, could not go to bed yet. I felt like going to the
  1054. hot-springs. I did not know the wrong or right of night watch going out,
  1055. but it was oppressively trying to stand a life akin to heavy
  1056. imprisonment. When I called at the school the first time and inquired
  1057. about night watch, I was told by the janitor that he had just gone out
  1058. and I thought it strange. But now by taking the turn of night watch
  1059. myself, I could fathom the situation; it was right for any night watch
  1060. to go out. I told the janitor that I was going out for a minute. He
  1061. asked me "on business?" and I answered "No," but to take a bath at the
  1062. hot springs, and went out straight. It was too bad that I had left my
  1063. red towel at home, but I would borrow one over there for to-day.
  1064. I took plenty of time in dipping in the bath and as it became dark at
  1065. last, I came to the Furumachi Station on a train. It was only about four
  1066. blocks to the school; I could cover it in no time. When I started
  1067. walking schoolwards, Badger was seen coming from the opposite direction.
  1068. Badger, I presumed, was going to the hot springs by this train. He came
  1069. with brisk steps, and as we passed by, I nodded my courtesy. Then
  1070. Badger, with a studiously owlish countenance, asked:
  1071. "Am I wrong to understand that you are night watch?"
  1072. Chuck that "Am-I-wrong-to-understand"! Two hours ago, did he not say to
  1073. me "You're on first night watch to-night. Now, take care of yourself?"
  1074. What makes one use such a roundabout, twisted way of saying anything
  1075. when he becomes a principal? I was far from smiling.
  1076. "Yes, Sir," I said, "I'm night watch to-night, and as I am night watch I
  1077. will return to the school and stay there overnight, sure." With this
  1078. parting shot, I left him where we met. Coming then to the cross-streets
  1079. of Katamachi, I met Porcupine. This is a narrow place, I tell you.
  1080. Whenever one ventures out, he is sure to come across some familiar face.
  1081. "Say, aren't you night watch?" he hallooed, and I said "Yes, I am." "Tis
  1082. wrong for night watch to leave his post at his pleasure," he added, and
  1083. to this I blurted out with a bold front; "Nothing wrong at all. It is
  1084. wrong not to go out."
  1085. "Say, old man, your slap-dash is going to the limit. Wouldn't look well
  1086. for the principal or the head teacher to see you out like this."
  1087. The submissive tone of his remark was contrary to Porcupine as I had
  1088. known him so far, so I cut him short by saying:
  1089. "I have met the principal just now. Why, he approved my taking a stroll
  1090. about the town. Said it would be hard on night watch unless he took a
  1091. walk when it is hot." Then I made a bee-line for the school.
  1092. Soon it was night. I called the janitor to my room and had a chat for
  1093. about two hours. I grew tired of this, and thought I would get into bed
  1094. anyway, even if I could not sleep. I put on my night shirt, lifted the
  1095. mosquito-net, rolled off the red blanket and fell down flat on my back
  1096. with a bang. The making of this bumping noise when I go to bed is my
  1097. habit from my boyhood. "It is a bad habit," once declared a student of a
  1098. law school who lived on the ground floor, and I on the second, when I
  1099. was in the boarding house at Ogawa-machi, Kanda-ku, and who brought
  1100. complaints to my room in person. Students of law schools, weaklings as
  1101. they are, have double the ability of ordinary persons when it comes to
  1102. talking. As this student of law dwelt long on absurd accusations, I
  1103. downed him by answering that the noise made when I went to bed was not
  1104. the fault of my hip, but that of the house which was not built on a
  1105. solid base, and that if he had any fuss to make, make it to the house,
  1106. not to me. This room for night watch was not on the second floor, so
  1107. nobody cared how much I banged. I do not feel well-rested unless I go to
  1108. bed with the loudest bang I can make.
  1109. "This is bully!" and I straightened out my feet, when something jumped
  1110. and clung to them. They felt coarse, and seemed not to be fleas. I was a
  1111. bit surprised, and shook my feet inside the blanket two or three times.
  1112. Instantly the blamed thing increased,--five or six of them on my legs,
  1113. two or three on the thighs, one crushed beneath my hip and another clear
  1114. up to my belly. The shock became greater. Up I jumped, took off the
  1115. blanket, and about fifty to sixty grasshoppers flew out. I was more or
  1116. less uneasy until I found out what they were, but now I saw they were
  1117. grasshoppers, they set me on the war path. "You insignificant
  1118. grasshoppers, startling a man! See what's coming to you!" With this I
  1119. slapped them with my pillow twice or thrice, but the objects being so
  1120. small, the effect was out of proportion to the force with which the
  1121. blows were administered. I adopted a different plan. In the manner of
  1122. beating floor-mats with rolled matting at house-cleaning, I sat up in
  1123. bed and began beating them with the pillow. Many of them flew up by the
  1124. force of the pillow; some desperately clung on or shot against my nose
  1125. or head. I could not very well hit those on my head with the pillow; I
  1126. grabbed such, and dashed them on the floor. What was more provoking was
  1127. that no matter how hard I dashed them, they landed on the mosquito-net
  1128. where they made a fluffy jerk and remained, far from being dead. At
  1129. last, in about half an hour the slaughter of the grasshoppers was ended.
  1130. I fetched a broom and swept them out. The janitor came along and asked
  1131. what was the matter.
  1132. "Damn the matter! Where in thunder are the fools who keep grasshoppers
  1133. in bed! You pumpkinhead!"
  1134. The janitor answered by explaining that he did not know anything about
  1135. it. "You can't get away with Did-not-know," and I followed this
  1136. thundering by throwing away the broom. The awe-struck janitor shouldered
  1137. the broom and faded away.
  1138. At once I summoned three of the students to my room as the
  1139. "representatives," and six of them reported. Six or ten made no
  1140. difference; I rolled up the sleeves of my night-shirt and fired away.
  1141. "What do you mean by putting grasshoppers in my bed!"
  1142. "Grasshoppers? What are they?" said one in front, in a tone disgustingly
  1143. quiet. In this school, not only the principal, but the students as well,
  1144. were addicted to using twisted-round expressions.
  1145. "Don't know grasshoppers! You shall see!" To my chagrin, there was none;
  1146. I had swept them all out. I called the janitor again and told him to
  1147. fetch those grasshoppers he had taken away. The janitor said he had
  1148. thrown them into the garbage box, but that he would pick them out again.
  1149. "Yes, hurry up," I said, and he sped away. After a while he brought back
  1150. about ten grasshoppers on a white paper, remarking:
  1151. "I'm sorry, Sir. It's dark outside and I can't find out more. I'll find
  1152. some tomorrow." All fools here, down to the janitor. I showed one
  1153. grasshopper to the students.
  1154. "This is a grasshopper. What's the matter for as big idiots as you not
  1155. to know a grasshopper." Then the one with a round face sitting on the
  1156. left saucily shot back:
  1157. "A-ah say, that's a locust, a-ah----."
  1158. "Shut up. They're the same thing. In the first place, what do you
  1159. mean by answering your teacher 'A-ah say'? Ah-Say or Ah-Sing is a
  1160. Chink's name!"
  1161. For this counter-shot, he answered:
  1162. "A-ah say and Ah-Sing is different,--A-ah say." They never got rid of
  1163. "A-ah say."
  1164. "Grasshoppers or locusts, why did you put them into my bed? When I
  1165. asked you to?"
  1166. "Nobody put them in."
  1167. "If not, how could they get into the bed?"
  1168. "Locusts are fond of warm places and probably they got in there
  1169. respectfully by themselves."
  1170. "You fools! Grasshoppers getting into bed respectfully! I should smile
  1171. at them getting in there respectfully! Now, what's the reason for doing
  1172. this mischief? Speak out."
  1173. "But there is no way to explain it because we didn't do it."
  1174. Shrimps! If they were afraid of making a clean breast of their own deed,
  1175. they should not have done it at all. They looked defiant, and appeared
  1176. to insist on their innocence as long as no evidence was brought up. I
  1177. myself did some mischief while in the middle school, but when the
  1178. culprit was sought after, I was never so cowardly, not even once, to
  1179. back out. What one has done, has been done; what he has not, has not
  1180. been,--that's the black and white of it. I, for one have been game and
  1181. square, no matter how much mischief I might have done. If I wished to
  1182. dodge the punishment, I would not start it. Mischief and punishment are
  1183. bound to go together. We can enjoy mischief-making with some show of
  1184. spirit because it is accompanied by certain consequences. Where does one
  1185. expect to see the dastardly spirit which hungers for mischief-making
  1186. without punishment, in vogue? The fellows who like to borrow money but
  1187. not pay it back, are surely such as these students here after they are
  1188. graduated. What did these fellows come to this middle school for,
  1189. anyway? They enter a school, tattle round lies, play silly jokes behind
  1190. some one by sneaking and cheating and get wrongly swell-headed when they
  1191. finish the school thinking they have received an education. A common lot
  1192. of jackasses they are.
  1193. My hatred of talking with these scamps became intense, so I dismissed
  1194. them by saying:
  1195. "If you fellows have nothing to say, let it go at that. You deserve
  1196. pity for not knowing the decent from the vulgar after coming to a
  1197. middle school."
  1198. I am not very decent in my own language or manner, but am sure that my
  1199. moral standard is far more decent than that of these gangs. Those six
  1200. boys filed out leisurely. Outwardly they appeared more dignified than I
  1201. their teacher, it was the more repulsive for their calm behavior. I have
  1202. no temerity equal to theirs. Then I went to bed again, and found the
  1203. inside of the net full of merry crowds of mosquitoes. I could not bother
  1204. myself to burn one by one with a candle flame. So I took the net off the
  1205. hooks, folded it the lengthwise, and shook it crossways, up and down the
  1206. room. One of the rings of the net, flying round, accidentally hit the
  1207. back of my hand, the effect of which I did not soon forget. When I went
  1208. to bed for the third time, I cooled off a little, but could not sleep
  1209. easily. My watch showed it was half past ten. Well, as I thought it
  1210. over, I realized myself as having come to a dirty pit. If all teachers
  1211. of middle schools everywhere have to handle fellows like these in this
  1212. school, those teachers have my sympathy. It is wonderful that teachers
  1213. never run short. I believe there are many boneheads of extraordinary
  1214. patience; but me for something else. In this respect, Kiyo is worthy of
  1215. admiration. She is an old woman, with neither education nor social
  1216. position, but as a human, she does more to command our respect. Until
  1217. now, I have been a trouble to her without appreciating her goodness, but
  1218. having come alone to such a far-off country, I now appreciated, for the
  1219. first time, her kindness. If she is fond of sasa-ame of Echigo province,
  1220. and if I go to Echigo for the purpose of buying that sweetmeat to let
  1221. her eat it, she is fully worth that trouble. Kiyo has been praising me
  1222. as unselfish and straight, but she is a person of sterling qualities far
  1223. more than I whom she praises. I began to feel like meeting her.
  1224. While I was thus meditating about Kiyo, all of a sudden, on the floor
  1225. above my head, about thirty to forty people, if I guess by the number,
  1226. started stamping the floor with bang, bang, bang that well threatened to
  1227. bang down the floor. This was followed by proportionately loud whoops.
  1228. The noise surprised me, and I popped up. The moment I got up I became
  1229. aware that the students were starting a rough house to get even with me.
  1230. What wrong one has committed, he has to confess, or his offence is never
  1231. atoned for. They are just to ask for themselves what crimes they have
  1232. done. It should be proper that they repent their folly after going to
  1233. bed and to come and beg me pardon the next morning. Even if they could
  1234. not go so far as to apologize they should have kept quiet. Then what
  1235. does this racket mean? Where we keeping hogs in our dormitory?
  1236. "This crazy thing got to stop. See what you get!"
  1237. I ran out of the room in my night shirt, and flew upstairs in three and
  1238. half steps. Then, strange to say, thunderous rumbling, of which I was
  1239. sure of hearing in the act, was hushed. Not only a whisper but even
  1240. footsteps were not heard. This was funny. The lamp was already blown
  1241. out and although I could not see what was what in the dark, nevertheless
  1242. could tell by instinct whether there was somebody around or not. In the
  1243. long corridor running from the east to the west, there was not hiding
  1244. even a mouse. From other end of the corridor the moonlight flooded in
  1245. and about there it was particularly light. The scene was somewhat
  1246. uncanny. I have had the habit from my boyhood of frequently dreaming and
  1247. of flying out of bed and of muttering things which nobody understood,
  1248. affording everybody a hearty laugh. One night, when I was sixteen or
  1249. seventeen, I dreamed that I picked up a diamond, and getting up,
  1250. demanded of my brother who was sleeping close to me what he had done
  1251. with that diamond. The demand was made with such force that for about
  1252. three days all in the house chaffed me about the fatal loss of precious
  1253. stone, much to my humiliation. Maybe this noise which I heard was but a
  1254. dream, although I was sure it was real. I was wondering thus in the
  1255. middle of the corridor, when at the further end where it was moonlit, a
  1256. roar was raised, coming from about thirty or forty throats, "One, two,
  1257. three,--Whee-ee!" The roar had hardly subsided, when, as before, the
  1258. stamping of the floor commenced with furious rhythm. Ah, it was not a
  1259. dream, but a real thing!
  1260. "Quit making the noise! 'Tis midnight!"
  1261. I shouted to beat the band, and started in their direction. My passage
  1262. was dark; the moonlight yonder was only my guide. About twelve feet
  1263. past, I stumbled squarely against some hard object; ere the "Ouch!" has
  1264. passed clear up to my head, I was thrown down. I called all kinds of
  1265. gods, but could not run. My mind urged me on to hurry up, but my leg
  1266. would not obey the command. Growing impatient, I hobbled on one foot,
  1267. and found both voice and stamping already ceased and perfectly quiet.
  1268. Men can be cowards but I never expected them capable of becoming such
  1269. dastardly cowards as this. They challenged hogs.
  1270. Now the situation having developed to this pretty mess, I would not give
  1271. it up until I had dragged them out from hiding and forced them to
  1272. apologize. With this determination, I tried to open one of the doors and
  1273. examine inside, but it would not open. It was locked or held fast with a
  1274. pile of tables or something; to my persistent efforts the door stood
  1275. unyielding. Then I tried one across the corridor on the northside, but
  1276. it was also locked. While this irritating attempt at door-opening was
  1277. going on, again on the east end of the corridor the whooping roar and
  1278. rhythmic stamping of feet were heard. The fools at both ends were bent
  1279. on making a goose of me. I realized this, but then I was at a loss what
  1280. to do. I frankly confess that I have not quite as much tact as dashing
  1281. spirit. In such a case I am wholly at the mercy of swaying circumstances
  1282. without my own way of getting through it. Nevertheless, I do not expect
  1283. to play the part of underdog. If I dropped the affair then and there, it
  1284. would reflect upon my dignity. It would be mortifying to have them think
  1285. that they had one on the Tokyo-kid and that Tokyo-kid was wanting in
  1286. tenacity. To have it on record that I had been guyed by these
  1287. insignificant spawn when on night watch, and had to give in to their
  1288. impudence because I could not handle them,--this would be an indelible
  1289. disgrace on my life. Mark ye,--I am descendant of a samurai of the
  1290. "hatamato" class. The blood of the "hatamoto" samurai could be traced to
  1291. Mitsunaka Tada, who in turn could claim still a nobler ancestor. I am
  1292. different from, and nobler than, these manure-smelling louts. The only
  1293. pity is that I am rather short of tact; that I do not know what to do in
  1294. such a case. That is the trouble. But I would not throw up the sponge;
  1295. not on your life! I only do not know how because I am honest. Just
  1296. think,--if the honest does not win, what else is there in this world
  1297. that will win? If I cannot beat them to-night, I will tomorrow; if not
  1298. tomorrow, then the day after tomorrow. If not the day after tomorrow, I
  1299. will sit down right here, get my meals from my home until I beat them.
  1300. Thus resolved, I squatted in the middle of the corridor and waited for
  1301. the dawn. Myriads of mosquitoes swarmed about me, but I did not mind
  1302. them. I felt my leg where I hit it a while ago; it seemed bespattered
  1303. with something greasy. I thought it was bleeding. Let it bleed all it
  1304. cares! Meanwhile, exhausted by these unwonted affairs, I fell asleep.
  1305. When I awoke, up I jumped with a curse. The door on my right was half
  1306. opened, and two students were standing in front of me. The moment I
  1307. recovered my senses from the drowsy lull, I grabbed a leg of one of them
  1308. nearest to me, and yanked it with all my might. He fell down prone. Look
  1309. at what you're getting now! I flew at the other fellow, who was much
  1310. confused; gave him vigorous shaking twice or thrice, and he only kept
  1311. open his bewildering eyes.
  1312. "Come up to my room." Evidently they were mollycoddles, for they obeyed
  1313. my command without a murmur. The day had become already clear.
  1314. I began questioning those two in my room, but,--you cannot pound out the
  1315. leopard's spots no matter how you may try,--they seemed determined to
  1316. push it through by an insistent declaration of "not guilty," that they
  1317. would not confess. While this questioning was going on, the students
  1318. upstairs came down, one by one, and began congregating in my room. I
  1319. noticed all their eyes were swollen from want of sleep.
  1320. "Blooming nice faces you got for not sleeping only one night. And you
  1321. call yourselves men! Go, wash your face and come back to hear what I've
  1322. got to tell you."
  1323. I hurled this shot at them, but none of them went to wash his face. For
  1324. about one hour, I had been talking and back-talking with about fifty
  1325. students when suddenly Badger put in his appearance. I heard afterward
  1326. that the janitor ran to Badger for the purpose of reporting to him that
  1327. there was a trouble in the school. What a weak-knee of the janitor to
  1328. fetch the principal for so trifling an affair as this! No wonder he
  1329. cannot see better times than a janitor.
  1330. The principal listened to my explanation, and also to brief remarks from
  1331. the students. "Attend school as usual till further notice. Hurry up with
  1332. washing your face and breakfast; there isn't much time left." So the
  1333. principal let go all the students. Decidedly slow way of handling, this.
  1334. If I were the principal, I would expel them right away. It is because
  1335. the school accords them such luke-warm treatment that they get "fresh"
  1336. and start "guying" the night watch.
  1337. He said to me that it must have been trying on my nerves, and that
  1338. I might be tired, and also that I need not teach that day. To this
  1339. I replied:
  1340. "No, Sir, no worrying at all. Such things may happen every night,
  1341. but it would not disturb me in the least as long as I breathe. I
  1342. will do the teaching. If I were not able to teach on account of lack
  1343. of sleep for only one single night, I would make a rebate of my
  1344. salary to the school."
  1345. I do not know how this impressed him, but he gazed at me for a while,
  1346. and called my attention to the fact that my face was rather swollen.
  1347. Indeed, I felt it heavy. Besides, it itched all over. I was sure the
  1348. mosquitoes must have stung me there to their hearts' content. I
  1349. further added:
  1350. "My face may be swollen, but I can talk all right; so I will teach;"
  1351. thus scratching my face with some warmth. The principal smiled and
  1352. remarked, "Well, you have the strength." To tell the truth, he did not
  1353. intend remark to be a compliment, but, I think, a sneer.
  1354. CHAPTER V.
  1355. "Won't you go fishing?" asked Red Shirt He talks in a strangely womanish
  1356. voice. One would not be able to tell whether he was a man or a woman. As
  1357. a man he should talk like one. Is he not a college graduate? I can talk
  1358. man-like enough, and am a graduate from a school of physics at that. It
  1359. is a shame for a B.A. to have such a squeak.
  1360. I answered with the smallest enthusiasm, whereupon he further asked me
  1361. an impolite question if I ever did fishing. I told him not much, that I
  1362. once caught three gibels when I was a boy, at a fishing game pond at
  1363. Koume, and that I also caught a carp about eight inches long, at a
  1364. similar game at the festival of Bishamon at Kagurazaka;--the carp, just
  1365. as I was coaxing it out of the water, splashed back into it, and when I
  1366. think of the incident I feel mortified at the loss even now. Red Shirt
  1367. stuck out his chin and laughed "ho, ho." Why could he not laugh just
  1368. like an ordinary person? "Then you are not well acquainted with the
  1369. spirit of the game," he cried. "I'll show you if you like." He seemed
  1370. highly elated.
  1371. Not for me! I take it this way that generally those who are fond of
  1372. fishing or shooting have cruel hearts. Otherwise, there is no reason why
  1373. they could derive pleasure in murdering innocent creatures. Surely, fish
  1374. and birds would prefer living to getting killed. Except those who make
  1375. fishing or shooting their calling, it is nonsense for those who are well
  1376. off to say that they cannot sleep well unless they seek the lives of
  1377. fish or birds. This was the way I looked at the question, but as he was
  1378. a B. A. and would have a better command of language when it came to
  1379. talking, I kept mum, knowing he would beat me in argument. Red Shirt
  1380. mistook my silence for my surrender, and began to induce me to join him
  1381. right away, saying he would show me some fish and I should come with him
  1382. if I was not busy, because he and Mr. Yoshikawa were lonesome when
  1383. alone. Mr. Yoshikawa is the teacher of drawing whom I had nicknamed
  1384. Clown. I don't know what's in the mind of this Clown, but he was a
  1385. constant visitor at the house of Red Shirt, and wherever he went, Clown
  1386. was sure to be trailing after him. They appeared more like master and
  1387. servant than two fellow teachers. As Clown used to follow Red Shirt like
  1388. a shadow, it would be natural to see them go off together now, but when
  1389. those two alone would have been well off, why should they invite
  1390. me,--this brusque, unaesthetic fellow,--was hard to understand.
  1391. Probably, vain of his fishing ability, he desired to show his skill, but
  1392. he aimed at the wrong mark, if that was his intention, as nothing of the
  1393. kind would touch me. I would not be chagrined if he fishes out two or
  1394. three tunnies. I am a man myself and poor though I may be in the art, I
  1395. would hook something if I dropped a line. If I declined his invitation,
  1396. Red Shirt would suspect that I refused not because of my lack of
  1397. interest in the game but because of my want of skill of fishing. I
  1398. weighed the matter thus, and accepted his invitation. After the school,
  1399. I returned home and got ready, and having joined Red Shirt and Clown at
  1400. the station, we three started to the shore. There was only one boatman
  1401. to row; the boat was long and narrow, a kind we do not have in Tokyo. I
  1402. looked for fishing rods but could find none.
  1403. "How can we fish without rods? How are we going to manage it?" I asked
  1404. Clown and he told me with the air of a professional fisherman that no
  1405. rods were needed in the deep-sea fishing, but only lines. I had better
  1406. not asked him if I was to be talked down in this way.
  1407. The boatman was rowing very slowly, but his skill was something
  1408. wonderful. We had already come far out to sea, and on turning back, saw
  1409. the shore minimized, fading in far distance. The five-storied pagoda of
  1410. Tosho Temple appeared above the surrounding woods like a needle-point.
  1411. Yonder stood Aoshima (Blue Island). Nobody was living on this island
  1412. which a closer view showed to be covered with stones and pine trees. No
  1413. wonder no one could live there. Red Shirt was intently surveying about
  1414. and praising the general view as fine. Clown also termed it "an
  1415. absolutely fine view." I don't know whether it is so fine as to be
  1416. absolute, but there was no doubt as to the exhilarating air. I realized
  1417. it as the best tonic to be thus blown by the fresh sea breeze upon a
  1418. wide expanse of water. I felt hungry.
  1419. "Look at that pine; its trunk is straight and spreads its top branches
  1420. like an umbrella. Isn't it a Turnersque picture?" said Red Shirt. "Yes,
  1421. just like Turner's," responded Clown, "Isn't the way it curves just
  1422. elegant? Exactly the touch of Turner," he added with some show of pride.
  1423. I didn't know what Turner was, but as I could get along without knowing
  1424. it, I kept silent. The boat turned to the left with the island on the
  1425. right. The sea was so perfectly calm as to tempt one to think he was not
  1426. on the deep sea. The pleasant occasion was a credit to Red Shirt. As I
  1427. wished, if possible, to land on the island, I asked the boatman if our
  1428. boat could not be made to it. Upon this Red Shirt objected, saying that
  1429. we could do so but it was not advisable to go too close the shore for
  1430. fishing. I kept still for a while. Then Clown made the unlooked-for
  1431. proposal that the island be named Turner Island. "That's good; We shall
  1432. call it so hereafter," seconded Red Shirt. If I was included in that
  1433. "We," it was something I least cared for. Aoshima was good enough for
  1434. me. "By the way, how would it look," said Clown, "if we place Madonna by
  1435. Raphael upon that rock? It would make a fine picture."
  1436. "Let's quit talking about Madonna, ho, ho, ho," and Red Shirt emitted a
  1437. spooky laugh.
  1438. "That's all right. Nobody's around," remarked Clown as he glanced at me,
  1439. and turning his face to other direction significantly, smiled
  1440. devilishly. I felt sickened.
  1441. As it was none of my business whether it was a Madonna or a kodanna
  1442. (young master), they let pose there any old way, but it was vulgar to
  1443. feign assurance that one's subject is in no danger of being understood
  1444. so long as others did not know the subject. Clown claims himself as a
  1445. Yedo kid. I thought that the person called Madonna was no other than a
  1446. favorite geisha of Red Shirt. I should smile at the idea of his gazing
  1447. at his tootsy-wootsy standing beneath a pine tree. It would be better
  1448. if Clown would make an oil painting of the scene and exhibit it for
  1449. the public.
  1450. "This will be about the best place." So saying the boatman stopped
  1451. rowing the boat and dropped an anchor.
  1452. "How deep is it?" asked Red Shirt, and was told about six fathoms.
  1453. "Hard to fish sea-breams in six fathoms," said Red Shirt as he dropped a
  1454. line into the water. The old sport appeared to expect to fetch some
  1455. bream. Bravo!
  1456. "It wouldn't be hard for you. Besides it is calm," Clown fawningly
  1457. remarked, and he too dropped a line. The line had only a tiny bit of
  1458. lead that looked like a weight. It had no float. To fish without a float
  1459. seemed as nearly reasonable as to measure the heat without a
  1460. thermometer, which was something impossible for me. So I looked on. They
  1461. then told me to start, and asked me if I had any line. I told them I had
  1462. more than I could use, but that I had no float.
  1463. "To say that one is unable to fish without a float shows that he is a
  1464. novice," piped up Clown.
  1465. "See? When the line touches the bottom, you just manage it with your
  1466. finger on the edge. If a fish bites, you could tell in a minute. There
  1467. it goes," and Red Shirt hastily started taking out the line. I wondered
  1468. what he had got, but I saw no fish, only the bait was gone. Ha, good for
  1469. you, Gov'nur!
  1470. "Wasn't it too bad! I'm sure it was a big one. If you miss that way,
  1471. with your ability, we would have to keep a sharper watch to-day. But,
  1472. say, even if we miss the fish, it's far better than staring at a float,
  1473. isn't it? Just like saying he can't ride a bike without a brake." Clown
  1474. has been getting rather gay, and I was almost tempted to swat him. I'm
  1475. just as good as they are. The sea isn't leased by Red Shirt, and there
  1476. might be one obliging bonito which might get caught by my line. I
  1477. dropped my line then, and toyed it with my finger carelessly.
  1478. After a while something shook my line with successive jerks. I thought
  1479. it must be a fish. Unless it was something living, it would not give
  1480. that tremulous shaking. Good! I have it, and I commenced drawing in the
  1481. line, while Clown jibed me "What? Caught one already? Very remarkable,
  1482. indeed!" I had drawn in nearly all the line, leaving only about five
  1483. feet in the water. I peeped over and saw a fish that looked like a gold
  1484. fish with stripes was coming up swimming to right and left. It was
  1485. interesting. On taking it out of the water, it wriggled and jumped, and
  1486. covered my face with water. After some effort, I had it and tried to
  1487. detach the hook, but it would not come out easily. My hands became
  1488. greasy and the sense was anything but pleasing. I was irritated; I swung
  1489. the line and banged the fish against the bottom of the boat. It speedily
  1490. died. Red Shirt and Clown watched me with surprise. I washed my hands in
  1491. the water but they still smelled "fishy." No more for me! I don't care
  1492. what fish I might get, I don't want to grab a fish. And I presume the
  1493. fish doesn't want to be grabbed either. I hastily rolled up the line.
  1494. "Splendid for the first honor, but that's goruki," Clown again made a
  1495. "fresh" remark.
  1496. "Goruki sounds like the name of a Russian literator," said Red Shirt.
  1497. "Yes, just like a Russian literator," Clown at once seconded Red Shirt.
  1498. Gorky for a Russian literator, Maruki a photographer of Shibaku, and
  1499. komeno-naruki (rice) a life-giver, eh? This Red Shirt has a bad hobby of
  1500. marshalling before anybody the name of foreigners. Everybody has his
  1501. specialty. How could a teacher of mathematics like me tell whether it is
  1502. a Gorky or shariki (rikishaman). Red Shirt should have been a little
  1503. more considerate. And if he wants to mention such names at all, let him
  1504. mention "Autobiography of Ben Franklin," or "Pushing to the Front," or
  1505. something we all know. Red Shirt has been seen once in a while bringing
  1506. a magazine with a red cover entitled Imperial Literature to the school
  1507. and poring over it with reverence. I heard it from Porcupine that Red
  1508. Shirt gets his supply of all foreign names from that magazine. Well, I
  1509. should say!
  1510. For some time, Red Shirt and Clown fished assiduously and within about
  1511. an hour they caught about fifteen fish. The funny part of it was that
  1512. all they caught were goruki; of sea-bream there was not a sign.
  1513. "This is a day of bumper crop of Russian literature," Red Shirt said,
  1514. and Clown answered:
  1515. "When one as skilled as you gets nothing but goruki, it's natural for me
  1516. to get nothing else."
  1517. The boatman told me that this small-sized fish goruki has too many
  1518. tiny bones and tastes too poor to be fit for eating, but they could be
  1519. used for fertilising. So Red Shirt and Clown were fishing fertilisers
  1520. with vim and vigor. As for me, one goruki was enough and I laid down
  1521. myself on the bottom, and looked up at the sky. This was far more
  1522. dandy than fishing.
  1523. Then the two began whispering. I could not hear well, nor did I care to.
  1524. I was looking up at the sky and thinking about Kiyo. If I had enough of
  1525. money, I thought, and came with Kiyo to such a picturesque place, how
  1526. joyous it would be. No matter how picturesque the scene might be, it
  1527. would be flat in the company of Clown or of his kind. Kiyo is a poor
  1528. wrinkled woman, but I am not ashamed to take her to any old place. Clown
  1529. or his likes, even in a Victoria or a yacht, or in a sky-high position,
  1530. would not be worthy to come within her shadow. If I were the head
  1531. teacher, and Red Shirt I, Clown would be sure to fawn on me and jeer at
  1532. Red Shirt. They say Yedo kids are flippant. Indeed, if a fellow like
  1533. Clown was to travel the country and repeatedly declare "I am a Yedo
  1534. kid," no wonder the country folk would decide that the flippant are Yedo
  1535. kids and Yedo kids are flippant. While I was meditating like this, I
  1536. heard suppressed laughter. Between their laughs they talked something,
  1537. but I could not make out what they were talking about. "Eh? I don't
  1538. know......" "...... That's true ...... he doesn't know ...... isn't it
  1539. pity, though ......." "Can that be......." "With grasshoppers ......
  1540. that's a fact."
  1541. I did not listen to what they were talking, but when I heard Clown say
  1542. "grasshoppers," I cocked my ear instinctively. Clown emphasized, for
  1543. what reason I do not know the word "grasshopers" so that it would be
  1544. sure to reach my ear plainly, and he blurred the rest on purpose. I did
  1545. not move, and kept on listening. "That same old Hotta," "that may be the
  1546. case...." "Tempura ...... ha, ha, ha ......" "...... incited ......"
  1547. "...... dango also? ......"
  1548. The words were thus choppy, but judging by their saying "grasshoppers,"
  1549. "tempura" or "dango," I was sure they were secretly talking something
  1550. about me. If they wanted to talk, they should do it louder. If they
  1551. wanted to discuss something secret, why in thunder did they invite me?
  1552. What damnable blokes! Grasshoppers or glass-stoppers, I was not in the
  1553. wrong; I have kept quiet to save the face of Badger because the
  1554. principle asked me to leave the matter to him. Clown has been making
  1555. unnecessary criticisms; out with your old paint-brushes there! Whatever
  1556. concerns me, I will settle it myself sooner or later, and they had just
  1557. to keep off my toes. But remarks such as "the same old Hotta" or "......
  1558. incited ......" worried me a bit. I could not make out whether they
  1559. meant that Hotta incited me to extend the circle of the trouble, or that
  1560. he incited the students to get at me. As I gazed at the blue sky, the
  1561. sunlight gradually waned and chilly winds commenced stirring. The clouds
  1562. that resembled the streaky smokes of joss sticks were slowly extending
  1563. over a clear sky, and by degrees they were absorbed, melted and changed
  1564. to a faint fog.
  1565. "Well, let's be going," said Red Shirt suddenly. "Yes, this is the time
  1566. we were going. See your Madonna to-night?" responded Clown. "Cut out
  1567. nonsense ...... might mean a serious trouble," said Red Shirt who was
  1568. reclining against the edge of the boat, now raising himself. "O, that's
  1569. all right if he hears.......," and when Clown, so saying, turned himself
  1570. my way, I glared squarely in his face. Clown turned back as if to keep
  1571. away from a dazzling light, and with "Ha, this is going some," shrugged
  1572. his shoulders and scratched his head.
  1573. The boat was now being rowed shore-ward over the calm sea. "You don't
  1574. seem much fond of fishing," asked Red Shirt. "No, I'd rather prefer
  1575. lying and looking at the sky," I answered, and threw the stub of
  1576. cigarette I had been smoking into the water; it sizzled and floated on
  1577. the waves parted by the oar.
  1578. "The students are all glad because you have come. So we want you do your
  1579. best." Red Shirt this time started something quite alien to fishing. "I
  1580. don't think they are," I said. "Yes; I don't mean it as flattery. They
  1581. are, sure. Isn't it so, Mr. Yoshikawa?"
  1582. "I should say they are. They're crazy over it," said Clown with an
  1583. unctuous smile. Strange that whatever Clown says, it makes me itching
  1584. mad. "But, if you don't look out, there is danger," warned Red Shirt.
  1585. "I am fully prepared for all dangers," I replied. In fact, I had made up
  1586. my mind either to get fired or to make all the students in the dormitory
  1587. apologize to me.
  1588. "If you talk that way, that cuts everything out. Really, as a head
  1589. teacher, I've been considering what is good for you, and wouldn't like
  1590. you to mistake it."
  1591. "The head teacher is really your friend. And I'm doing what I can for
  1592. you, though mighty little, because you and I are Yedo kids, and I would
  1593. like to have you stay with us as long as possible and we can help each
  1594. other." So said Clown and it sounded almost human. I would sooner hang
  1595. myself than to get helped by Clown.
  1596. "And the students are all glad because you had come, but there are many
  1597. circumstances," continued Red Shirt. "You may feel angry sometimes but
  1598. be patient for the present, and I will never do anything to hurt your
  1599. interests."
  1600. "You say 'many circumstances'; what are they?"
  1601. "They're rather complicated. Well, they'll be clear to you by and by.
  1602. You'll understand them naturally without my talking them over. What do
  1603. you say, Mr. Yoshikawa?"
  1604. "Yes, they're pretty complicated; hard to get them cleared up in a
  1605. jiffy. But they'll become clear by-the-bye. Will be understood naturally
  1606. without my explaining them," Clown echoed Red Shirt.
  1607. "If they're such a bother, I don't mind not hearing them. I only asked
  1608. you because you sprang the subject."
  1609. "That's right. I may seem irresponsible in not concluding the thing I
  1610. had started. Then this much I'll tell you. I mean no offense, but you
  1611. are fresh from school, and teaching is a new experience. And a school is
  1612. a place where somewhat complicated private circumstances are common and
  1613. one cannot do everything straight and simple".
  1614. "If can't get it through straight and simple, how does it go?"
  1615. "Well, there you are so straight as that. As I was saying, you're short
  1616. of experience........"
  1617. "I should be. As I wrote it down in my record-sheet, I'm 23 years and
  1618. four months."
  1619. "That's it. So you'd be done by some one in unexpected quarter."
  1620. "I'm not afraid who might do me as long as I'm honest."
  1621. "Certainly not. No need be afraid, but I do say you look sharp; your
  1622. predecessor was done."
  1623. I noticed Clown had become quiet, and turning round, saw him at the
  1624. stern talking with the boatman. Without Clown, I found our conversation
  1625. running smoothly.
  1626. "By whom was my predecessor done?"
  1627. "If I point out the name, it would reflect on the honor of that person,
  1628. so I can't mention it. Besides there is no evidence to prove it and I
  1629. may be in a bad fix if I say it. At any rate, since you're here, my
  1630. efforts will prove nothing if you fail. Keep a sharp look-out, please."
  1631. "You say look-out, but I can't be more watchful than I'm now. If I don't
  1632. do anything wrong, after all, that's all right isn't it?"
  1633. Red Shirt laughed. I did not remember having said anything provocative
  1634. of laughter. Up to this very minute, I have been firm in my conviction
  1635. that I'm right. When I come to consider the situation, it appears that a
  1636. majority of people are encouraging others to become bad. They seem to
  1637. believe that one must do wrong in order to succeed. If they happen to
  1638. see some one honest and pure, they sneer at him as "Master Darling" or
  1639. "kiddy." What's the use then of the instructors of ethics at grammar
  1640. schools or middle schools teaching children not to tell a lie or to be
  1641. honest. Better rather make a bold departure and teach at schools the
  1642. gentle art of lying or the trick of distrusting others, or show pupils
  1643. how to do others. That would be beneficial for the person thus taught
  1644. and for the public as well. When Red Shirt laughed, he laughed at my
  1645. simplicity. My word! what chances have the simple-hearted or the pure in
  1646. a society where they are made objects of contempt! Kiyo would never
  1647. laugh at such a time; she would listen with profound respect. Kiyo is
  1648. far superior to Red Shirt.
  1649. "Of course, that't all right as long as you don't do anything wrong. But
  1650. although you may not do anything wrong, they will do you just the same
  1651. unless you can see the wrong of others. There are fellows you have got
  1652. to watch,--the fellows who may appear off-hand, simple and so kind as to
  1653. get boarding house for you...... Getting rather cold. 'Tis already
  1654. autumn, isn't it. The beach looks beer-color in the fog. A fine view.
  1655. Say, Mr. Yoshikawa, what do you think of the scene along the
  1656. beach?......" This in a loud voice was addressed to Clown.
  1657. "Indeed, this is a fine view. I'd get a sketch of it if I had time.
  1658. Seems a pity to leave it there," answered Clown.
  1659. A light was seen upstairs at Minato-ya, and just as the whistle of a
  1660. train was sounded, our boat pushed its nose deep into the sand. "Well,
  1661. so you're back early," courtesied the wife of the boatman as she stepped
  1662. upon the sand. I stood on the edge of the boat; and whoop! I jumped out
  1663. to the beach.
  1664. CHAPTER VI.
  1665. I heartily despise Clown. It would be beneficial for Japan if such a
  1666. fellow were tied to a quernstone and dumped into the sea. As to Red
  1667. Shirt, his voice did not suit my fancy. I believe he suppresses his
  1668. natural tones to put on airs and assume genteel manner. He may put on
  1669. all kinds of airs, but nothing good will come of it with that type of
  1670. face. If anything falls in love with him, perhaps the Madonna will be
  1671. about the limit. As a head-teacher, however, he is more serious than
  1672. Clown. As he did not say definitely, I cannot get to the point, but it
  1673. appears that he warned me to look-out for Porcupine as he is crooked. If
  1674. that was the case, he should have declared it like a man. And if
  1675. Porcupine is so bad a teacher as that, it would be better to discharge
  1676. him. What a lack of backbone for a head teacher and a Bachelor of Arts!
  1677. As he is a fellow so cautious as to be unable to mention the name of the
  1678. other even in a whisper, he is surely a mollycoddle. All mollycoddles
  1679. are kind, and that Red Shirt may be as kind as a woman. His kindness is
  1680. one thing, and his voice quite another, and it would be wrong to
  1681. disregard his kindness on account of his voice. But then, isn't this
  1682. world a funny place! The fellow I don't like is kind to me, and the
  1683. friend whom I like is crooked,--how absurd! Probably everything here
  1684. goes in opposite directions as it is in the country, the contrary holds
  1685. in Tokyo. A dangerous place, this. By degrees, fires may get frozen and
  1686. custard pudding petrified. But it is hardly believable that Porcupine
  1687. would incite the students, although he might do most anything he wishes
  1688. as he is best liked among them. Instead of taking in so roundabout a
  1689. way, in the first place, it would have saved him a lot of trouble if he
  1690. came direct to me and got at me for a fight. If I am in his way, he had
  1691. better tell me so, and ask me to resign because I am in his way. There
  1692. is nothing that cannot be settled by talking it over. If what he says
  1693. sounds reasonable, I would resign even tomorrow. This is not the only
  1694. town where I can get bread and butter; I ought not to die homeless
  1695. wherever I go. I thought Porcupine was a better sport.
  1696. When I came here, Porcupine was the first to treat me to ice water. To
  1697. be treated by such a fellow, even if it is so trifling a thing as ice
  1698. water, affects my honor. I had only one glass then and had him pay only
  1699. one sen and a half. But one sen or half sen, I shall not die in peace if
  1700. I accept a favor from a swindler. I will pay it back tomorrow when I go
  1701. to the school. I borrowed three yen from Kiyo. That three yen is not
  1702. paid yet to-day, though it is five years since. Not that I could not
  1703. pay, but that I did not want to. Kiyo never looks to my pocket thinking
  1704. I shall pay it back by-the-bye. Not by any means. I myself do not expect
  1705. to fulfill cold obligation like a stranger by meditating on returning
  1706. it. The more I worry about paying it back, the more I may be doubting
  1707. the honest heart of Kiyo. It would be the same as traducing her pure
  1708. mind. I have not paid her back that three yen not because I regard her
  1709. lightly, but because I regard her as part of myself. Kiyo and Porcupine
  1710. cannot be compared, of course, but whether it be ice water or tea, the
  1711. fact that I accept another's favor without saying anything is an act of
  1712. good-will, taking the other on his par value, as a decent fellow.
  1713. Instead of chipping in my share, and settling each account, to receive
  1714. munificence with grateful mind is an acknowledgment which no amount of
  1715. money can purchase. I have neither title nor official position but I am
  1716. an independent fellow, and to have an independent fellow kowtow to you
  1717. in acknowledgment of the favor you extend him should be considered as
  1718. far more than a return acknowledgment with a million yen. I made
  1719. Porcupine blow one sen and a half, and gave him my gratitude which is
  1720. more costly than a million yen. He ought to have been thankful for that.
  1721. And then what an outrageous fellow to plan a cowardly action behind my
  1722. back! I will give him back that one sen and a half tomorrow, and all
  1723. will be square. Then I will land him one. When I thought thus far, I
  1724. felt sleepy and slept like a log. The next day, as I had something in my
  1725. mind, I went to the school earlier than usual and waited for Porcupine,
  1726. but he did not appear for a considerable time. "Confucius" was there, so
  1727. was Clown, and finally Red Shirt, but for Porcupine there was a piece of
  1728. chalk on his desk but the owner was not there. I had been thinking of
  1729. paying that one sen and a half as soon as I entered the room, and had
  1730. brought the coppers to the school grasped in my hand. My hands get
  1731. easily sweaty, and when I opened my hand, I found them wet. Thinking
  1732. that Porcupine might say something if wet coins were given him, I placed
  1733. them upon my desk, and cooled them by blowing in them. Then Red Shirt
  1734. came to me and said he was sorry to detain me yesterday, thought I have
  1735. been annoyed. I told him I was not annoyed at all, only I was hungry.
  1736. Thereupon Red Shirt put his elbows upon the desk, brought his
  1737. sauce-pan-like face close to my nose, and said; "Say, keep dark what I
  1738. told you yesterday in the boat. You haven't told it anybody, have you?"
  1739. He seems quite a nervous fellow as becoming one who talks in a feminish
  1740. voice. It was certain that I had not told it to anybody, but as I was in
  1741. the mood to tell it and had already one sen and a half in my hand, I
  1742. would be a little rattled if a gag was put on me. To the devil with Red
  1743. Shirt! Although he had not mentioned the name "Porcupine," he had given
  1744. me such pointers as to put me wise as to who the objective was, and now
  1745. he requested me not to blow the gaff!--it was an irresponsibility least
  1746. to be expected from a head teacher. In the ordinary run of things, he
  1747. should step into the thick of the fight between Porcupine and me, and
  1748. side with me with all his colors flying. By so doing, he might be worthy
  1749. the position of the head teacher, and vindicate the principle of wearing
  1750. red shirts.
  1751. I told the head teacher that I had not divulged the secret to anybody
  1752. but was going to fight it out with Porcupine. Red Shirt was greatly
  1753. perturbed, and stuttered out; "Say, don't do anything so rash as that. I
  1754. don't remember having stated anything plainly to you about Mr.
  1755. Hotta....... if you start a scrimmage here, I'll be greatly
  1756. embarrassed." And he asked the strangely outlandish question if I had
  1757. come to the school to start trouble? Of course not, I said, the school
  1758. would not stand for my making trouble and pay me salary for it. Red
  1759. Shirt then, perspiring, begged me to keep the secret as mere reference
  1760. and never mention it. "All right, then," I assured him, "this robs me
  1761. shy, but since you're so afraid of it, I'll keep it all to myself." "Are
  1762. you sure?" repeated Red Shirt. There was no limit to his womanishness.
  1763. If Red Shirt was typical of Bachelors of Arts, I did not see much in
  1764. them. He appeared composed after having requested me to do something
  1765. self-contradictory and wanting logic, and on top of that suspects my
  1766. sincerity.
  1767. "Don't you mistake," I said to myself, "I'm a man to the marrow, and
  1768. haven't the idea of breaking my own promises; mark that!"
  1769. Meanwhile the occupants of the desks on both my sides came to the room,
  1770. and Red Shirt hastily withdrew to his own desk. Red Shirt shows some air
  1771. even in his walk. In stepping about the room, he places down his shoes
  1772. so as to make no sound. For the first time I came to know that making no
  1773. sound in one's walk was something satisfactory to one's vanity. He was
  1774. not training himself for a burglar, I suppose. He should cut out such
  1775. nonsense before it gets worse. Then the bugle for the opening of classes
  1776. was heard. Porcupine did not appear after all. There was no other way
  1777. but to leave the coins upon the desk and attend the class.
  1778. When I returned to the room a little late after the first hour class,
  1779. all the teachers were there at their desks, and Porcupine too was
  1780. there. The moment Porcupine saw my face, he said that he was late on
  1781. my account, and I should pay him a fine. I took out that one sen and a
  1782. half, and saying it was the price of the ice water, shoved it on his
  1783. desk and told him to take it. "Don't josh me," he said, and began
  1784. laughing, but as I appeared unusually serious, he swept the coins back
  1785. to my desk, and flung back, "Quit fooling." So he really meant to
  1786. treat me, eh?
  1787. "No fooling; I mean it," I said. "I have no reason to accept your treat,
  1788. and that's why I pay you back. Why don't you take it?"
  1789. "If you're so worried about that one sen and a half, I will take it, but
  1790. why do you pay it at this time so suddenly?"
  1791. "This time or any time, I want to pay it back. I pay it back because I
  1792. don't like you treat me."
  1793. Porcupine coldly gazed at me and ejaculated "H'm." If I had not been
  1794. requested by Red Shirt, here was the chance to show up his cowardice and
  1795. make it hot for him. But since I had promised not to reveal the secret,
  1796. I could do nothing. What the deuce did he mean by "H'm" when I was red
  1797. with anger.
  1798. "I'll take the price of the ice water, but I want you leave your
  1799. boarding house."
  1800. "Take that coin; that's all there is to it. To leave or not,--that's my
  1801. pleasure."
  1802. "But that is not your pleasure. The boss of your boarding house came to
  1803. me yesterday and wanted me to tell you leave the house, and when I heard
  1804. his explanation, what he said was reasonable. And I dropped there on my
  1805. way here this morning to hear more details and make sure of everything."
  1806. What Porcupine was trying to get at was all dark to me.
  1807. "I don't care a snap what the boss was damn well pleased to tell you," I
  1808. cried. "What do you mean by deciding everything by yourself! If there is
  1809. any reason, tell me first. What's the matter with you, deciding what the
  1810. boss says is reasonable without hearing me."
  1811. "Then you shall hear," he said. "You're too tough and been regarded
  1812. a nuisance over there. Say, the wife of a boarding house is a wife,
  1813. not a maid, and you've been such a four-flusher as to make her wipe
  1814. your feet."
  1815. "When did I make her wipe my feet?" I asked.
  1816. "I don't know whether you did or did not, but anyway they're pretty sore
  1817. about you. He said he can make ten or fifteen yen easily if he sell a
  1818. roll of panel-picture."
  1819. "Damn the chap! Why did he take me for a boarder then!"
  1820. "I don't know why. They took you but they want you leave because they
  1821. got tired of you. So you'd better get out."
  1822. "Sure, I will. Who'd stay in such a house even if they beg me on their
  1823. knees. You're insolent to have induced me to go to such a false accuser
  1824. in the first place."
  1825. "Might be either I'm insolent or you're tough." Porcupine is no less
  1826. hot-tempered than I am, and spoke with equally loud voice. All the other
  1827. teachers in the room, surprised, wondering what has happened, looked in
  1828. our direction and craned their necks. I was not conscious of having done
  1829. anything to be ashamed of, so I stood up and looked around. Clown alone
  1830. was laughing amused. The moment he met my glaring stare as if to say
  1831. "You too want to fight?" he suddenly assumed a grave face and became
  1832. serious. He seemed to be a little cowed. Meanwhile the bugle was heard,
  1833. and Porcupine and I stopped the quarrel and went to the class rooms.
  1834. In the afternoon, a meeting of the teachers was going to be held to
  1835. discuss the question of punishment of those students in the dormitory
  1836. who offended me the other night. This meeting was a thing I had to
  1837. attend for the first time in my life, and I was totally ignorant about
  1838. it. Probably it was where the teachers gathered to blow about their own
  1839. opinions and the principal bring them to compromise somehow. To
  1840. compromise is a method used when no decision can be delivered as to the
  1841. right or wrong of either side. It seemed to me a waste of time to hold a
  1842. meeting over an affair in which the guilt of the other side was plain as
  1843. daylight. No matter who tried to twist it round, there was no ground for
  1844. doubting the facts. It would have been better if the principal had
  1845. decided at once on such a plain case; he is surely wanting in decision.
  1846. If all principals are like this, a principal is a synonym of a
  1847. "dilly-dally."
  1848. The meeting hall was a long, narrow room next to that of the principal,
  1849. and was used for dining room. About twenty chairs, with black leather
  1850. seat, were lined around a narrow table, and the whole scene looked like
  1851. a restaurant in Kanda. At one end of the table the principal took his
  1852. seat, and next to him Red Shirt. All the rest shifted for themselves,
  1853. but the gymnasium teacher is said always to take the seat farthest down
  1854. out of modesty. The situation was new to me, so I sat down between the
  1855. teachers of natural history and of Confucius. Across the table sat
  1856. Porcupine and Clown. Think how I might, the face of Clown was a
  1857. degrading type. That of Porcupine was far more charming, even if I was
  1858. now on bad terms with him. The panel picture which hung in the alcove of
  1859. the reception hall of Yogen temple where I went to the funeral of my
  1860. father, looked exactly like this Porcupine. A priest told me the picture
  1861. was the face of a strange creature called Idaten. To-day he was pretty
  1862. sore, and frequently stared at me with his fiery eyes rolling. "You
  1863. can't bulldoze me with that," I thought, and rolled my own in defiance
  1864. and stared back at him. My eyes are not well-shaped but their large size
  1865. is seldom beaten by others. Kiyo even once suggested that I should make
  1866. a fine actor because I had big eyes.
  1867. "All now here?" asked the principal, and the clerk named Kawamura
  1868. counted one, two, three and one was short. "Just one more," said the
  1869. clerk, and it ought to be; Hubbard Squash was not there. I don't know
  1870. what affinity there is between Hubbard Squash and me, but I can never
  1871. forget his face. When I come to the teachers' room, his face attracts me
  1872. first; while walking out in the street, his manners are recalled to my
  1873. mind. When I go to the hot springs, sometimes I meet him with a
  1874. pale-face in the bath, and if I hallooed to him, he would raise his
  1875. trembling head, making me feel sorry for him. In the school there is no
  1876. teacher so quiet as he. He seldom, if ever, laughs or talks. I knew the
  1877. word "gentleman" from books, and thought it was found only in the
  1878. dictionary, but not a thing alive. But since I met Hubbard Squash, I was
  1879. impressed for the first time that the word represented a real substance.
  1880. As he is a man so attached to me, I had noticed his absence as soon as I
  1881. entered the meeting hall. To tell the truth, I came to the hall with the
  1882. intention of sitting next to him. The principal said that the absentee
  1883. may appear shortly, and untied a package he had before him, taking out
  1884. some hectograph sheets and began reading them. Red Shirt began polishing
  1885. his amber pipe with a silk handkerchief. This was his hobby, which was
  1886. probably becoming to him. Others whispered with their neighbors. Still
  1887. others were writing nothings upon the table with the erasers at the end
  1888. of their pencils. Clown talked to Porcupine once in a while, but he was
  1889. not responsive. He only said "Umh" or "Ahm," and stared at me with
  1890. wrathful eyes. I stared back with equal ferocity.
  1891. Then the tardy Hubbard Squash apologetically entered, and politely
  1892. explained that he was unavoidably detained. "Well, then the meeting is
  1893. called to order," said Badger. On these sheets was printed, first the
  1894. question of the punishment of the offending students, second that of
  1895. superintending the students, and two or three other matters. Badger,
  1896. putting on airs as usual, as if he was an incarnation of education,
  1897. spoke to the following effect.
  1898. "Any misdeeds or faults among the teachers or the students in this
  1899. school are due to the lack of virtues in my person, and whenever
  1900. anything happens, I inwardly feel ashamed that a man like me could hold
  1901. his position. Unfortunately such an affair has taken place again, and I
  1902. have to apologize from my heart. But since it has happened, it cannot be
  1903. helped; we must settle it one way or other. The facts are as you already
  1904. know, and I ask you gentlemen to state frankly the best means by which
  1905. the affair may be settled."
  1906. When I heard the principal speak, I was impressed that indeed the
  1907. principal, or Badger, was saying something "grand." If the principal was
  1908. willing to assume all responsibilities, saying it was his fault or his
  1909. lack of virtues, it would have been better stop punishing the students
  1910. and get himself fired first. Then there will be no need of holding such
  1911. thing as a meeting. In the first place, just consider it by common
  1912. sense. I was doing my night duty right, and the students started
  1913. trouble. The wrong doer is neither the principal nor I. If Porcupine
  1914. incited them, then it would be enough to get rid of the students and
  1915. Porcupine. Where in thunder would be a peach of damfool who always
  1916. swipes other people's faults and says "these are mine?" It was a stunt
  1917. made possible only by Badger. Having made such an illogical statement,
  1918. he glanced at the teachers in a highly pleased manner. But no one opened
  1919. his mouth. The teacher of natural history was gazing at the crow which
  1920. had hopped on the roof of the nearby building. The teacher of Confucius
  1921. was folding and unfolding the hectograph sheet. Porcupine was still
  1922. staring at me. If a meeting was so nonsensical an affair as this, I
  1923. would have been better absent taking a nap at home.
  1924. I became irritated, and half raised myself, intending to make a
  1925. convincing speech, but just then Red Shirt began saying something and I
  1926. stopped. I saw him say something, having put away his pipe, and wiping
  1927. his face with a striped silk handkerchief. I'm sure he copped that
  1928. handkerchief from the Madonna; men should use white linen. He said:
  1929. "When I heard of the rough affairs in the dormitory, I was greatly
  1930. ashamed as the head teacher of my lack of discipline and influence. When
  1931. such an affair takes place there is underlying cause somewhere. Looking
  1932. at the affair itself, it may seem that the students were wrong, but in a
  1933. closer study of the facts, we may find the responsibility resting with
  1934. the School. Therefore, I'm afraid it might affect us badly in the future
  1935. if we administer too severe a punishment on the strength of what has
  1936. been shown on the surface. As they are youngsters, full of life and
  1937. vigor, they might half-consciously commit some youthful pranks, without
  1938. due regard as to their good or bad. As to the mode of punishment itself,
  1939. I have no right to suggest since it is a matter entirely in the hand of
  1940. the principal, but I should ask, considering these points, that some
  1941. leniency be shown toward the students."
  1942. Well, as Badger, so was Red Shirt. He declares the "Rough Necks" among
  1943. the students is not their fault but the fault of the teachers. A crazy
  1944. person beats other people because the beaten are wrong. Very grateful,
  1945. indeed. If the students were so full of life and vigor, shovel them out
  1946. into the campus and let them wrestle their heads off. Who would have
  1947. grasshoppers put into his bed unconsciously! If things go on like this,
  1948. they may stab some one asleep, and get freed as having done the deed
  1949. unconsciously.
  1950. Having figured it out in this wise, I thought I would state my own views
  1951. on the matter, but I wanted to give them an eloquent speech and fairly
  1952. take away their breath. I have an affection of the windpipe which clog
  1953. after two or three words when I am excited. Badger and Red Shirt are
  1954. below my standing in their personality, but they were skilled in
  1955. speech-making, and it would not do to have them see my awkwardness. I'll
  1956. make a rough note of composition first, I thought, and started mentally
  1957. making a sentence, when, to my surprise, Clown stood up suddenly. It was
  1958. unusual for Clown to state his opinion. He spoke in his flippant tone:
  1959. "Really the grasshopper incident and the whoop-la affair are peculiar
  1960. happenings which are enough to make us doubt our own future. We teachers
  1961. at this time must strive to clear the atmosphere of the school. And
  1962. what the principal and the head teacher have said just now are fit and
  1963. proper. I entirely agree with their opinions. I wish the punishment be
  1964. moderate."
  1965. In what Clown had said there were words but no meaning. It was a
  1966. juxtaposition of high-flown words making no sense. All that I understood
  1967. was the words, "I entirely agree with their opinions."
  1968. Clown's meaning was not clear to me, but as I was thoroughly angered, I
  1969. rose without completing my rough note.
  1970. "I am entirely opposed to......." I said, but the rest did not come at
  1971. once. ".......I don't like such a topsy-turvy settlement," I added and
  1972. the fellows began laughing. "The students are absolutely wrong from the
  1973. beginning. It would set a bad precedent if we don't make them apologize
  1974. ....... What do we care if we kick them all out ....... darn the kids
  1975. trying to guy a new comer......." and I sat down. Then the teacher of
  1976. natural history who sat on my right whined a weak opinion, saying "The
  1977. students may be wrong, but if we punish them too severely, they may
  1978. start a reaction and would make it rather bad. I am for the moderate
  1979. side, as the head teacher suggested." The teacher of Confucius on my
  1980. left expressed his agreement with the moderate side, and so did the
  1981. teacher of history endorse the views of the head teacher. Dash those
  1982. weak-knees! Most of them belonged to the coterie of Red Shirt. It would
  1983. make a dandy school if such fellows run it. I had decided in my mind
  1984. that it must be either the students apologize to me or I resign, and if
  1985. the opinion of Red Shirt prevailed, I had determined to return home and
  1986. pack up. I had no ability of out-talking such fellows, or even if I had,
  1987. I was in no humor to keeping their company for long. Since I don't
  1988. expect to remain in the school, the devil may take care of the rest. If
  1989. I said anything, they would only laugh; so I shut my mouth tight.
  1990. Porcupine, who up to this time had been listening to the others, stood
  1991. up with some show of spirit. Ha, the fellow was going to endorse the
  1992. views of Red Shirt, eh? You and I got to fight it out anyway, I thought,
  1993. so do any way you darn please. Porcupine spoke in a thunderous voice:
  1994. "I entirely differ from the opinions of the head teacher and other
  1995. gentlemen. Because, viewed from whatever angle, this incident cannot be
  1996. other than an attempt by those fifty students in the dormitory to make
  1997. a fool of a new teacher. The head teacher seems to trace the cause of
  1998. the trouble to the personality of that teacher himself, but, begging
  1999. his pardon, I think he is mistaken. The night that new teacher was on
  2000. night duty was not long after his arrival, not more than twenty days
  2001. after he had come into contact with the students. During those short
  2002. twenty days, the students could have no reason to criticise his
  2003. knowledges or his person. If he was insulted for some cause which
  2004. deserved insult, there may be reasons in our considering the act of the
  2005. students, but if we show undue leniency toward the frivolous students
  2006. who would insult a new teacher without cause, it would affect the
  2007. dignity of this school. The spirit of education is not only in
  2008. imparting technical knowledges, but also in encouraging honest,
  2009. ennobling and samurai-like virtues, while eliminating the evil tendency
  2010. to vulgarity and roughness. If we are afraid of reaction or further
  2011. trouble, and satisfy ourselves with make-shifts, there is no telling
  2012. when we can ever get rid of this evil atmosphere[G]. We are here to
  2013. eradicate this very evil. If we mean to countenance it, we had better
  2014. not accepted our positions here. For these reasons, I believe it proper
  2015. to punish the students in the dormitory to the fullest extent and also
  2016. make them apologize to that teacher in the open."
  2017. All were quiet. Red Shirt again began polishing his pipe. I was greatly
  2018. elated. He spoke almost what I had wanted to. I'm such a simple-hearted
  2019. fellow that I forgot all about the bickerings with Porcupine, and looked
  2020. at him with a grateful face, but he appeared to take no notice of me.
  2021. After a while, Porcupine again stood up, and said. "I forgot to mention
  2022. just now, so I wish to add. The teacher on night duty that night seems
  2023. to have gone to the hot springs during his duty hours, and I think it a
  2024. blunder. It is a matter of serious misconduct to take the advantage of
  2025. being in sole charge of the school, to slip out to a hot springs. The
  2026. bad behavior of the students is one thing; this blunder is another, and
  2027. I wish the principal to call attention of the responsible person to
  2028. that matter."
  2029. A strange fellow! No sooner had he backed me up than he began talking me
  2030. down. I knew the other night watch went out during his duty hours, and
  2031. thought it was a custom, so I went as far out as to the hot springs
  2032. without considering the situation seriously. But when it was pointed out
  2033. like this, I realised that I had been wrong. Thereupon I rose again and
  2034. said; "I really went to the hot springs. It was wrong and I apologize."
  2035. Then all again laughed. Whatever I say, they laugh. What a lot of boobs!
  2036. See if you fellows can make a clean breast of your own fault like this!
  2037. You fellows laugh because you can't talk straight.
  2038. After that the principal said that since it appeared that there will be
  2039. no more opinions, he will consider the matter well and administer what
  2040. he may deem a proper punishment. I may here add the result of the
  2041. meeting. The students in the dormitory were given one week's
  2042. confinement, and in addition to that, apologized to me. If they had not
  2043. apologized, I intended to resign and go straight home, but as it was it
  2044. finally resulted in a bigger and still worse affair, of which more
  2045. later. The principal then at the meeting said something to the effect
  2046. that the manners of the students should be directed rightly by the
  2047. teachers' influence, and as the first step, no teacher should patronize,
  2048. if possible, the shops where edibles and drinks were served, excepting,
  2049. however, in case of farewell party or such social gatherings. He said he
  2050. would like no teacher to go singly to eating houses of lower kind--for
  2051. instance, noodle-house or dango shop.... And again all laughed. Clown
  2052. looked at Porcupine, said "tempura" and winked his eyes, but Porcupine
  2053. regarded him in silence. Good!
  2054. My "think box" is not of superior quality, so things said by Badger were
  2055. not clear to me, but I thought if a fellow can't hold the job of teacher
  2056. in a middle school because he patronizes a noodle-house or dango shop,
  2057. the fellow with bear-like appetite like me will never be able to hold
  2058. it. If it was the case, they ought to have specified when calling for a
  2059. teacher one who does not eat noodle and dango. To give an appointment
  2060. without reference to the matter at first, and then to proclaim that
  2061. noodle or dango should not be eaten was a blow to a fellow like me who
  2062. has no other petty hobby. Then Red Shirt again opened his mouth.
  2063. "Teachers of the middle school belong to the upper class of society and
  2064. they should not be looking after material pleasures only, for it would
  2065. eventually have effect upon their personal character. But we are human,
  2066. and it would be intolerable in a small town like this to live without
  2067. any means of affording some pleasure to ourselves, such as fishing,
  2068. reading literary products, composing new style poems, or haiku
  2069. (17-syllable poem). We should seek mental consolation of higher order."
  2070. There seemed no prospect that he would quit the hot air. If it was a
  2071. mental consolation to fish fertilisers on the sea, have goruki for
  2072. Russian literature, or to pose a favorite geisha beneath pine tree, it
  2073. would be quite as much a mental consolation to eat dempura noodle and
  2074. swallow dango. Instead of dwelling on such sham consolations, he would
  2075. find his time better spent by washing his red shirts. I became so
  2076. exasperated that I asked; "Is it also a mental consolation to meet the
  2077. Madonna?" No one laughed this time and looked at each other with queer
  2078. faces, and Red Shirt himself hung his head, apparently embarrassed. Look
  2079. at that! A good shot, eh? Only I was sorry for Hubbard Squash who,
  2080. having heard the remark, became still paler.
  2081. CHAPTER VII.
  2082. That very night I left the boarding house. While I was packing up, the
  2083. boss came to me and asked if there was anything wrong in the way I was
  2084. treated. He said he would be pleased to correct it and suit me if I was
  2085. sore at anything. This beats me, sure. How is it possible for so many
  2086. boneheads to be in this world! I could not tell whether they wanted me
  2087. to stay or get out. They're crazy. It would be disgrace for a Yedo kid
  2088. to fuss about with such a fellow; so I hired a rikishaman and speedily
  2089. left the house.
  2090. I got out of the house all right, but had no place to go. The rikishaman
  2091. asked me where I was going. I told him to follow me with his mouth shut,
  2092. then he shall see and I kept on walking. I thought of going to
  2093. Yamashiro-ya to avoid the trouble of hunting up a new boarding house,
  2094. but as I had no prospect of being able to stay there long, I would have
  2095. to renew the hunt sooner or later, so I gave up the idea. If I continued
  2096. walking this way, I thought I might strike a house with the sign of
  2097. "boarders taken" or something similar, and I would consider the first
  2098. house with the sign the one provided for me by Heaven. I kept on going
  2099. round and round through the quiet, decent part of the town when I found
  2100. myself at Kajimachi. This used to be former samurai quarters where one
  2101. had the least chance of finding any boarding house, and I was going to
  2102. retreat to a more lively part of the town when a good idea occurred to
  2103. me. Hubbard Squash whom I respected lived in this part of the town. He
  2104. is a native of the town, and has lived in the house inherited from his
  2105. great grandfather. He must be, I thought, well informed about nearly
  2106. everything in this town. If I call on him for his help, he will perhaps
  2107. find me a good boarding house. Fortunately, I called at his house once
  2108. before, and there was no trouble in finding it out. I knocked at the
  2109. door of a house, which I knew must be his, and a woman about fifty years
  2110. old with an old fashioned paper-lantern in hand, appeared at the door. I
  2111. do not despise young women, but when I see an aged woman, I feel much
  2112. more solicitous. This is probably because I am so fond of Kiyo. This
  2113. aged lady, who looked well-refined, was certainly mother of Hubbard
  2114. Squash whom she resembled. She invited me inside, but I asked her to
  2115. call him out for me. When he came I told him all the circumstances, and
  2116. asked him if he knew any who would take me for a boarder. Hubbard Squash
  2117. thought for a moment in a sympathetic mood, then said there was an old
  2118. couple called Hagino, living in the rear of the street, who had asked
  2119. him sometime ago to get some boarders for them as there are only two in
  2120. the house and they had some vacant rooms. Hubbard Squash was kind enough
  2121. to go along with me and find out if the rooms were vacant. They were.
  2122. From that night I boarded at the house of the Haginos. What surprised me
  2123. was that on the day after I left the house of Ikagin, Clown stepped in
  2124. and took the room I had been occupying. Well used to all sorts of tricks
  2125. and crooks as I might have been, this audacity fairly knocked me off my
  2126. feet. It was sickening.
  2127. I saw that I would be an easy mark for such people unless I brace up
  2128. and try to come up, or down, to their level. It would be a high time
  2129. indeed for me to be alive if it were settled that I would not get three
  2130. meals a day without living on the spoils of pick pockets. Nevertheless,
  2131. to hang myself,--healthy and vigorous as I am,--would be not only
  2132. inexcusable before my ancestors but a disgrace before the public. Now I
  2133. think it over, it would have been better for me to have started
  2134. something like a milk delivery route with that six hundred yen as
  2135. capital, instead of learning such a useless stunt as mathematics at the
  2136. School of Physics. If I had done so, Kiyo could have stayed with me,
  2137. and I could have lived without worrying about her so far a distance
  2138. away. While I was with her I did not notice it, but separated thus I
  2139. appreciated Kiyo as a good-natured old woman. One could not find a
  2140. noble natured woman like Kiyo everywhere. She was suffering from a
  2141. slight cold when I left Tokyo and I wondered how she was getting on
  2142. now? Kiyo must have been pleased when she received the letter from me
  2143. the other day. By the way, I thought it was the time I was in receipt
  2144. of answer from her. I spent two or three days with things like this in
  2145. my mind. I was anxious about the answer, and asked the old lady of the
  2146. house if any letter came from Tokyo for me, and each time she would
  2147. appear sympathetic and say no. The couple here, being formerly of
  2148. samurai class, unlike the Ikagin couple, were both refined. The old
  2149. man's recital of "utai" in a queer voice at night was somewhat telling
  2150. on my nerves, but it was much easier on me as he did not frequent my
  2151. room like Ikagin with the remark of "let me serve you tea."
  2152. The old lady once in a while would come to my room and chat on many
  2153. things. She questioned me why I had not brought my wife with me. I asked
  2154. her if I looked like one married, reminding her that I was only twenty
  2155. four yet. Saying "it is proper for one to get married at twenty four" as
  2156. a beginning, she recited that Mr. Blank married when he was twenty, that
  2157. Mr. So-and-So has already two children at twenty two, and marshalled
  2158. altogether about half a dozen examples,--quite a damper on my youthful
  2159. theory. I will then get marred at twenty four, I said, and requested her
  2160. to find me a good wife, and she asked me if I really meant it.
  2161. "Really? You bet! I can't help wanting to get married."
  2162. "I should suppose so. Everybody is just like that when young." This
  2163. remark was a knocker; I could not say anything to that.
  2164. "But I'm sure you have a Madam already. I have seen to that with my
  2165. own eyes."
  2166. "Well, they are sharp eyes. How have you seen it?"
  2167. "How? Aren't you often worried to death, asking if there's no letter
  2168. from Tokyo?"
  2169. "By Jupiter! This beats me!"
  2170. "Hit the mark, haven't I?"
  2171. "Well, you probably have."
  2172. "But the girls of these days are different from what they used to be and
  2173. you need a sharp look-out on them. So you'd better be careful."
  2174. "Do you mean that my Madam in Tokyo is behaving badly?"
  2175. "No, your Madam is all right."
  2176. "That makes me feel safe. Then about what shall I be careful?"
  2177. "Yours is all right. Though yours is all right......."
  2178. "Where is one not all right?"
  2179. "Rather many right in this town. You know the daughter of the Toyamas?
  2180. "No, I do not."
  2181. "You don't know her yet? She is the most beautiful girl about here. She
  2182. is so beautiful that the teachers in the school call her Madonna. You
  2183. haven't heard that?
  2184. "Ah, the Madonna! I thought it was the name of a geisha."
  2185. "No, Sir. Madonna is a foreign word and means a beautiful girl,
  2186. doesn't it?"
  2187. "That may be. I'm surprised."
  2188. "Probably the name was given by the teacher of drawing."
  2189. "Was it the work of Clown?"
  2190. "No, it was given by Professor Yoshikawa."
  2191. "Is that Madonna not all right?"
  2192. "That Madonna-san is a Madonna not all right."
  2193. "What a bore! We haven't any decent woman among those with nicknames
  2194. from old days. I should suppose the Madonna is not all right."
  2195. "Exactly. We have had awful women such as O-Matsu the Devil or Ohyaku
  2196. the Dakki.
  2197. "Does the Madonna belong to that ring?"
  2198. "That Madonna-san, you know, was engaged to Professor Koga,--who brought
  2199. you here,--yes, was promised to him."
  2200. "Ha, how strange! I never knew our friend Hubbard Squash was a fellow of
  2201. such gallantry. We can't judge a man by his appearance. I'll be a bit
  2202. more careful."
  2203. "The father of Professor Koga died last year,--up to that time they had
  2204. money and shares in a bank and were well off,--but since then things
  2205. have grown worse, I don't know why. Professor Koga was too good-natured,
  2206. in short, and was cheated, I presume. The wedding was delayed by one
  2207. thing or another and there appeared the head teacher who fell in love
  2208. with the Madonna head over heels and wanted to many her."
  2209. "Red Shirt? He ought be hanged. I thought that shirt was not an ordinary
  2210. kind of shirt. Well?"
  2211. "The head-teacher proposed marriage through a go-between, but the
  2212. Toyamas could not give a definite answer at once on account of their
  2213. relations with the Kogas. They replied that they would consider the
  2214. matter or something like that. Then Red Shirt-san worked up some ways
  2215. and started visiting the Toyamas and has finally won the heart of the
  2216. Miss. Red Shirt-san is bad, but so is Miss Toyama; they all talk bad of
  2217. them. She had agreed to be married to Professor Koga and changed her
  2218. mind because a Bachelor of Arts began courting her,--why, that would be
  2219. an offense to the God of To-day."
  2220. "Of course. Not only of To-day but also of tomorrow and the day after;
  2221. in fact, of time without end."
  2222. "So Hotta-san a friend of Koga-san, felt sorry for him and went to the
  2223. head teacher to remonstrate with him. But Red Shirt-san said that he had
  2224. no intention of taking away anybody who is promised to another. He may
  2225. get married if the engagement is broken, he said, but at present he was
  2226. only being acquainted with the Toyamas and he saw nothing wrong in his
  2227. visiting the Toyamas. Hotta-san couldn't do anything and returned. Since
  2228. then they say Red Shirt-san and Hotta-san are on bad terms."
  2229. "You do know many things, I should say. How did you get such details?
  2230. I'm much impressed."
  2231. "The town is so small that I can know everything."
  2232. Yes, everything seems to be known more than one cares. Judging by her
  2233. way, this woman probably knows about my tempura and dango affairs. Here
  2234. was a pot that would make peas rattle! The meaning of the Madonna, the
  2235. relations between Porcupine and Red Shirt became clear and helped me a
  2236. deal. Only what puzzled me was the uncertainty as to which of the two
  2237. was wrong. A fellow simple-hearted like me could not tell which side he
  2238. should help unless the matter was presented in black and white.
  2239. "Of Red Shirt and Porcupine, which is a better fellow?"
  2240. "What is Porcupine, Sir?"
  2241. "Porcupine means Hotta."
  2242. "Well, Hotta-san is physically strong, as strength goes, but Red
  2243. Shirt-san is a Bachelor of Arts and has more ability. And Red Shirt-san
  2244. is more gentle, as gentleness goes, but Hotta-san is more popular among
  2245. the students."
  2246. "After all, which is better?"
  2247. "After all, the one who gets a bigger salary is greater, I suppose?"
  2248. There was no use of going on further in this way, and I closed the talk.
  2249. Two or three days after this, when I returned from the school, the old
  2250. lady with a beaming smile, brought me a letter, saying, "Here you are
  2251. Sir, at last. Take your time and enjoy it." I took it up and found it
  2252. was from Kiyo. On the letter were two or three retransmission slips, and
  2253. by these I saw the letter was sent from Yamashiro-ya to the Iagins, then
  2254. to the Haginos. Besides, it stayed at Yamashiro-ya for about one week;
  2255. even letters seemed to stop in a hotel. I opened it, and it was a very
  2256. long letter.
  2257. "When I received the letter from my Master Darling, I intended to write
  2258. an answer at once. But I caught cold and was sick abed for about one
  2259. week and the answer was delayed for which I beg your pardon. I am not
  2260. well-used to writing or reading like girls in these days, and it
  2261. required some efforts to get done even so poorly written a letter as
  2262. this. I was going to ask my nephew to write it for me, but thought it
  2263. inexcusable to my Master Darling when I should take special pains for
  2264. myself. So I made a rough copy once, and then a clean copy. I finished
  2265. the clean copy, in two days, but the rough copy took me four days. It
  2266. may be difficult for you to read, but as I have written this letter with
  2267. all my might, please read it to the end."
  2268. This was the introductory part of the letter in which, about four feet
  2269. long, were written a hundred and one things. Well, it was difficult to
  2270. read. Not only was it poorly written but it was a sort of juxtaposition
  2271. of simple syllables that racked one's brain to make it clear where it
  2272. stopped or where it began. I am quick-tempered and would refuse to read
  2273. such a long, unintelligible letter for five yen, but I read this
  2274. seriously from the first to the last. It is a fact that I read it
  2275. through. My efforts were mostly spent in untangling letters and
  2276. sentences; so I started reading it over again. The room had become a
  2277. little dark, and this rendered it harder to read it; so finally I
  2278. stepped out to the porch where I sat down and went over it carefully.
  2279. The early autumn breeze wafted through the leaves of the banana trees,
  2280. bathed me with cool evening air, rustled the letter I was holding and
  2281. would have blown it clear to the hedge if I let it go. I did not mind
  2282. anything like this, but kept on reading.
  2283. "Master Darling is simple and straight like a split bamboo by
  2284. disposition," it says, "only too explosive. That's what worries me. If
  2285. you brand other people with nicknames you will only make enemies of
  2286. them; so don't use them carelessly; if you coin new ones, just tell them
  2287. only to Kiyo in your letters. The countryfolk are said to be bad, and I
  2288. wish you to be careful not have them do you. The weather must be worse
  2289. than in Tokyo, and you should take care not to catch cold. Your letter
  2290. is too short that I can't tell how things are going on with you. Next
  2291. time write me a letter at least half the length of this one. Tipping the
  2292. hotel with five yen is all right, but were you not short of money
  2293. afterward? Money is the only thing one can depend upon when in the
  2294. country and you should economize and be prepared for rainy days. I'm
  2295. sending you ten yen by postal money order. I have that fifty yen my
  2296. Master Darling gave me deposited in the Postal Savings to help you start
  2297. housekeeping when you return to Tokyo, and taking out this ten, I have
  2298. still forty yen left,--quite safe."
  2299. I should say women are very particular on many things.
  2300. When I was meditating with the letter flapping in my hand on the porch,
  2301. the old lady opened the sliding partition and brought in my supper.
  2302. "Still poring over the letter? Must be a very long one, I
  2303. imagine," she said.
  2304. "Yes, this is an important letter, so I'm reading it with the wind
  2305. blowing it about," I replied--the reply which was nonsense even for
  2306. myself,--and I sat down for supper. I looked in the dish on the tray,
  2307. and saw the same old sweet potatoes again to-night. This new boarding
  2308. house was more polite and considerate and refined than the Ikagins, but
  2309. the grub was too poor stuff and that was one drawback. It was sweet
  2310. potato yesterday, so it was the day before yesterday, and here it is
  2311. again to-night. True, I declared myself very fond of sweet potatoes, but
  2312. if I am fed with sweet potatoes with such insistency, I may soon have to
  2313. quit this dear old world. I can't be laughing at Hubbard Squash; I shall
  2314. become Sweet Potato myself before long. If it were Kiyo she would surely
  2315. serve me with my favorite sliced tunny or fried kamaboko, but nothing
  2316. doing with a tight, poor samurai. It seems best that I live with Kiyo.
  2317. If I have to stay long in the school, I believe I would call her from
  2318. Tokyo. Don't eat tempura, don't eat dango, and then get turned yellow by
  2319. feeding on sweet potatoes only, in the boarding house. That's for an
  2320. educator, and his place is really a hard one. I think even the priests
  2321. of the Zen sect are enjoying better feed. I cleaned up the sweet
  2322. potatoes, then took out two raw eggs from the drawer of my desk, broke
  2323. them on the edge of the rice bowl, to tide it over. I have to get
  2324. nourishment by eating raw eggs or something, or how can I stand the
  2325. teaching of twenty one hours a week?
  2326. I was late for my bath to-day on account of the letter from Kiyo. But I
  2327. would not like to drop off a single day since I had been there everyday.
  2328. I thought I would take a train to-day, and coming to the station with
  2329. the same old red towel dangling out of my hand, I found the train had
  2330. just left two or three minutes ago, and had to wait for some time. While
  2331. I was smoking a cigarette on a bench, my friend Hubbard Squash happened
  2332. to come in. Since I heard the story about him from the old lady my
  2333. sympathy for him had become far greater than ever. His reserve always
  2334. appeared to me pathetic. It was no longer a case of merely pathetic;
  2335. more than that. I was wishing to get his salary doubled, if possible,
  2336. and have him marry Miss Toyama and send them to Tokyo for about one
  2337. month on a pleasure trip. Seeing him, therefore, I motioned him to a
  2338. seat beside me, addressing him cheerfully:
  2339. "Hello[H], going to bath? Come and sit down here."
  2340. Hubbard Squash, appearing much awe-struck, said; "Don't mind me,
  2341. Sir," and whether out of polite reluctance or I don't know what,
  2342. remained standing.
  2343. "You have to wait for a little while before the next train starts; sit
  2344. down; you'll be tired," I persuaded him again. In fact, I was so
  2345. sympathetic for him that I wished to have him sit down by me somehow.
  2346. Then with a "Thank you, Sir," he at last sat down. A fellow like Clown,
  2347. always fresh, butts in where he is not wanted; or like Porcupine
  2348. swaggers about with a face which says "Japan would be hard up without
  2349. me," or like Red Shirt, self-satisfied in the belief of being the
  2350. wholesaler of gallantry and of cosmetics. Or like Badger who appears to
  2351. say; "If 'Education' were alive and put on a frockcoat, it would look
  2352. like me." One and all in one way or other have bravado, but I have
  2353. never seen any one like this Hubbard Squash, so quiet and resigned,
  2354. like a doll taken for a ransom. His face is rather swollen but for the
  2355. Madonna to cast off such a splendid fellow and give preference to Red
  2356. Shirt, was frivolous beyond my understanding. Put how many dozens of
  2357. Red Shirt you like together, it will not make one husband of stuff to
  2358. beat Hubbard Squash.
  2359. "Is anything wrong with you? You look quite fatigued," I asked.
  2360. "No, I have no particular ailments......."
  2361. "That's good. Poor health is the worst thing one can get."
  2362. "You appear very strong."
  2363. "Yes, I'm thin, but never got sick. That's something I don't like."
  2364. Hubbard Squash smiled at my words. Just then I heard some young girlish
  2365. laughs at the entrance, and incidentally looking that way, I saw a
  2366. "peach." A beautiful girl, tall, white-skinned, with her head done up
  2367. in "high-collared" style, was standing with a woman of about forty-five
  2368. or six, in front of the ticket window. I am not a fellow given to
  2369. describing a belle, but there was no need to repeat asserting that she
  2370. was beautiful. I felt as if I had warmed a crystal ball with perfume
  2371. and held it in my hand. The older woman was shorter, but as she
  2372. resembled the younger, they might be mother and daughter. The moment I
  2373. saw them, I forgot all about Hubbard Squash, and was intently gazing at
  2374. the young beauty. Then I was a bit startled to see Hubbard Squash
  2375. suddenly get up and start walking slowly toward them. I wondered if she
  2376. was not the Madonna. The three were courtesying in front of the ticket
  2377. window, some distance away from me, and I could not hear what they were
  2378. talking about.
  2379. The clock at the station showed the next train to start in five
  2380. minutes. Having lost my partner, I became impatient and longed for the
  2381. train to start as soon as possible, when a fellow rushed into the
  2382. station excited. It was Red Shirt. He had on some fluffy clothes,
  2383. loosely tied round with a silk-crepe girdle, and wound to it the same
  2384. old gold chain. That gold chain is stuffed. Red Shirt thinks nobody
  2385. knows it and is making a big show of it, but I have been wise. Red
  2386. Shirt stopped short, stared around, and then after bowing politely to
  2387. the three still in front of the ticket window, made a remark or two,
  2388. and hastily turned toward me. He came up to me, walking in his usual
  2389. cat's style, and hallooed.
  2390. "You too going to bath? I was afraid of missing the train and
  2391. hurried up, but we have three or four minutes yet. Wonder if that
  2392. clock is right?"
  2393. He took out his gold watch, and remarking it wrong about two minutes sat
  2394. down beside me. He never turned toward the belle, but with his chin on
  2395. the top of a cane, steadily looked straight before him. The older woman
  2396. would occasionally glance toward Red Shirt, but the younger kept her
  2397. profile away. Surely she was the Madonna.
  2398. The train now arrived with a shrill whistle and the passengers hastened
  2399. to board. Red Shirt jumped into the first class coach ahead of all. One
  2400. cannot brag much about boarding the first class coach here. It cost only
  2401. five sen for the first and three sen for the second to Sumida; even I
  2402. paid for the first and a white ticket. The country fellows, however,
  2403. being all close, seemed to regard the expenditure of the extra two sen a
  2404. serious matter and mostly boarded the second class. Following Red Shirt,
  2405. the Madonna and her mother entered the first class. Hubbard Squash
  2406. regularly rides in the second class. He stood at the door of a second
  2407. class coach and appeared somewhat hesitating, but seeing me coming, took
  2408. decisive steps and jumped into the second. I felt sorry for him--I do
  2409. not know why--and followed him into the same coach. Nothing wrong in
  2410. riding on the second with a ticket for the first, I believe.
  2411. At the hot springs, going down from the third floor to the bath room in
  2412. bathing gown, again I met Hubbard Squash. I feel my throat clogged up
  2413. and unable to speak at a formal gathering, but otherwise I am rather
  2414. talkative; so I opened conversation with him. He was so pathetic and my
  2415. compassion was aroused to such an extent that I considered it the duty
  2416. of a Yedo kid to console him to the best of my ability. But Hubbard
  2417. Squash was not responsive. Whatever I said, he would only answer "eh?"
  2418. or "umh," and even these with evident effort. Finally I gave up my
  2419. sympathetic attempt and cut off the conversation.
  2420. I did not meet Red Shirt at the bath. There are many bath rooms, and one
  2421. does not necessarily meet the fellows at the same bath room though he
  2422. might come on the same train. I thought it nothing strange. When I got
  2423. out of the bath, I found the night bright with the moon. On both sides
  2424. of the street stood willow trees which cast their shadows on the road. I
  2425. would take a little stroll, I thought. Coming up toward north, to the
  2426. end of the town, one sees a large gate to the left. Opposite the gate
  2427. stands a temple and both sides of the approach to the temple are lined
  2428. with houses with red curtains. A tenderloin inside a temple gate is an
  2429. unheard-of phenomenon. I wanted to go in and have a look at the place,
  2430. but for fear I might get another kick from Badger, I passed it by. A
  2431. flat house with narrow lattice windows and black curtain at the
  2432. entrance, near the gate, is the place where I ate dango and committed
  2433. the blunder. A round lantern with the signs of sweet meats hung outside
  2434. and its light fell on the trunk of a willow tree close by. I hungered to
  2435. have a bite of dango, but went away forbearing.
  2436. To be unable to eat dango one is so fond of eating, is tragic. But to
  2437. have one's betrothed change her love to another, would be more tragic.
  2438. When I think of Hubbard Squash, I believe that I should, not complain if
  2439. I cannot eat dango or anything else for three days. Really there is
  2440. nothing so unreliable a creature as man. As far as her face goes, she
  2441. appears the least likely to commit so stony-hearted an act as this. But
  2442. the beautiful person is cold-blooded and Koga-san who is swollen like a
  2443. pumpkin soaked in water, is a gentleman to the core,--that's where we
  2444. have to be on the look-out. Porcupine whom I had thought candid was said
  2445. to have incited the students and he whom then I regarded an agitator,
  2446. demanded of the principal a summary punishment of the students. The
  2447. disgustingly snobbish Red Shirt is unexpectedly considerate and warns me
  2448. in ways more than one, but then he won the Madonna by crooked means. He
  2449. denies, however, having schemed anything crooked about the Madonna, and
  2450. says he does not care to marry her unless her engagement with Koga is
  2451. broken. When Ikagin beat me out of his house, Clown enters and takes my
  2452. room. Viewed from any angle, man is unreliable. If I write these things
  2453. to Kiyo, it would surprise her. She would perhaps say that because it is
  2454. the west side of Hakone that the town had all the freaks and crooks
  2455. dumped in together.[7]
  2456. [Footnote 7: An old saying goes that east of the Hakone pass, there are
  2457. no apparitions or freaks.]
  2458. I do not by nature worry about little things, and had come so far
  2459. without minding anything. But hardly a month had passed since I came
  2460. here, and I have begun to regard the world quite uneasily. I have not
  2461. met with any particularly serious affairs, but I feel as if I had grown
  2462. five or six years older. Better say "good by" to this old spot soon and
  2463. return to Tokyo, I thought. While strolling thus thinking on various
  2464. matters, I had passed the stone bridge and come up to the levy of the
  2465. Nozeri river. The word river sounds too big; it is a shallow stream of
  2466. about six feet wide. If one goes on along the levy for about twelve
  2467. blocks, he reaches the Aioi village where there is a temple of Kwanon.
  2468. Looking back at the town of the hot springs, I see red lights gleaming
  2469. amid the pale moon beams. Where the sound of the drum is heard must be
  2470. the tenderloin. The stream is shallow but fast, whispering incessantly.
  2471. When I had covered about three blocks walking leisurely upon the bank,
  2472. I perceived a shadow ahead. Through the light of the moon, I found
  2473. there were two shadows. They were probably village youngsters returning
  2474. from the hot springs, though they did not sing, and were exceptionally
  2475. quiet for that.
  2476. I kept on walking, and I was faster than they. The two shadows became
  2477. larger. One appeared like a woman. When I neared them within about sixty
  2478. feet, the man, on hearing my footsteps, turned back. The moon was
  2479. shining from behind me. I could see the manner of the man then and
  2480. something queer struck me. They resumed their walk as before. And I
  2481. chased them on a full speed. The other party, unconscious, walked
  2482. slowly. I could now hear their voice distinctly. The levy was about six
  2483. feet wide, and would allow only three abreast. I easily passed them, and
  2484. turning back gazed squarely into the face of the man. The moon
  2485. generously bathed my face with its beaming light. The fellow uttered a
  2486. low "ah," and suddenly turning sideway, said to the woman "Let's go
  2487. back." They traced their way back toward the hot springs town.
  2488. Was it the intention of Red Shirt to hush the matter up by pretending
  2489. ignorance, or was it lack of nerve? I was not the only fellow who
  2490. suffered the consequence of living in a small narrow town.
  2491. CHAPTER VIII.
  2492. On my way back from the fishing to which I was invited by Red Shirt, and
  2493. since then, I began to suspect Porcupine. When the latter wanted me to
  2494. get out of Ikagin's house on sham pretexts, I regarded him a decidedly
  2495. unpleasant fellow. But as Porcupine, at the teachers' meeting, contrary
  2496. to my expectation, stood firmly for punishing the students to the
  2497. fullest extent of the school regulations, I thought it queer. When I
  2498. heard from the old lady about Porcupine volunteering himself for the
  2499. sake of Hubbard Squash to stop Red Shirt meddling with the Madonna, I
  2500. clapped my hands and hoorayed for him. Judging by these facts, I began
  2501. to wonder if the wrong-doer might be not Porcupine, but Red Shirt the
  2502. crooked one. He instilled into my head some flimsy hearsay plausibly and
  2503. in a roundabout-way. At this juncture I saw Red Shirt taking a walk with
  2504. the Madonna on the levy of the Nozeri river, and I decided that Red
  2505. Shirt may be a scoundrel. I am not sure of his being really scoundrel at
  2506. heart, but at any rate he is not a good fellow. He is a fellow with a
  2507. double face. A man deserves no confidence unless he is as straight as
  2508. the bamboo. One may fight a straight fellow, and feel satisfied. We
  2509. cannot lose sight of the fact that Red Shirt or his kind who is kind,
  2510. gentle, refined, and takes pride in his pipe had to be looked sharp, for
  2511. I could not be too careful in getting into a scrap with the fellow of
  2512. this type. I may fight, but I would not get square games like the
  2513. wrestling matches it the Wrestling Amphitheatre in Tokyo. Come to think
  2514. of it, Porcupine who turned against me and startled the whole teachers'
  2515. room over the amount of one sen and a half is far more like a man. When
  2516. he stared at me with owlish eyes at the teachers' meeting, I branded him
  2517. as a spiteful guy, but as I consider the matter now, he is better than
  2518. the feline voice of Red Shirt. To tell the truth, I tried to get
  2519. reconciled with Porcupine, and after the meeting, spoke a word or two to
  2520. him, but he shut up like a clam and kept glaring at me. So I became
  2521. sore, and let it go at that.
  2522. Porcupine has not spoken to me since. The one sen and a half which I
  2523. paid him back upon the desk, is still there, well covered with dust. I
  2524. could not touch it, nor would Porcupine take it. This one sen and a
  2525. half has become a barrier between us two. We two were cursed with this
  2526. one sen and a half. Later indeed I got sick of its sight that I hated
  2527. to see it.
  2528. While Porcupine and I were thus estranged, Red Shirt and I continued
  2529. friendly relations and associated together. On the day following my
  2530. accidental meeting with him near the Nozeri river, for instance, Red
  2531. Shirt came to my desk as soon as he came to the school, and asked me how
  2532. I liked the new boarding house. He said we would go together for fishing
  2533. Russian literature again, and talked on many things. I felt a bit
  2534. piqued, and said, "I saw you twice last night," and he answered, "Yes,
  2535. at the station. Do you go there at that time every day? Isn't it late?"
  2536. I startled him with the remark; "I met you on the levy of the Nozeri
  2537. river too, didn't I?" and he replied, "No, I didn't go in that
  2538. direction. I returned right after my bath."
  2539. What is the use of trying to keep it dark. Didn't we meet actually face
  2540. to face? He tells too many lies. If one can hold the job of a head
  2541. teacher and act in this fashion, I should be able to run the position of
  2542. Chancellor of a university. From this time on, my confidence in Red
  2543. Shirt became still less. I talk with Red Shirt whom I do not trust, and
  2544. I keep silent with Porcupine whom I respect. Funny things do happen in
  2545. this world.
  2546. One day Red Shirt asked me to come over to his house as he had something
  2547. to tell me, and much as I missed the trip to the hot springs, I started
  2548. for his house at about 4 o'clock. Red Shirt is single, but in keeping
  2549. with the dignity of a head teacher, he gave up the boarding house life
  2550. long ago, and lives in a fine house. The house rent, I understood, was
  2551. nine yen and fifty sen. The front entrance was so attractive that I
  2552. thought if one can live in such a splendid house at nine yen and a half
  2553. in the country, it would be a good game to call Kiyo from Tokyo and make
  2554. her heart glad. The younger brother of Red Shirt answered my bell. This
  2555. brother gets his lessons on algebra and mathematics from me at the
  2556. school. He stands no show in his school work, and being a "migratory
  2557. bird" is more wicked than the native boys.
  2558. I met Red Shirt. Smoking the same old unsavory amber pipe, he said
  2559. something to the following effect:
  2560. "Since you've been with us, our work has been more satisfactory than it
  2561. was under your predecessor, and the principal is very glad to have got
  2562. the right person in the right place. I wish you to work as hard as you
  2563. can, for the school is depending upon you."
  2564. "Well, is that so. I don't think I can work any harder than now......."
  2565. "What you're doing now is enough. Only don't forget what I told you the
  2566. other day."
  2567. "Meaning that one who helps me find a boarding house is dangerous?"
  2568. "If you state it so baldly, there is no meaning to it....... But that's
  2569. all right,...... I believe you understand the spirit of my advice. And
  2570. if you keep on in the way you're going to-day ...... We have not been
  2571. blind ...... we might offer you a better treatment later on if we can
  2572. manage it."
  2573. "In salary? I don't care about the salary, though the more the better."
  2574. "And fortunately there is going to be one teacher transferred,......
  2575. however, I can't guarantee, of course, until I talk it over with the
  2576. principal ...... and we might give you something out of his salary."
  2577. "Thank you. Who is going to be transferred?"
  2578. "I think I may tell you now; 'tis going to be Announced soon. Koga
  2579. is the man."
  2580. "But isn't Koga-san a native of this town?"
  2581. "Yes, he is. But there are some circumstances ...... and it is partly by
  2582. his own preference."
  2583. "Where is he going?"
  2584. "To Nobeoka in Hiuga province. As the place is so far away, he is going
  2585. there with his salary raised a grade higher."
  2586. "Is some one coming to take his place?"
  2587. "His successor is almost decided upon."
  2588. "Well, that's fine, though I'm not very anxious to have my salary
  2589. raised."
  2590. "I'm going to talk to the principal about that anyway. And, we may have
  2591. to ask you to work more some time later ...... and the principal appears
  2592. to be of the same opinion....... I want you to go[I] ahead with that in
  2593. your mind."
  2594. "Going to increase my working hours?"
  2595. "No. The working hours may be reduced......"
  2596. "The working hours shortened and yet work more? Sounds funny."
  2597. "It does sound funny ...... I can't say definitely just yet ...... it
  2598. means that we way have to ask you to assume more responsibility."
  2599. I could not make out what he meant. To assume more responsibility might
  2600. mean my appointment to the senior instructor of mathematics, but
  2601. Porcupine is the senior instructor and there is no danger of his
  2602. resigning. Besides, he is so very popular among the students that his
  2603. transfer or discharge would be inadvisable. Red Shirt always misses the
  2604. point. And though he did not get to the point, the object of my visit
  2605. was ended. We talked a while on sundry matters, Red Shirt proposing a
  2606. farewell dinner party for Hubbard Squash, asking me if I drink liquor
  2607. and praising Hubbard Squash as an amiable gentleman, etc. Finally he
  2608. changed the topic and asked me if I take an interest in "haiku"[8] Here
  2609. is where I beat it, I thought, and, saying "No, I don't, good by,"
  2610. hastily left the house. The "haiku" should be a diversion of Baseo[9] or
  2611. the boss of a barbershop. It would not do for the teacher of mathematics
  2612. to rave over the old wooden bucket and the morning glory.[10]
  2613. [Footnote 8: The 17-syllable poem]
  2614. [Footnote 9: A famous composer of the poem.]
  2615. [Footnote 10: There is a well-known 17-syllable poem describing the
  2616. scene of morning glories entwining around the wooden bucket.]
  2617. I returned home and thought it over. Here is a man whose mental process
  2618. defies a layman's understanding. He is going to court hardships in a
  2619. strange part of the country in preference of his home and the school
  2620. where he is working,--both of which should satisfy most
  2621. anybody,--because he is tired of them. That may be all right if the
  2622. strange place happens to be a lively metropolis where electric cars
  2623. run,--but of all places, why Nobeoka in Hiuga province? This town here
  2624. has a good steamship connection, yet I became sick of it and longed for
  2625. home before one month had passed. Nobeoka is situated in the heart of a
  2626. most mountainous country. According to Red Shirt, one has to make an
  2627. all-day ride in a wagonette to Miyazaki, after he had left the vessel,
  2628. and from Miyazaki another all-day ride in a rikisha to Nobeoka. Its name
  2629. alone does not commend itself as civilized. It sounds like a town
  2630. inhabited by men and monkeys in equal numbers. However sage-like Hubbard
  2631. Squash might be I thought he would not become a friend of monkeys of his
  2632. own choice. What a curious slant!
  2633. Just then the old lady brought in my supper--"Sweet potatoes again?" I
  2634. asked, and she said, "No, Sir, it is tofu to-night." They are about the
  2635. same thing.
  2636. "Say, I understand Koga-san is going to Nobeoka."
  2637. "Isn't it too bad?"
  2638. "Too bad? But it can't be helped if he goes there by his own
  2639. preference."
  2640. "Going there by his own preference? Who, Sir?"
  2641. "Who? Why, he! Isn't Professor Koga going there by his own choice?"
  2642. "That's wrong Mr. Wright, Sir."
  2643. "Ha, Mr. Wright, is it? But Red Shirt told me so just now. If that's
  2644. wrong Mr. Wright, then Red Shirt is blustering Mr. Bluff."
  2645. "What the head-teacher says is believable, but so Koga-san does not
  2646. wish to go."
  2647. "Our old lady is impartial, and that is good. Well, what's the matter?"
  2648. "The mother of Koga-san was here this morning, and told me all the
  2649. circumstances."
  2650. "Told you what circumstances?"
  2651. "Since the father of Koga-san died, they have not been quite well off as
  2652. we might have supposed, and the mother asked the principal if his salary
  2653. could not be raised a little as Koga-san has been in service for four
  2654. years. See?"
  2655. "Well?"
  2656. "The principal said that he would consider the matter, and she felt
  2657. satisfied and expected the announcement of the increase before long. She
  2658. hoped for its coming this month or next. Then the principal called
  2659. Koga-san to his office one day and said that he was sorry but the school
  2660. was short of money and could not raise his salary. But he said there is
  2661. an opening in Nobeoka which would give him five yen extra a month and he
  2662. thought that would suit his purpose, and the principal had made all
  2663. arrangements and told Koga-san he had better go......."
  2664. "That wasn't a friendly talk but a command. Wasn't it?"
  2665. "Yes, Sir, Koga-san told the principal that he liked to stay here better
  2666. at the old salary than go elsewhere on an increased salary, because he
  2667. has his own house and is living with his mother. But the matter has all
  2668. been settled, and his successor already appointed and it couldn't be
  2669. helped, said the principal."
  2670. "Hum, that's a jolly good trick, I should say. Then Koga-san has no
  2671. liking to go there? No wonder I thought it strange. We would have to go
  2672. a long way to find any blockhead to do a job in such a mountain village
  2673. and get acquainted with monkeys for five yen extra."
  2674. "What is a blockhead, Sir?"
  2675. "Well, let go at that. It was all the scheme of Red Shirt. Deucedly
  2676. underhand scheme, I declare. It was a stab from behind. And he means to
  2677. raise my salary by that; that's not right. I wouldn't take that raise.
  2678. Let's see if he can raise it."
  2679. "Is your salary going to be raised, Sir?"
  2680. "Yes, they said they would raise mine, but I'm thinking of refusing it."
  2681. "Why do you refuse?"
  2682. "Why or no why, it's going to be refused. Say, Red Shirt is a fool; he
  2683. is a coward."
  2684. "He may be a coward, but if he raises your salary, it would be best for
  2685. you to make no fuss, but accept it. One is apt to get grouchy when
  2686. young, but will always repent when he is grown up and thinks that it was
  2687. pity he hadn't been a little more patient. Take an old woman's advice
  2688. for once, and if Red Shirt-san says he will raise your salary, just take
  2689. it with thanks."
  2690. "It's none of business of you old people."
  2691. The old lady withdrew in silence. The old man is heard singing "utai" in
  2692. the off-key voice. "Utai," I think, is a stunt which purposely makes a
  2693. whole show a hard nut to crack by giving to it difficult tunes, whereas
  2694. one could better understand it by reading it. I cannot fathom what is in
  2695. the mind of the old man who groans over it every night untired. But I'm
  2696. not in a position to be fooling with "utai." Red Shirt said he would
  2697. have my salary raised, and though I did not care much about it, I
  2698. accepted it because there was no use of leaving the money lying around.
  2699. But I cannot, for the love of Mike, be so inconsiderate as to skin the
  2700. salary of a fellow teacher who is being transferred against his will.
  2701. What in thunder do they mean by sending him away so far as Nobeoka when
  2702. the fellow prefers to remain in his old position? Even
  2703. Dazai-no-Gonnosutsu did not have to go farther than about Hakata; even
  2704. Matagoro Kawai [11] stopped at Sagara. I shall not feel satisfied unless
  2705. I see Red Shirt and tell him I refuse the raise.
  2706. [Footnote 11: The persons in exile, well-known in Japanese history.]
  2707. I dressed again and went to his house. The same younger brother of Red
  2708. Shirt again answered the bell, and looked at me with eyes which plainly
  2709. said, "You here again?" I will come twice or thrice or as many times as
  2710. I want to if there is business. I might rouse them out of their beds at
  2711. midnight;--it is possible, who knows. Don't mistake me for one coming to
  2712. coax the head teacher. I was here to give back my salary. The younger
  2713. brother said that there is a visitor just now, and I told him the front
  2714. door will do; won't take more than a minute, and he went in. Looking
  2715. about my feet, I found a pair of thin, matted wooden clogs, and I heard
  2716. some one in the house saying, "Now we're banzai." I noticed that the
  2717. visitor was Clown. Nobody but Clown could make such a squeaking voice
  2718. and wear such clogs as are worn by cheap actors.
  2719. After a while Red Shirt appeared at the door with a lamp in his hand,
  2720. and said, "Come in; it's no other than Mr. Yoshikawa."
  2721. "This is good enough," I said, "it won't take long." I looked at his
  2722. face which was the color of a boiled lobster. He seemed to have been
  2723. drinking with Clown.
  2724. "You told me that you would raise my salary, but I've changed my mind,
  2725. and have come here to decline the offer."
  2726. Red Shirt, thrusting out the lamp forward, and intently staring at me,
  2727. was unable to answer at the moment. He appeared blank. Did he think it
  2728. strange that here was one fellow, only one in the world, who does not
  2729. want his salary raised, or was he taken aback that I should come back so
  2730. soon even if I wished to decline it, or was it both combined, he stood
  2731. there silent with his mouth in a queer shape.
  2732. "I accepted your offer because I understood that Mr. Koga was being
  2733. transferred by his own preference......."
  2734. "Mr. Koga is really going to be transferred by his own preference."
  2735. "No, Sir. He would like to stay here. He doesn't mind his present salary
  2736. if he can stay."
  2737. "Have you heard it from Mr. Koga himself?"
  2738. "No, not from him."
  2739. "Then, from who?"
  2740. "The old lady in my boarding house told me what she heard from the
  2741. mother of Mr. Koga."
  2742. "Then the old woman in your boarding house told you so?"
  2743. "Well, that's about the size of it."
  2744. "Excuse me, but I think you are wrong. According to what you say, it
  2745. seems as if you believe what the old woman in the boarding house tells
  2746. you, but would not believe what your head teacher tells you. Am I right
  2747. to understand it that way?"
  2748. I was stuck. A Bachelor of Arts is confoundedly good in oratorical
  2749. combat. He gets hold of unexpected point, and pushes the other backward.
  2750. My father used to tell me that I am too careless and no good, and now
  2751. indeed I look that way. I ran out of the house on the moment's impulse
  2752. when I heard the story from the old lady, and in fact I had not heard
  2753. the story from either Hubbard Squash or his mother. In consequence, when
  2754. I was challenged in this Bachelor-of-Arts fashion, it was a bit
  2755. difficult to defend myself.
  2756. I could not defend his frontal attack, but I had already declared in my
  2757. mind a lack of confidence on Red Shirt. The old lady in the boarding
  2758. house may be tight and a grabber, I do not doubt it, but she is a woman
  2759. who tells no lie. She is not double faced like Red Shirt, I was
  2760. helpless, so I answered.
  2761. "What you say might be right,--anyway, I decline the raise."
  2762. "That's still funnier. I thought your coming here now was because you
  2763. had found a certain reason for which you could not accept the raise.
  2764. Then it is hard to understand to see you still insisting on declining
  2765. the raise in spite of the reason having been eradicated by my
  2766. explanation."
  2767. "It may be hard to understand, but anyway I don't want it."
  2768. "If you don't like it so much, I wouldn't force it on you. But if you
  2769. change your mind within two or three hours with no particular reason, it
  2770. would affect your credit in future."
  2771. "I don't care if it does affect it."
  2772. "That can't be. Nothing is more important than credit for us. Supposing,
  2773. the boss of the boarding house......."
  2774. "Not the boss, but the old lady."
  2775. "Makes no difference,--suppose what the old woman in the boarding house
  2776. told you was true, the raise of your salary is not to be had by reducing
  2777. the income of Mr. Koga, is it? Mr. Koga is going to Nobeoka; his
  2778. successor is coming. He comes on a salary a little less than that of Mr.
  2779. Koga, and we propose to add the surplus money to your salary, and you
  2780. need not be shy. Mr. Koga will be promoted; the successor is to start on
  2781. less pay, and if you could be raised, I think everything be satisfactory
  2782. to all concerned. If you don't like it, that's all right, but suppose
  2783. you think it over once more at home?"
  2784. My brain is not of the best stuff, and if another fellow flourishes his
  2785. eloquence like this, I usually think, "Well, perhaps I was wrong," and
  2786. consider myself defeated, but not so to-night. From the time I came to
  2787. this town I felt prejudiced against Red Shirt. Once I had thought of him
  2788. in a different light, taking him for a fellow kind-hearted and
  2789. feminished. His kindness, however, began to look like anything but
  2790. kindness, and as a result, I have been getting sick of him. So no matter
  2791. how he might glory himself in logical grandiloquence, or how he might
  2792. attempt to out-talk me in a head-teacher-style, I don't care a snap. One
  2793. who shines in argument is not necessarily a good fellow, while the other
  2794. who is out-talked is not necessarily a bad fellow, either. Red Shirt is
  2795. very, very reasonable as far as his reasoning goes, but however graceful
  2796. he may appear, he cannot win my respect. If money, authority or
  2797. reasoning can command admiration, loansharks, police officers or college
  2798. professors should be liked best by all. I cannot be moved in the least
  2799. by the logic by so insignificant a fellow as the head teacher of a
  2800. middle school. Man works by preference, not by logic.
  2801. "What you say is right, but I have begun to dislike the raise, so I
  2802. decline. It will be the same if I think it over. Good by." And I left
  2803. the house of Red Shirt. The solitary milky way hung high in the sky.
  2804. CHAPTER IX.
  2805. When I went to the school, in the morning of the day the farewell dinner
  2806. party was to be held, Porcupine suddenly spoke to me;
  2807. "The other day I asked you to quit the Ikagins because Ikagin begged of
  2808. me to have you leave there as you were too tough, and I believed him.
  2809. But I heard afterward that Ikagin is a crook and often passes imitation
  2810. of famous drawings for originals. I think what he told me about you must
  2811. be a lie. He tried to sell pictures and curios to you, but as you shook
  2812. him off, he told some false stories on you. I did very wrong by you
  2813. because I did not know his character, and wish you would forgive me."
  2814. And he offered me a lengthy apology.
  2815. Without saying a word, I took up the one sen and a half which was lying
  2816. on the desk of Porcupine, and put it into my purse. He asked me in a
  2817. wondering tone, if I meant to take it back. I explained, "Yes. I didn't
  2818. like to have you treat me and expected to pay this back at all hazard,
  2819. but as I think about it, I would rather have you treated me after all;
  2820. so I'm going to take it back."
  2821. Porcupine laughed heartily and asked me why I had not taken it back
  2822. sooner. I told him that I wanted to more than once, in fact, but somehow
  2823. felt shy and left it there. I was sick of that one sen and a half these
  2824. days that I shunned the sight of it when I came to the school, I said.
  2825. He said "You're a deucedly unyielding sport," and I answered "You're
  2826. obstinate." Then ensued the following give-and-take between us two;
  2827. "Where were you born anyway?"
  2828. "I'm a Yedo kid."
  2829. "Ah, a Yedo kid, eh? No wonder I thought you a pretty stiff neck."
  2830. "And you?"
  2831. "I'm from Aizu."
  2832. "Ha, Aizu guy, eh? You've got reason to be obstinate. Going to the
  2833. farewell dinner to-day?"
  2834. "Sure. You?"
  2835. "Of course I am. I intend to go down to the beach to see Koga-san off
  2836. when he leaves."
  2837. "The farewell dinner should be a big blow-out. You come and see. I'm
  2838. going to get soused to the neck."
  2839. "You get loaded all you want. I quit the place right after I finish my
  2840. plates. Only fools fight booze."
  2841. "You're a fellow who picks up a fight too easy. It shows up the
  2842. characteristic of the Yedo kid well."
  2843. "I don't care. Say, before you go to the farewell dinner, come to see
  2844. me. I want to tell you something."
  2845. Porcupine came to my room as promised. I had been in full sympathy with
  2846. Hubbard Squash these days, and when it came to his farewell dinner, my
  2847. pity for him welled up so much that I wished I could go to Nobeoka for
  2848. him myself. I thought of making a parting address of burning eloquence
  2849. at the dinner to grace the occasion, but my speech which rattles off
  2850. like that of the excited spieler of New York would not become the place.
  2851. I planned to take the breath out of Red Shirt by employing Porcupine who
  2852. has a thunderous voice. Hence my invitation to him before we started for
  2853. the party.
  2854. I commenced by explaining the Madonna affair, but Porcupine, needless to
  2855. say, knew more about it than I. Telling about my meeting Red Shirt on
  2856. the Nozeri river, I called him a fool. Porcupine then said; "You call
  2857. everybody a fool. You called me a fool to-day at the school. If I'm a
  2858. fool, Red Shirt isn't," and insisted that he was not in the same group
  2859. with Red Shirt. "Then Red Shirt may be a four-flusher," I said and he
  2860. approved this new alias with enthusiasm. Porcupine is physically strong,
  2861. but when it comes to such terms, he knows less than I do. I guess all
  2862. Aizu guys are about the same.
  2863. Then, when I disclosed to him about the raise of my salary and the
  2864. advance hint on my promotion by Red Shirt, Porcupine pished, and said,
  2865. "Then he means to discharge me." "Means to discharge you? But you mean
  2866. to get discharged?" I asked. "Bet you, no. If I get fired, Red Shirt
  2867. will have to go with me," he remarked with a lordly air. I insisted on
  2868. knowing how he was going to get Red Shirt kicked out with him, and he
  2869. answered that he had not thought so far yet. Yes, Porcupine looks
  2870. strong, but seems to be possessed of no abundance of brain power. I told
  2871. him about my refusal of the raise of my salary, and the Gov'nur was much
  2872. pleased, praising me with the remark, "That's the stuff for Yedo kids."
  2873. "If Hubbard Squash does not like to go down to Nobeoka, why didn't you
  2874. do something to enable him remain here," I asked, and Porcupine said
  2875. that when he heard the story from Hubbard Squash, everything had been
  2876. settled already, but he had asked the principal twice and Red Shirt once
  2877. to have the transfer order cancelled, but to no purpose. Porcupine
  2878. bitterly condemned Hubbard Squash for being too good-natured. If Hubbard
  2879. Squash, he said, had either flatly refused or delayed the answer on the
  2880. pretext of considering it, when Red Shirt raised the question of
  2881. transfer, it would have been better for him. But he was fooled by the
  2882. oily tongue of Red Shirt, had accepted the transfer outright, and all
  2883. efforts by Porcupine who was moved by the tearful appeal of the mother,
  2884. proved unavailing.
  2885. I said; "The transfer of Koga is nothing but a trick of Red Shirt to cop
  2886. the Madonna by sending Hubbard Squash away."
  2887. "Yes," said Porcupine "That must be. Red Shirt looks gentle, but plays
  2888. nasty tricks. He is a sonovagun for when some one finds fault with him,
  2889. he has excuses prepared already. Nothing but a sound thumping will be
  2890. effective for fellows like him."
  2891. He rolled up his sleeves over his plump arms as he spoke. I asked him,
  2892. by the way, if he knew jiujitsu, because his arms looked powerful. Then
  2893. he put force in his forearm, and told me to touch it. I felt its swelled
  2894. muscle which was hard as the pumic stone in the public bathhouse.
  2895. I was deeply impressed by his massive strength, and asked him if he
  2896. could not knock five or six of Red Shirt in a bunch. "Of course," he
  2897. said, and as he extended and bent back the arm, the lumpy muscle rolled
  2898. round and round, which was very amusing. According to the statement of
  2899. Porcupine himself, this muscle, if he bends the arm back with force,
  2900. would snap a paper-string wound around it twice. I said I might do the
  2901. same thing if it were a paper-string, and he challenged me. "No, you
  2902. can't," he said. "See if you can." As it would not look well if I
  2903. failed, I did not try.
  2904. "Say, after you have drunk all you want to-night at the dinner, take a
  2905. fall out of Red Shirt and Clown, eh?" I suggested to him for fun.
  2906. Porcupine thought for a moment and said, "Not to-night, I guess." I
  2907. wanted to know why, and he pointed out that it would be bad for Koga.
  2908. "Besides, if I'm going to give it to them at all, I've to get them red
  2909. handed in their dirty scheme, or all the blame will be on me," he added
  2910. discretely. Even Porcupine seems to have wiser judgment than I.
  2911. "Then make a speech and praise Mr. Koga sky-high. My speech becomes sort
  2912. of jumpy, wanting dignity. And at any formal gathering, I get lumpy in
  2913. my throat, and can't speak. So I leave it to you," I said.
  2914. "That's a strange disease. Then you can't speak in the presence of other
  2915. people? It would be awkward, I suppose," he said, and I told him not
  2916. quite as much awkward as he might think.
  2917. About then, the time for the farewell dinner party arrived, and I went
  2918. to the hall with Porcupine. The dinner party was to be held at
  2919. Kashin-tei which is said to be the leading restaurant in the town, but I
  2920. had never been in the house before. This restaurant, I understood, was
  2921. formerly the private residence of the chief retainer of the daimyo of
  2922. the province, and its condition seemed to confirm the story. The
  2923. residence of a chief retainer transformed into a restaurant was like
  2924. making a saucepan out of warrior's armor.
  2925. When we two came there, about all of the guests were present. They
  2926. formed two or three groups in the spacious room of fifty mats. The
  2927. alcove in this room, in harmony with its magnificence, was very large.
  2928. The alcove in the fifteen-mat room which I occupied at Yamashiro-ya made
  2929. a small showing beside it. I measured it and found it was twelve feet
  2930. wide. On the right, in the alcove, there was a seto-ware flower vase,
  2931. painted with red designs, in which was a large branch of pine tree. Why
  2932. the pine twigs, I did not know, except that they are in no danger of
  2933. withering for many a month to come, and are economical. I asked the
  2934. teacher of natural history where that seto-ware flower vase is made. He
  2935. told me it was not a seto-ware but an imari. Isn't imari seto-ware? I
  2936. wondered audibly, and the natural history man laughed. I heard afterward
  2937. that we call it a seto-ware because it is made in Seto. I'm a Yedo kid,
  2938. and thought all china was seto-wares. In the center of the alcove was
  2939. hung a panel on which were written twenty eight letters, each letter as
  2940. large as my face. It was poorly written; so poorly indeed that I
  2941. enquired of the teacher of Confucius why such a poor work be hung in
  2942. apparent show of pride. He explained that it was written by Kaioku a
  2943. famous artist in the writing, but Kaioku or anyone else, I still declare
  2944. the work poorly done.
  2945. By and by, Kawamura, the clerk, requested all to be seated. I chose one
  2946. in front of a pillar so I could lean against it. Badger sat in front of
  2947. the panel of Kaioku in Japanese full dress. On his left sat Red Shirt
  2948. similarly dressed, and on his right Hubbard Squash, as the guest of
  2949. honor, in the same kind of dress. I was dressed in a European suit, and
  2950. being unable to sit down, squatted on my legs at once. The teacher of
  2951. physical culture next to me, though in the same kind of rags as mine,
  2952. sat squarely in Japanese fashion. As a teacher of his line he appeared
  2953. to have well trained himself. Then the dinner trays were served and the
  2954. bottles placed beside them. The manager of the day stood up and made a
  2955. brief opening address. He was followed by Badger and Red Shirt. These
  2956. two made farewell addresses, and dwelt at length on Hubbard Squash being
  2957. an ideal teacher and gentleman, expressing their regret, saying his
  2958. departure was a great loss not only to the school but to them in person.
  2959. They concluded that it could not be helped, however, since the transfer
  2960. was due to his own earnest desire and for his own convenience. They
  2961. appeared to be ashamed not in the least by telling such a lie at a
  2962. farewell dinner. Particularly, Red Shirt, of these three, praised Hubard
  2963. Squash in lavish terms. He went so far as to declare that to lose this
  2964. true friend was a great personal loss to him. Moreover, his tone was so
  2965. impressive in its same old gentle tone that one who listens to him for
  2966. the first time would be sure to be misled. Probably he won the Madonna
  2967. by this same trick. While Red Shirt was uttering his farewell buncomb,
  2968. Porcupine who sat on the other side across me, winked at me. As an
  2969. answer of this, I "snooked" at him.
  2970. No sooner had Red Shirt sat down than Porcupine stood up, and highly
  2971. rejoiced, I clapped hands. At this Badger and others glanced at me, and
  2972. I felt that I blushed a little.
  2973. "Our principal and other gentlemen," he said, "particularly the head
  2974. teacher, expressed their sincere regret at Mr. Koga's transfer. I am of
  2975. a different opinion, and hope to see him leave the town at the earliest
  2976. possible moment. Nobeoka is an out-of-the-way, backwoods town, and
  2977. compared with this town, it may have more material inconveniences, but
  2978. according to what I have heard, Nobeoka is said to be a town where the
  2979. customs are simple and untainted, and the teachers and students still
  2980. strong in the straightforward characteristics of old days. I am
  2981. convinced that in Nobeoka there is not a single high-collared guy who
  2982. passes round threadbare remarks, or who with smooth face, entraps
  2983. innocent people. I am sure that a man like Mr. Koga, gentle and honest,
  2984. will surely be received with an enthusiastic welcome there. I heartily
  2985. welcome this transfer for the sake of Mr. Koga. In concluding, I hope
  2986. that when he is settled down at Nobeoka, he will find a lady qualified
  2987. to become his wife, and form a sweet home at an early date and
  2988. incidentally let the inconstant, unchaste sassy old wench die ashamed
  2989. ...... a'hum, a'hum!"
  2990. He coughed twice significantly and sat down. I thought of clapping my
  2991. hands again, but as it would draw attention, I refrained. When
  2992. Porcupine finished his speech, Hubbard Squash arose politely, slipped
  2993. out of his seat, went to the furthest end of the room, and having bowed
  2994. to all in a most respectful manner, acknowledged the compliments in the
  2995. following way;
  2996. "On the occasion of my going to Kyushu for my personal convenience, I am
  2997. deeply impressed and appreciate the way my friends have honored me with
  2998. this magnificent dinner....... The farewell addresses by our principal
  2999. and other gentlemen will be long held in my fondest recollection.......
  3000. I am going far away now, but I hope my name be included in the future as
  3001. in the past in the list of friends of the gentlemen here to-night."
  3002. Then again bowing, he returned to his seat. There was no telling how far
  3003. the "good-naturedness" of Hubbard Squash might go. He had respectfully
  3004. thanked the principal and the head teacher who had been fooling him. And
  3005. it was not a formal, cut-and-dried reply he made, either; by his manner,
  3006. tone and face, he appeared to have been really grateful from his heart.
  3007. Badger and Red Shirt should have blushed when they were addressed so
  3008. seriously by so good a man as Hubbard Squash, but they only listened
  3009. with long faces.
  3010. After the exchange of addresses, a sizzling sound was heard here and
  3011. there, and I too tried the soup which tasted like anything but soup.
  3012. There was kamaboko in the kuchitori dish, but instead of being snow
  3013. white as it should be, it looked grayish, and was more like a poorly
  3014. cooked chikuwa. The sliced tunny was there, but not having been sliced
  3015. fine, passed the throat like so many pieces of chopped raw tunny. Those
  3016. around me, however, ate with ravenous appetite. They have not tasted, I
  3017. guess, the real Yedo dinner.
  3018. Meanwhile the bottles began passing round, and all became more or less
  3019. "jacked up." Clown proceeded to the front of the principal and
  3020. submissively drank to his health. A beastly fellow, this! Hubbard Squash
  3021. made a round of all the guests, drinking to their health. A very onerous
  3022. job, indeed. When he came to me and proposed my health, I abandoned the
  3023. squatting posture and sat up straight.
  3024. "Too bad to see you go away so soon. When are you going? I want to see
  3025. you off at the beach," I said.
  3026. "Thank you, Sir. But never mind that. You're busy," he declined. He
  3027. might decline, but I was determined to get excused for the day and give
  3028. him a rousing send-off.
  3029. Within about an hour from this, the room became pretty lively.
  3030. "Hey, have another, hic; ain't goin', hic, have one on me?" One or two
  3031. already in a pickled state appeared on the scene. I was little tired,
  3032. and going out to the porch, was looking at the old fashioned garden by
  3033. the dim star light, when Porcupine came.
  3034. "How did you like my speech? Wasn't it grand, though!" he remarked in a
  3035. highly elated tone. I protested that while I approved 99 per cent, of
  3036. his speech, there was one per cent, that I did not. "What's that one per
  3037. cent?" he asked.
  3038. "Well, you said,...... there is not a single high-collared guy who with
  3039. smooth face entraps innocent people......."
  3040. "Yes."
  3041. "A 'high-collared guy' isn't enough."
  3042. "Then what should I say?"
  3043. "Better say,--'a high-collared guy; swindler, bastard,
  3044. super-swanker, doubleface, bluffer, totempole, spotter, who looks
  3045. like a dog as he yelps.'"
  3046. "I can't get my tongue to move so fast. You're eloquent. In the first
  3047. place, you know a great many simple words. Strange that you can't make
  3048. a speech."
  3049. "I reserve these words for use when I chew the rag. If it comes to
  3050. speech-making, they don't come out so smoothly."
  3051. "Is that so? But they simply come a-running. Repeat that again for me."
  3052. "As many times as you like. Listen,--a high-collared guy, swindler,
  3053. bastard, super-swanker ..."
  3054. While I was repeating this, two shaky fellows came out of the room
  3055. hammering the floor.
  3056. "Hey, you two gents, if won't do to run away. Won't let you off while
  3057. I'm here. Come and have a drink. Bastard? That's fine. Bastardly fine.
  3058. Now, come on."
  3059. And they pulled Porcupine and me away. These two fellows really had come
  3060. to the lavatory, but soaked as they were, in booze bubbles, they
  3061. apparently forgot to proceed to their original destination, and were
  3062. pulling us hard. All booze fighters seem to be attracted by whatever
  3063. comes directly under their eyes for the moment and forget what they had
  3064. been proposing to do.
  3065. "Say, fellows, we've got bastards. Make them drink. Get them loaded. You
  3066. gents got to stay here."
  3067. And they pushed me who never attempted to escape against the wall.
  3068. Surveying the scene, I found there was no dish in which any edibles were
  3069. left. Some one had eaten all his share, and gone on a foraging
  3070. expedition. The principal was not there,--I did not know when he left.
  3071. At that time, preceded by a coquetish voice, three or four geishas
  3072. entered the room. I was a bit surprised, but having been pushed against
  3073. the wall, I had to look on quietly. At the instant, Red Shirt who had
  3074. been leaning against a pillar with the same old amber pipe stuck into
  3075. his mouth with some pride, suddenly got up and started to leave the
  3076. room. One of the geishas who was advancing toward him smiled and
  3077. courtesied at him as she passed by him. The geisha was the youngest and
  3078. prettiest of the bunch. They were some distance away from me and I could
  3079. not see very well, but it seemed that she might have said "Good
  3080. evening." Red Shirt brushed past as if unconscious, and never showed
  3081. again. Probably he followed the principal.
  3082. The sight of the geishas set the room immediately in a buzz and it
  3083. became noisy as they all raised howls of welcome. Some started the game
  3084. of "nanko" with a force that beat the sword-drawing practice. Others
  3085. began playing morra, and the way they shook their hands, intently
  3086. absorbed in the game, was a better spectacle than a puppet show.
  3087. One in the corner was calling "Hey, serve me here," but shaking the
  3088. bottle, corrected it to "Hey, fetch me more sake." The whole room
  3089. became so infernally noisy that I could scarcely stand it. Amid this
  3090. orgy, one, like a fish out of water, sat down with his head bowed. It
  3091. was Hubbard Squash. The reason they have held this farewell dinner
  3092. party was not in order to bid him a farewell, but because they wanted
  3093. to have a jolly good time for themselves with John Barleycorn. He had
  3094. come to suffer only. Such a dinner party would have been better had it
  3095. not been started at all.
  3096. After a while, they began singing ditties in outlandish voices. One of
  3097. the geishas came in front of me, and taking up a samisen, asked me to
  3098. sing something. I told her I didn't sing, but I'd like to hear, and she
  3099. droned out:
  3100. "If one can go round and meet the one he wants, banging gongs and drums
  3101. ...... bang, bang, bang, bang, bing, shouting after wandering Santaro,
  3102. there is some one I'd like to meet by banging round gongs and drums
  3103. ...... bang, bang, bang, bang, b-i-n-g."
  3104. She dashed this off in two breaths, and sighed, "O, dear!" She should
  3105. have sung something easier.
  3106. Clown who had come near us meanwhile, remarked in his flippant tone:
  3107. "Hello, dear Miss Su-chan, too bad to see your beau go away so soon."
  3108. The geisha pouted, "I don't know." Clown, regardless, began imitating
  3109. "gidayu" with a dismal voice,--"What a luck, when she met her sweet
  3110. heart by a rare chance...."
  3111. The geisha slapped the lap of Clown with a "Cut that out," and Clown
  3112. gleefully laughed. This geisha is the one who made goo-goo eyes[J] at
  3113. Red Shirt. What a simpleton, to be pleased by the slap of a geisha, this
  3114. Clown. He said:
  3115. "Say, Su-chan, strike up the string. I'm going to dance the Kiino-kuni."
  3116. He seemed yet to dance.
  3117. On other side of the room, the old man of Confucius, twisting round his
  3118. toothless mouth, had finished as far as "...... dear Dembei-san" and is
  3119. asking a geisha who sat in front of him to couch him for the rest. Old
  3120. people seem to need polishing up their memorizing system. One geisha is
  3121. talking to the teacher of natural history:
  3122. "Here's the latest. I'll sing it. Just listen. 'Margaret, the
  3123. high-collared head with a white ribbon; she rides on a bike, plays a
  3124. violin, and talks in broken English,--I am glad to see you.'" Natural
  3125. history appears impressed, and says;
  3126. "That's an interesting piece. English in it too."
  3127. Porcupine called "geisha, geisha," in a loud voice, and commanded; "Bang
  3128. your samisen; I'm going to dance a sword-dance."
  3129. His manner was so rough that the geishas were startled and did not
  3130. answer. Porcupine, unconcerned, brought out a cane, and began performing
  3131. the sword-dance in the center of the room. Then Clown, having danced the
  3132. Kii-no-kuni, the Kap-pore[K] and the Durhma-san on the Shelf, almost
  3133. stark-naked, with a palm-fibre broom, began turkey-trotting about the
  3134. room, shouting "The Sino-Japanese negotiations came to a break......."
  3135. The whole was a crazy sight.
  3136. I had been feeling sorry for Hubbard Squash, who up to this time had sat
  3137. up straight in his full dress. Even were this a farewell dinner held in
  3138. his honor, I thought he was under no obligation to look patiently in a
  3139. formal dress at the naked dance. So I went to him and persuaded him with
  3140. "Say, Koga-san, let's go home." Hubbard Squash said the dinner was in
  3141. his honor, and it would be improper for him to leave the room before the
  3142. guests. He seemed to be determined to remain.
  3143. "What do you care!" I said, "If this is a farewell dinner, make it like
  3144. one. Look at those fellows; they're just like the inmates of a lunatic
  3145. asylum. Let's go."
  3146. And having forced hesitating Hubbard Squash to his feet, we were
  3147. just leaving the room, when Clown, marching past, brandishing the
  3148. broom, saw us.
  3149. "This won't do for the guest of honor to leave before us," he hollered,
  3150. "this is the Sino-Japanese negotiations. Can't let you off." He enforced
  3151. his declaration by holding the broom across our way. My temper had been
  3152. pretty well aroused for some time, and I felt impatient.
  3153. "The Sino-Japanese negotiation, eh? Then you're a Chink," and I whacked
  3154. his head with a knotty fist.
  3155. This sudden blow left Clown staring blankly speechless for a second or
  3156. two; then he stammered out:
  3157. "This is going some! Mighty pity to knock my head. What a blow on this
  3158. Yoshikawa! This makes the Sino-Japanese negotiations the sure stuff."
  3159. While Clown was mumbling these incoherent remarks, Porcupine, believing
  3160. some kind of row had been started, ceased his sword-dance and came
  3161. running toward us. On seeing us, he grabbed the neck of Clown and
  3162. pulled him back.
  3163. "The Sino-Japane......ouch!......ouch! This is outrageous," and Clown
  3164. writhed under the grip of Porcupine who twisted him sideways and threw
  3165. him down on the floor with a bang. I do not know the rest. I parted from
  3166. Hubbard Squash on the way, and it was past eleven when I returned home.
  3167. CHAPTER X.
  3168. The town is going to celebrate a Japanese victory to-day, and there is
  3169. no school. The celebration is to be held at the parade ground, and
  3170. Badger is to take out all the students and attend the ceremony. As one
  3171. of the instructors, I am to go with them. The streets are everywhere
  3172. draped with flapping national flags almost enough to dazzle the eyes.
  3173. There were as many as eight hundred students in all, and it was
  3174. arranged, under the direction of the teacher of physical culture to
  3175. divide them into sections with one teacher or two to lead them. The
  3176. arrangement itself was quite commendable, but in its actual operation
  3177. the whole thing went wrong. All students are mere kiddies who, ever too
  3178. fresh, regard it as beneath their dignity not to break all regulations.
  3179. This rendered the provision of teachers among them practically useless.
  3180. They would start marching songs without being told to, and if they
  3181. ceased the marching songs, they would raise devilish shouts without
  3182. cause. Their behavior would have done credit to the gang of tramps
  3183. parading the streets demanding work. When they neither sing nor shout,
  3184. they tee-hee and giggle. Why they cannot walk without these disorder,
  3185. passes my understanding, but all Japanese are born with their mouths
  3186. stuck out, and no kick will ever be strong enough to stop it. Their
  3187. chatter is not only of simple nature, but about the teachers when their
  3188. back is turned. What a degraded bunch! I made the students apologize to
  3189. me on the dormitory affair, and considered the incident closed. But I
  3190. was mistaken. To borrow the words of the old lady in the boarding house,
  3191. I was surely wrong Mr. Wright. The apology they offered was not prompted
  3192. by repentance in their hearts. They had kowtowed as a matter of form by
  3193. the command of the principal. Like the tradespeople who bow their heads
  3194. low but never give up cheating the public, the students apologize but
  3195. never stop their mischiefs. Society is made up, I think it probable, of
  3196. people just like those students. One may be branded foolishly honest if
  3197. he takes seriously the apologies others might offer. We should regard
  3198. all apologies a sham and forgiving also as a sham; then everything would
  3199. be all right. If one wants to make another apologize from his heart, he
  3200. has to pound him good and strong until he begs for mercy from his heart.
  3201. As I walked along between the sections, I could hear constantly the
  3202. voices mentioning "tempura" or "dango." And as there were so many of
  3203. them, I could not tell which one mentioned it. Even if I succeeded in
  3204. collaring the guilty one I was sure of his saying, "No, I didn't mean
  3205. you in saying tempura or dango. I fear you suffer from nervousness and
  3206. make wrong inferences." This dastardly spirit has been fostered from the
  3207. time of the feudal lords, and is deep-rooted. No amount of teaching or
  3208. lecturing will cure it. If I stay in a town like this for one year or
  3209. so, I may be compelled to follow their example, who knows,--clean and
  3210. honest though I have been. I do not propose to make a fool of myself by
  3211. remaining quiet when others attempt to play games on me, with all their
  3212. excuses ready-made. They are men and so am I--students or kiddies or
  3213. whatever they may be. They are bigger than I, and unless I get even with
  3214. them by punishment, I would cut a sorry figure. But in the attempt to
  3215. get even, if I resort to ordinary means, they are sure to make it a
  3216. boomerang. If I tell them, "You're wrong," they will start an eloquent
  3217. defence, because they are never short of the means of sidestepping.
  3218. Having defended themselves, and made themselves appear suffering
  3219. martyrs, they would begin attacking me. As the incident would have been
  3220. started by my attempting to get even with them, my defence would not be
  3221. a defence until I can prove their wrong. So the quarrel, which they had
  3222. started, might be mistaken, after all, as one begun by me. But the more
  3223. I keep silent the more they would become insolent, which, speaking
  3224. seriously, could not be permitted for the sake of public morale. In
  3225. consequence, I am obliged to adopt an identical policy so they cannot
  3226. catch men in playing it back on them. If the situation comes to that, it
  3227. would be the last day of the Yedo kid. Even so, if I am to be subjected
  3228. to these pin-pricking[L] tricks, I am a man and got to risk losing off
  3229. the last remnant of the honor of the Yedo kid. I became more convinced
  3230. of the advisability of returning to Tokyo quickly and living with Kiyo.
  3231. To live long in such a countrytown would be like degrading myself for a
  3232. purpose. Newspaper delivering would be preferable to being degraded so
  3233. far as that.
  3234. I walked along with a sinking heart, thinking like this, when the head
  3235. of our procession became suddenly noisy, and the whole came to a full
  3236. stop. I thought something has happened, stepped to the right out of the
  3237. ranks, and looked toward the direction of the noise. There on the corner
  3238. of Otemachi, turning to Yakushimachi, I saw a mass packed full like
  3239. canned sardines, alternately pushing back and forth. The teacher of
  3240. physical culture came down the line hoarsely shouting to all to be
  3241. quiet. I asked him what was the matter, and he said the middle school
  3242. and the normal had come to a clash at the corner.
  3243. The middle school and the normal, I understood, are as much friendly as
  3244. dogs and monkeys. It is not explained why but their temper was
  3245. hopelessly crossed, and each would try to knock the chip off the
  3246. shoulder of the other on all occasions. I presume they quarrel so much
  3247. because life gets monotonous in this backwoods town. I am fond of
  3248. fighting, and hearing of the clash, darted forward to make the most of
  3249. the fun. Those foremost in the line are jeering, "Get out of the way,
  3250. you country tax!"[12] while those in the rear are hollowing "Push them
  3251. out!" I passed through the students, and was nearing the corner, when I
  3252. heard a sharp command of "Forward!" and the line of the normal school
  3253. began marching on. The clash which had resulted from contending for the
  3254. right of way was settled, but it was settled by the middle school giving
  3255. way to the normal. From the point of school-standing the normal is said
  3256. to rank above the middle.
  3257. [Footnote 12: The normal school in the province maintains the students
  3258. mostly on the advance-expense system, supported by the country tax.]
  3259. The ceremony was quite simple. The commander of the local brigade read a
  3260. congratulatory address, and so did the governor, and the audience
  3261. shouted banzais. That was all. The entertainments were scheduled for the
  3262. afternoon, and I returned home once and started writing to Kiyo an
  3263. answer which had been in my mind for some days. Her request had been
  3264. that I should write her a letter with more detailed news; so I must get
  3265. it done with care. But as I took up the rolled letter-paper, I did not
  3266. know with what I should begin, though I have many things to write about.
  3267. Should I begin with that? That is too much trouble. Or with this? It is
  3268. not interesting. Isn't there something which will come out smoothly, I
  3269. reflected, without taxing my head too much, and which will interest
  3270. Kiyo. There seemed, however, no such item as I wanted I grated the
  3271. ink-cake, wetted the writing brush, stared at the letter-paper--stared
  3272. at the letter-paper, wetted the writing brush, grated the ink-cake--and,
  3273. having repeated the same thing several times, I gave up the letter
  3274. writing as not in my line, and covered the lid of the stationery box. To
  3275. write a letter was a bother. It would be much simpler to go back to
  3276. Tokyo and see Kiyo. Not that I am unconcerned about the anxiety of Kiyo,
  3277. but to get up a letter to please the fancy of Kiyo is a harder job than
  3278. to fast for three weeks.
  3279. I threw down the brush and letter-paper, and lying down with my bent
  3280. arms as a pillow, gazed at the garden. But the thought of the letter to
  3281. Kiyo would come back in my mind. Then I thought this way; If I am
  3282. thinking of her from my heart, even at such a distance, my sincerity
  3283. would find responsive appreciation in Kiyo. If it does find response,
  3284. there is no need of sending letters. She will regard the absence of
  3285. letters from me as a sign of my being in good health. If I write in case
  3286. of illness or when something unusual happens, that will be sufficient.
  3287. The garden is about thirty feet square, with no particular plants worthy
  3288. of name. There is one orange tree which is so tall as to be seen above
  3289. the board fence from outside. Whenever I returned from the school I used
  3290. to look at this orange tree. For to those who had not been outside of
  3291. Tokyo, oranges on the tree are rather a novel sight. Those oranges now
  3292. green will ripen by degrees and turn to yellow, when the tree would
  3293. surely be beautiful. There are some already ripened. The old lady told
  3294. me that they are juicy, sweet oranges. "They will all soon be ripe, and
  3295. then help yourself to all you want," she said. I think I will enjoy a
  3296. few every day. They will be just right in about three weeks. I do not
  3297. think I will have to leave the town in so short a time as three weeks.
  3298. While my attention was centered on the oranges, Porcupine[M] came in.
  3299. "Say, to-day being the celebration[N] of victory, I thought I would get
  3300. something good to eat with you, and bought some beef."
  3301. So saying, he took out a package covered with a bamboo-wrapper, and
  3302. threw it down in the center of the room. I had been denied the pleasure
  3303. of patronizing the noodle house or dango shop, on top of getting sick of
  3304. the sweet potatoes and tofu, and I welcomed the suggestion with "That's
  3305. fine," and began cooking it with a frying pan and some sugar borrowed
  3306. from the old lady.
  3307. Porcupine, munching the beef to the full capacity of his mouth, asked me
  3308. if I knew Red Shirt having a favorite geisha. I asked if that was not
  3309. one of the geishas who came to our dinner the other night, and he
  3310. answered, "Yes, I got the wind of the fact only recently; you're sharp."
  3311. "Red Shirt always speaks of refinement of character or of mental
  3312. consolation, but he is making a fool of himself by chasing round a
  3313. geisha. What a dandy rogue. We might let that go if he wouldn't make
  3314. fuss about others making fools of themselves. I understand through the
  3315. principal he stopped your going even to noodle houses or dango shops as
  3316. unbecoming to the dignity of the school, didn't he?"
  3317. "According to his idea, running after a geisha is a mental consolation
  3318. but tempura or dango is a material pleasure, I guess. If that's mental
  3319. consolation, why doesn't the fool do it above board? You ought to see
  3320. the jacknape skipping out of the room when the geisha came into it the
  3321. other night,--I don't like his trying to deceive us, but if one were to
  3322. point it out for him, he would deny it or say it was the Russian
  3323. literature or that the haiku is a half-brother of the new poetry, and
  3324. expect to hush it up by twaddling soft nonsense. A weak-knee like him is
  3325. not a man. I believe he lived the life of a court-maid in former life.
  3326. Perhaps his daddy might have been a kagema at Yushima in old days."
  3327. "What is a kagema?"
  3328. "I suppose something very unmanly,--sort of emasculated chaps. Say, that
  3329. part isn't cooked enough. It might give you tape worm."
  3330. "So? I think it's all right. And, say, Red Shirt is said to frequent
  3331. Kadoya at the springs town and meet his geisha there, but he keeps
  3332. it in dark."
  3333. "Kadoya? That hotel?"
  3334. "Also a restaurant. So we've got to catch him there with his geisha and
  3335. make it hot for him right to his face."
  3336. "Catch him there? Suppose we begin a kind of night watch?"
  3337. "Yes, you know there is a rooming house called Masuya in front of
  3338. Kadoya. We'll rent one room upstairs of the house, and keep peeping
  3339. through a loophole we could make in the shoji."
  3340. "Will he come when we keep peeping at him?"
  3341. "He may. We will have to do it more than one night. Must expect to keep
  3342. it up for at least two weeks."
  3343. "Say, that would make one pretty well tired, I tell you. I sat up every
  3344. night for about one week attending my father when he died, and it left
  3345. me thoroughly down and out for some time afterward."
  3346. "I don't care if I do get tired some. A crook like Red Shirt should not
  3347. go unpunished that way for the honor of Japan, and I am going to
  3348. administer a chastisement in behalf of heaven."
  3349. "Hooray! If things are decided upon that way, I am game. And we are
  3350. going to start from to-night?"
  3351. "I haven't rented a room at Masuya yet, so can't start it to-night."
  3352. "Then when?"
  3353. "Will start before long. I'll let you know, and want you help me."
  3354. "Right-O. I will help you any time. I am not much myself at scheming,
  3355. but I am IT when it comes to fighting."
  3356. While Porcupine and I were discussing the plan of subjugating Red Shirt,
  3357. the old lady appeared at the door, announcing that a student was wanting
  3358. to see Professor Hotta. The student had gone to his house, but seeing
  3359. him out, had come here as probable to find him. Porcupine went to the
  3360. front door himself, and returning to the room after a while, said:
  3361. "Say, the boy came to invite us to go and see the entertainment of the
  3362. celebration. He says there is a big bunch of dancers from Kochi to dance
  3363. something, and it would be a long time before we could see the like of
  3364. it again. Let's go."
  3365. Porcupine seemed enthusiastic over the prospect of seeing that dance,
  3366. and induced me to go with him. I have seen many kinds of dance in Tokyo.
  3367. At the annual festival of the Hachiman Shrine, moving stages come around
  3368. the district, and I have seen the Shiokukmi and almost any other
  3369. variety. I was little inclined to see that dance by the sturdy fellows
  3370. from Tosa province, but as Porcupine was so insistent, I changed my mind
  3371. and followed him out. I did not know the student who came to invite
  3372. Porcupine, but found he was the younger brother of Red Shirt. Of all
  3373. students, what a strange choice for a messenger!
  3374. The celebration ground was decorated, like the wrestling amphitheater at
  3375. Ryogoku during the season, or the annual festivity of the Hommonji
  3376. temple, with long banners planted here and there, and on the ropes that
  3377. crossed and recrossed in the mid-air were strung the colors of all
  3378. nations, as if they were borrowed from as many nations for the occasion
  3379. and the large roof presented unusually cheerful aspect. On the eastern
  3380. corner there was built a temporary stage upon which the dance of Koehi
  3381. was to be performed. For about half a block, with the stage on the
  3382. right, there was a display of flowers and plant settings arranged on
  3383. shelves sheltered with reed screens. Everybody was looking at the
  3384. display seemingly much impressed, but it failed to impress me. If
  3385. twisted grasses or bamboos afforded so much pleasure, the gallantry of a
  3386. hunchback or the husband of a wrong pair should give as much pleasure to
  3387. their eyes.
  3388. In the opposite direction, aerial bombs and fire works were steadily
  3389. going on. A balloon shot out on which was written "Long Live the
  3390. Empire!" It floated leisurely over the pine trees near the castle
  3391. tower, and fell down inside the compound of the barracks. Bang! A black
  3392. ball shot up against the serene autumn sky; burst open straight above
  3393. my head, streams of luminous green smoke ran down in an umbrella-shape,
  3394. and finally faded. Then another balloon. It was red with "Long Live the
  3395. Army and Navy" in white. The wind slowly carried it from the town
  3396. toward the Aioi village. Probably it would fall into the yard of Kwanon
  3397. temple there.
  3398. At the formal celebration this morning there were not quite so many as
  3399. here now. It was surging mass that made me wonder how so many people
  3400. lived in the place. There were not many attractive faces among the
  3401. crowd, but as far as the numerical strength went, it was a formidable
  3402. one. In the meantime that dance had begun. I took it for granted that
  3403. since they call it a dance, it would be something similar to the kind of
  3404. dance by the Fujita troupe, but I was greatly mistaken.
  3405. Thirty fellows, dressed up in a martial style, in three rows of ten
  3406. each, stood with glittering drawn swords. The sight was an eye-opener,
  3407. indeed. The space between the rows measured about two feet, and that
  3408. between the men might have been even less. One stood apart from the
  3409. group. He was similarly dressed but instead of a drawn sword, he carried
  3410. a drum hung about his chest. This fellow drawled out signals the tone of
  3411. which suggested a mighty easy-life, and then croaking a strange song, he
  3412. would strike the drum. The tune was outlandishly unfamiliar. One might
  3413. form the idea by thinking it a combination of the Mikawa Banzai and the
  3414. Fudarakuya.
  3415. The song was drowsy, and like syrup in summer is dangling and slovenly.
  3416. He struck the drum to make stops at certain intervals. The tune was kept
  3417. with regular rhythmical order, though it appeared to have neither head
  3418. nor tail. In response to this tune, the thirty drawn swords flash, with
  3419. such dexterity and speed that the sight made the spectator almost
  3420. shudder. With live men within two feet of their position, the sharp
  3421. drawn blades, each flashing them in the same manner, they looked as if
  3422. they might make a bloody mess unless they were perfectly accurate in
  3423. their movements. If it had been brandishing swords alone without moving
  3424. themselves, the chances of getting slashed or cut might have been less,
  3425. but sometimes they would turn sideways together, or clear around, or
  3426. bend their knees. Just one second's difference in the movement, either
  3427. too quick or too late, on the part of the next fellow, might have meant
  3428. sloughing off a nose or slicing off the head of the next fellow. The
  3429. drawn swords moved in perfect freedom, but the sphere of action was
  3430. limited to about two feet square, and to cap it all, each had to keep
  3431. moving with those in front and back, at right and left, in the same
  3432. direction at the same speed. This beats me! The dance of the Shiokumi or
  3433. the Sekinoto would make no show compared with this! I heard them say the
  3434. dance requires much training, and it could not be an easy matter to make
  3435. so many dancers move in a unison like this. Particularly difficult part
  3436. in the dance was that of the fellow with drum stuck to his chest. The
  3437. movement of feet, action of hands, or bending of knees of those thirty
  3438. fellows were entirely directed by the tune with which he kept them
  3439. going. To the spectators this fellow's part appeared the easiest. He
  3440. sang in a lazy tune, but it was strange that he was the fellow who takes
  3441. the heaviest responsibility.
  3442. While Porcupine and I, deeply impressed, were looking at the dance with
  3443. absorbing interest, a sudden hue and cry was raised about half a block
  3444. off. A commotion was started among those who had been quietly enjoying
  3445. the sights and all ran pell-mell in every direction. Some one was heard
  3446. saying "fight!" Then the younger brother of Red Shirt came running
  3447. forward through the crowd.
  3448. "Please, Sir," he panted, "a row again! The middles are going to get
  3449. even with the normals and have just begun fighting. Come quick, Sir!"
  3450. And he melted somewhere into the crowd.
  3451. "What troublesome brats! So they're at it again, eh? Why can't
  3452. they stop it!"
  3453. Porcupine, as he spoke, dashed forward, dodging among the running crowd.
  3454. He meant, I think, to stop the fight, because he could not be an idle
  3455. spectator once he was informed of the fact. I of course had no intention
  3456. of turning tail, and hastened on the heels of Porcupine. The fight was
  3457. in its fiercest. There were about fifty to sixty normals, and the
  3458. middles numbered by some ninety. The normals wore uniform, but the
  3459. middles had discarded their uniform and put on Japanese civilian
  3460. clothes, which made the distinction between the two hostile camps easy.
  3461. But they were so mixed up, and wrangling with such violence, that we did
  3462. not know how and where we could separate them.
  3463. Porcupine, apparently at a loss what to do, looked at the wild scene
  3464. awhile, then turned to me, saying:
  3465. "Let's jump in and separate them. It will be hell if cops get on them."
  3466. I did not answer, but rushed to the spot where the scuffle appeared
  3467. most violent.
  3468. "Stop there! Cut this out! You're ruining the name of the school! Stop
  3469. this, dash you!"
  3470. Shouting at the top of my voice, I attempted to penetrate the line which
  3471. seemed to separate the hostile sides, but this attempt did not succeed.
  3472. When about ten feet into the turmoil, I could neither advance nor
  3473. retreat. Right in my front, a comparatively large normal was grappling
  3474. with a middle about sixteen years of ago.
  3475. "Stop that!"
  3476. I grabbed the shoulder of the normal and tried to force them apart when
  3477. some one whacked my feet. On this sudden attack, I let go the normal and
  3478. fell down sideways. Some one stepped on my back with heavy shoes. With
  3479. both hands and knees upon the ground, I jumped up and the fellow on my
  3480. back rolled off to my right. I got up, and saw the big body of Porcupine
  3481. about twenty feet away, sandwiched between the students, being pushed
  3482. back and forth, shouting, "Stop the fight! Stop that!"
  3483. "Say, we can't do anything!" I hollered at him, but unable to hear, I
  3484. think, he did not answer.
  3485. A pebble-stone whiffled through the air and hit squarely on my cheek
  3486. bone; the same moment some one banged my back with a heavy stick
  3487. from behind.
  3488. "Profs mixing in!" "Knock them down!" was shouted.
  3489. "Two of them; big one and small. Throw stones at them!" Another shout.
  3490. "Drat you fresh jackanapes!" I cried as I wallopped the head of a normal
  3491. nearby. Another stone grazed my head, and passed behind me. I did not
  3492. know what had become of Porcupine, I could not find him. Well, I could
  3493. not help it but jumped into the teapot to stop the tempest. I wasn't[O]
  3494. a Hottentot to skulk away on being shot at with pebble-stones. What did
  3495. they think I was anyway! I've been through all kinds of fighting in
  3496. Tokyo, and can take in all fights one may care to give me. I slugged,
  3497. jabbed and banged the stuffing out of the fellow nearest to me. Then
  3498. some one cried, "Cops! Cops! Cheese it! Beat it!" At that moment, as if
  3499. wading through a pond of molasses, I could hardly move, but the next I
  3500. felt suddenly released and both sides scampered off simultaneously. Even
  3501. the country fellows do creditable work when it comes to retreating, more
  3502. masterly than General Kuropatkin, I might say.
  3503. I searched for Porcupine who, I found his overgown torn to shreds, was
  3504. wiping his nose. He bled considerably, and his nose having swollen was a
  3505. sight. My clothes were pretty well massed with dirt, but I had not
  3506. suffered quite as much damage as Porcupine. I felt pain in my cheek and
  3507. as Porcupine said, it bled some.
  3508. About sixteen police officers arrived at the scene but, all the students
  3509. having beat it in opposite directions, all they were able to catch were
  3510. Porcupine and me. We gave them our names and explained the whole story.
  3511. The officers requested us to follow them to the police station which we
  3512. did, and after stating to the chief of police what had happened, we
  3513. returned home.
  3514. CHAPTER XI.
  3515. The next morning on awakening I felt pains all over my body, due, I
  3516. thought, to having had no fight for a long time. This is not creditable
  3517. to my fame as regards fighting, so I thought while in bed, when the old
  3518. lady brought me a copy of the Shikoku Shimbun. I felt so weak as to need
  3519. some effort even reaching for the paper. But what should be man so
  3520. easily upset by such a trifling affair,--so I forced myself to turn in
  3521. bed, and, opening its second page, I was surprised. There was the whole
  3522. story of the fight of yesterday in print. Not that I was surprised by
  3523. the news of the fight having been published, but it said that one
  3524. teacher Hotta of the Middle School and one certain saucy Somebody,
  3525. recently from Tokyo, of the same institution, not only started this
  3526. trouble by inciting the students, but were actually present at the scene
  3527. of the trouble, directing the students and engaged themselves against
  3528. the students of the Normal School. On top of this, something of the
  3529. following effect was added.
  3530. "The Middle School in this prefecture has been an object of admiration
  3531. by all other schools for its good and ideal behavior. But since this
  3532. long-cherished honor has been sullied by these two irresponsible
  3533. persons, and this city made to suffer the consequent indignity, we have
  3534. to bring the perpetrators to full account. We trust that before we take
  3535. any step in this matter, the authorities will have those 'toughs'
  3536. properly punished, barring them forever from our educational circles."
  3537. All the types were italicized, as if they meant to administer
  3538. typographical chastisement upon us. "What the devil do I care!" I
  3539. shouted, and up I jumped out of bed. Strange to say, the pain in my
  3540. joints became tolerable.
  3541. I rolled up the newspaper and threw it into the garden. Not satisfied, I
  3542. took that paper to the cesspool and dumped it there. Newspapers tell
  3543. such reckless lies. There is nothing so adept, I believe, as the
  3544. newspaper in circulating lies. It has said what I should have said. And
  3545. what does it mean by "one saucy Somebody who is recently from Tokyo?" Is
  3546. there any one in this wide world with the name of Somebody? Don't
  3547. forget, I have a family and personal name of my own which I am proud of.
  3548. If they want to look at my family-record, they will bow before every one
  3549. of my ancestors from Mitsunaka Tada down. Having washed my face, my
  3550. cheek began suddenly smarting. I asked the old lady for a mirror, and
  3551. she asked if I had read the paper of this morning. "Yes," I said, "and
  3552. dumped it in the cesspool; go and pick it up if you want it,"--and she
  3553. withdrew with a startled look. Looking in the mirror, I saw bruises on
  3554. my cheek. Mine is a precious face to me. I get my face bruised, and am
  3555. called a saucy Somebody as if I were nobody. That is enough.
  3556. It will be a reflection on my honor to the end of my days if it is said
  3557. that I shunned the public gaze and kept out of the school on account of
  3558. the write-up in the paper. So, after the breakfast, I attended the
  3559. school ahead of all. One after the other, all coming to the school would
  3560. grin at my face. What is there to laugh about! This face is my own,
  3561. gotten up, I am sure, without the least obligation on their part. By and
  3562. by, Clown appeared.
  3563. "Ha, heroic action yesterday. Wounds of honor, eh?"
  3564. He made this sarcastic remark, I suppose, in revenge for the knock he
  3565. received on his head from me at the farewell dinner.
  3566. "Cut out nonsense; you get back there and suck your old drawing
  3567. brushes!" Then he answered "that was going some," and enquired if it
  3568. pained much?
  3569. "Pain or no pain, this is my face. That's none of your business," I
  3570. snapped back in a furious temper. Then Clown took his seat on the other
  3571. side, and still keeping his eye on me, whispered and laughed with the
  3572. teacher of history next to him.
  3573. Then came Porcupine. His nose had swollen and was purple,--it was a
  3574. tempting object for a surgeon's knife. His face showed far worse (is it
  3575. my conceit that make this comparison?) than mine. I and Porcupine are
  3576. chums with desks next to each other, and moreover, as ill-luck would
  3577. have it, the desks are placed right facing the door. Thus were two
  3578. strange faces placed together. The other fellows, when in want of
  3579. something to divert them, would gaze our way with regularity. They say
  3580. "too bad," but they are surely laughing in their minds as "ha, these
  3581. fools!" If that is not so, there is no reason for their whispering
  3582. together and grinning like that. In the class room, the boys clapped
  3583. their hands when I entered; two or three of them banzaied. I could not
  3584. tell whether it was an enthusiastic approval or open insult. While I and
  3585. Porcupine were thus being made the cynosures of the whole school, Red
  3586. Shirt came to me as usual.
  3587. "Too bad, my friend; I am very sorry indeed for you gentlemen," he said
  3588. in a semi-apologetic manner. "I've talked with the principal in regard
  3589. to the story in the paper, and have arranged to demand that the paper
  3590. retract the report, so you needn't worry on that score. You were plunged
  3591. into the trouble because my brother invited Mr. Hotta, and I don't know
  3592. how I can apologize you! I'm going to do my level best in this matter;
  3593. you gentlemen please depend on that." At the third hour recess the
  3594. principal came out of his room, and seemed more or less perturbed,
  3595. saying, "The paper made a bad mess of it, didn't it? I hope the matter
  3596. will not become serious."
  3597. As to anxiety, I have none. If they propose to relieve me, I intend
  3598. to tender my resignation before I get fired,--that's all. However, if
  3599. I resign with no fault on my part, I would be simply giving the paper
  3600. advantage. I thought it proper to make the paper take back what it
  3601. had said, and stick to my position. I was going to the newspaper
  3602. office to give them a piece of my mind on my way back but having been
  3603. told that the school had already taken steps to have the story
  3604. retracted, I did not.
  3605. Porcupine and I saw the principal and Red Shirt at a convenient hour,
  3606. giving them a faithful version of the incident. The principal and Red
  3607. Shirt agreed that the incident must have been as we said and that the
  3608. paper bore some grudge against the school and purposely published such a
  3609. story. Red Shirt made a round of personal visits on each teacher in the
  3610. room, defending and explaining our action in the affair. Particularly he
  3611. dwelt upon the fact that his brother invited Porcupine and it was his
  3612. fault. All teachers denounced the paper as infamous and agreed that we
  3613. two deserved sympathy.
  3614. On our way home, Porcupine warned me that Red Shirt smelt suspicious,
  3615. and we would be done unless we looked out. I said he had been smelling
  3616. some anyway,--it was not necessarily so just from to-day. Then he said
  3617. that it was his trick to have us invited and mixed in the fight
  3618. yesterday,--"Aren't you on to that yet?" Well, I was not. Porcupine was
  3619. quite a Grobian but he was endowed, I was impressed, with a better
  3620. brain than I.
  3621. "He made us mix into the trouble, and slipped behind and contrived to
  3622. have the paper publish the story. What a devil!"
  3623. "Even the newspaper in the band wagon of Red Shirt? That surprises me.
  3624. But would the paper listen to Red Shirt so easily?"
  3625. "Wouldn't it, though. Darn easy thing if one has friends in the
  3626. paper."[P]
  3627. "Has he any?"
  3628. "Suppose he hasn't, still that's easy. Just tell lies and say such and
  3629. such are facts, and the paper will take it up."
  3630. "A startling revelation, this. If that was really a trick of Red Shirt,
  3631. we're likely to be discharged on account of this affair."
  3632. "Quite likely we may be discharged."
  3633. "Then I'll tender my resignation tomorrow, and back to Tokyo I go. I am
  3634. sick of staying in such a wretched hole."
  3635. "Your resignation wouldn't make Red Shirt squeal."
  3636. "That's so. How can he be made to squeal?"
  3637. "A wily guy like him always plots not to leave any trace behind, and it
  3638. would be difficult to follow his track."
  3639. "What a bore! Then we have to stand in a false light, eh? Damn it! I
  3640. call all kinds of god to witness if this is just and right!"
  3641. "Let's wait for two or three days and see how it turns out. And if
  3642. we can't do anything else, we will have to catch him at the hot
  3643. springs town."
  3644. "Leaving this fight affair a separate case?"
  3645. "Yes. We'll have to his hit weak spot with our own weapon."
  3646. "That may be good. I haven't much to say in planning it out; I leave it
  3647. to you and will do anything at your bidding."
  3648. I parted from Porcupine then. If Red Shirt was really instrumental in
  3649. bringing us two into the trouble as Porcupine supposed, he certainly
  3650. deserves to be called down. Red Shirt outranks us in brainy work. And
  3651. there is no other course open but to appeal to physical force. No wonder
  3652. we never see the end of war in the world. Among individuals, it is,
  3653. after all, the question of superiority of the fist.
  3654. Next day I impatiently glanced over the paper, the arrival of which I
  3655. had been waiting with eagerness, but not a correction of the news or
  3656. even a line of retraction could be found. I pressed the matter on
  3657. Badger when I went to the school, and he said it might probably appear
  3658. tomorrow. On that "tomorrow" a line of retraction was printed in tiny
  3659. types. But the paper did not make any correction of the story. I called
  3660. the attention of Badger to the fact, and he replied that that was about
  3661. all that could be done under the circumstance. The principal, with the
  3662. face like a badger and always swaggering, is surprisingly, wanting in
  3663. influence. He has not even as much power as to bring down a country
  3664. newspaper, which had printed a false story. I was so thoroughly
  3665. indignant that I declared I would go alone to the office and see the
  3666. editor-in-chief on the subject, but Badger said no.
  3667. "If you go there and have a blowup with the editor," he continued, "it
  3668. would only mean of your being handed out worse stuff in the paper again.
  3669. Whatever is published in a paper, right or wrong, nothing can be done
  3670. with it." And he wound up with a remark that sounded like a piece of
  3671. sermon by a Buddhist bonze that "We must be contented by speedily
  3672. despatching the matter from our minds and forgetting it."
  3673. If newspapers are of that character, it would be beneficial for us all
  3674. to have them suspended,--the sooner the better. The similarity of the
  3675. unpleasant sensation of being written-up in a paper and being
  3676. bitten-down by a turtle became plain for the first time by the
  3677. explanation of Badger.
  3678. About three days afterward, Porcupine came to me excited, and said that
  3679. the time has now come, that he proposes to execute that thing we had
  3680. planned out. Then I will do so, I said, and readily agreed to join him.
  3681. But Porcupine jerked his head, saying that I had better not. I asked him
  3682. why, and he asked if I had been requested by the principal to tender my
  3683. resignation. No, I said, and asked if he had. He told me that he was
  3684. called by the principal who was very, very sorry for him but under the
  3685. circumstance requested him to decide to resign.
  3686. "That isn't fair. Badger probably had been pounding his belly-drum too
  3687. much and his stomach is upside down," I said, "you and I went to the
  3688. celebration, looked at the glittering sword dance together, and jumped
  3689. into the fight together to stop it. Wasn't it so? If he wants you to
  3690. tender your resignation, he should be impartial and should have asked me
  3691. to also. What makes everything in the country school so dull-head. This
  3692. is irritating!"
  3693. "That's wire-pulling by Red Shirt," he said. "I and Red Shirt cannot go
  3694. along together, but they think you can be left as harmless."
  3695. "I wouldn't get along with that Red Shirt either. Consider me harmless,
  3696. eh? They're getting too gay with me."
  3697. "You're so simple and straight that they think they can handle you in
  3698. any old way."
  3699. "Worse still. I wouldn't get along with him, I tell you."
  3700. "Besides, since the departure of Koga, his successor has not arrived.
  3701. Furthermore, if they fire me and you together, there will be blank spots
  3702. in the schedule hours at the school."
  3703. "Then they expect me to play their game. Darn the fellow! See if they
  3704. can make me."
  3705. On going to the school next day I made straightway for the room of the
  3706. principal and started firing;
  3707. "Why don't you ask me to put in my resignation?" I said.
  3708. "Eh?" Badger stared blankly.
  3709. "You requested Hotta to resign, but not me. Is that right?"
  3710. "That is on account of the condition of the school......"
  3711. "That condition is wrong, I dare say. If I don't have to resign, there
  3712. should be no necessity for Hotta to resign either."
  3713. "I can't offer a detailed explanation about that......as to Hotta, it
  3714. cannot be helped if he goes...... ......we see no need of your
  3715. resigning."
  3716. Indeed, he is a badger. He jabbers something, dodging the point, but
  3717. appears complacent. So I had to say:
  3718. "Then, I will tender my resignation. You might have thought that I
  3719. would remain peacefully while Mr. Hotta is forced to resign, but I
  3720. cannot do it"
  3721. "That leaves us in a bad fix. If Hotta goes away and you follow him, we
  3722. can't teach mathematics here."
  3723. "None of my business if you can't."
  3724. "Say, don't be so selfish. You ought to consider the condition of the
  3725. school. Besides, if it is said that you resigned within one month of
  3726. starting a new job, it would affect your record in the future. You
  3727. should consider that point also."
  3728. "What do I care about my record. Obligation is more important
  3729. than record."
  3730. "That's right. What you say is right, but be good enough to take our
  3731. position into consideration. If you insist on resigning, then resign,
  3732. but please stay until we get some one to take your place. At any rate,
  3733. think the matter over once more, please."
  3734. The reason was so plain as to discourage any attempt to think it over,
  3735. but as I took some pity on Badger whose face reddened or paled
  3736. alternately as he spoke, I withdrew on the condition that I would think
  3737. the matter over. I did not talk with Red Shirt. If I have to land him
  3738. one, it was better, I thought, to have it bunched together and make it
  3739. hot and strong.
  3740. I acquainted Porcupine with the details of my meeting with Badger. He
  3741. said he had expected it to be about so, and added that the matter of
  3742. resignation can be left alone without causing me any embarrassment
  3743. until the time comes. So I followed his advice. Porcupine appears
  3744. somewhat smarter than I, and I have decided to accept whatever advices
  3745. he may give.
  3746. Porcupine finally tendered his resignation, and having bidden farewell
  3747. of all the fellow teachers, went down to Minato-ya on the beach. But he
  3748. stealthily returned to the hot springs town, and having rented a front
  3749. room upstairs of Masuya, started peeping through the hole he fingered
  3750. out in the shoji. I am the only person who knows of this. If Red Shirt
  3751. comes round, it would be night anyway, and as he is liable to be seen by
  3752. students or some others during the early part in the evening, it would
  3753. surely be after nine. For the first two nights, I was on the watch till
  3754. about 11 o'clock, but no sight of Red Shirt was seen. On the third
  3755. night, I kept peeping through from nine to ten thirty, but he did not
  3756. come. Nothing made me feel more like a fool than returning to the
  3757. boarding house at midnight after a fruitless watch. In four or five
  3758. days, our old lady began worrying about me and advised me to quit night
  3759. prowling,--being married. My night prowling is different from that kind
  3760. of night prowling. Mine is that of administering a deserved
  3761. chastisement. But then, when no encouragement is in sight after one
  3762. week, it becomes tiresome. I am quick tempered, and get at it with all
  3763. zeal when my interest is aroused, and would sit up all night to work it
  3764. out, but I have never shone in endurance. However loyal a member of the
  3765. heavenly-chastisement league I may be, I cannot escape monotony. On the
  3766. sixth night I was a little tired, and on the seventh thought I would
  3767. quit. Porcupine, however, stuck to it with bull-dog tenacity. From early
  3768. in the evening up to past twelve, he would glue his eye to the shoji and
  3769. keep steadily watching under the gas globe of Kadoya. He would surprise
  3770. me, when I come into the room, with figures showing how many patrons
  3771. there were to-day, how many stop-overs and how many women, etc. Red
  3772. Shirt seems never to be coming, I said, and he would fold his arms,
  3773. audibly sighing, "Well, he ought to." If Red Shirt would not come just
  3774. for once, Porcupine would be deprived of the chance of handing out a
  3775. deserved and just punishment.
  3776. I left my boarding house about 7 o'clock on the eighth night and after
  3777. having enjoyed my bath, I bought eight raw eggs. This would counteract
  3778. the attack of sweet potatoes by the old lady. I put the eggs into my
  3779. right and left pockets, four in each, with the same old red towel hung
  3780. over my shoulder, my hands inside my coat, went to Masuya. I opened the
  3781. shoji of the room and Porcupine greeted me with his Idaten-like face
  3782. suddenly radiant, saying:
  3783. "Say, there's hope! There's hope!" Up to last night, he had been
  3784. downcast, and even I felt gloomy. But at his cheerful countenance, I too
  3785. became cheerful, and before hearing anything, I cried, "Hooray! Hooray!"
  3786. "About half past seven this evening," he said, "that geisha named Kosuzu
  3787. has gone into Kadoya."
  3788. "With Red Shirt?"
  3789. "No."
  3790. "That's no good then."
  3791. "There were two geishas......seems to me somewhat hopeful."
  3792. "How?"
  3793. "How? Why, the sly old fox is likely to send his girls ahead[Q], and
  3794. sneak round behind later."
  3795. "That may be the case. About nine now, isn't it?"
  3796. "About twelve minutes past nine," said he, pulling out a watch with
  3797. a nickel case, "and, say put out the light. It would be funny to
  3798. have two silhouettes of bonze heads on the shoji. The fox is too
  3799. ready to suspect."
  3800. I blew out the lamp which stood upon the lacquer-enameled table. The
  3801. shoji alone was dimly plain by the star light. The moon has not come up
  3802. yet. I and Porcupine put our faces close to the shoji, watching almost
  3803. breathless. A wall clock somewhere rang half past nine.
  3804. "Say, will he come to-night, do you think? If he doesn't show up, I
  3805. quit."
  3806. "I'm going to keep this up while my money lasts."
  3807. "Money? How much have you?"
  3808. "I've paid five yen and sixty sen up to to-day for eight days. I pay my
  3809. bill every night, so I can jump out anytime."
  3810. "That's well arranged. The people of this hotel must have been rather
  3811. put out, I suppose."
  3812. "That's all right with the hotel; only I can't take my mind off
  3813. the house."
  3814. "But you take some sleep in daytime."
  3815. "Yes, I take a nap, but it's nuisance because I can't go out."
  3816. "Heavenly chastisement is a hard job, I'm sure," I said. "If he gives
  3817. us the slip after giving us such trouble, it would have been a
  3818. thankless task."
  3819. "Well, I'm sure he will come to-night...--... Look, look!" His voice
  3820. changed to whisper and I was alert in a moment. A fellow with a black
  3821. hat looked up at the gas light of Kadoya and passed on into the
  3822. darkness. No, it was not Red Shirt. Disappointing, this! Meanwhile the
  3823. clock at the office below merrily tinkled off ten. It seems to be
  3824. another bum watch to-night.
  3825. The streets everywhere had become quiet. The drum playing in the
  3826. tenderloin reached our ears distinctively. The moon had risen from
  3827. behind the hills of the hot springs. It is very light outside. Then
  3828. voices were heard below. We could not poke our heads out of the window,
  3829. so were unable to see the owners of the voices, but they were evidently
  3830. coming nearer. The dragging of komageta (a kind of wooden footwear) was
  3831. heard. They approached so near we could see their shadows.
  3832. "Everything is all right now. We've got rid of the stumbling block." It
  3833. was undoubtedly the voice of Clown.
  3834. "He only glories in bullying but has no tact." This from Red Shirt.
  3835. "He is like that young tough, isn't he? Why, as to that young tough, he
  3836. is a winsome, sporty Master Darling."
  3837. "I don't want my salary raised, he says, or I want to tender
  3838. resignation,--I'm sure something is wrong with his nerves."
  3839. I was greatly inclined to open the window, jump out of the second story
  3840. and make them see more stars than they cared to, but I restrained myself
  3841. with some effort. The two laughed, and passed below the gas light, and
  3842. into Kadoya.
  3843. "Say."
  3844. "Well."
  3845. "He's here."
  3846. "Yes, he has come at last."
  3847. "I feel quite easy now."
  3848. "Damned Clown called me a sporty Master Darling."
  3849. "The stumbling[R] block means me. Hell!"
  3850. I and Porcupine had to waylay them on their return. But we knew no more
  3851. than the man in the moon when they would come out. Porcupine went down
  3852. to the hotel office, notifying them to the probability of our going out
  3853. at midnight, and requesting them to leave the door unfastened so we
  3854. could get out anytime. As I think about it now, it is wonderful how the
  3855. hotel people complied with our request. In most cases, we would have
  3856. been taken for burglars.
  3857. It was trying to wait for the coming of Red Shirt, but it was still more
  3858. trying to wait for his coming out again. We could not go to sleep, nor
  3859. could we remain with our faces stuck to the shoji all the time our minds
  3860. constantly in a state of feverish agitation. In all my life, I never
  3861. passed such fretful, mortifying hours. I suggested that we had better go
  3862. right into his room and catch him but Porcupine rejected the proposal
  3863. outright. If we get in there at this time of night, we are likely to be
  3864. prevented from preceding much further, he said, and if we ask to see
  3865. him, they will either answer that he is not there or will take us into a
  3866. different room. Supposing we do break into a room, we cannot tell of all
  3867. those many rooms, where we can find him. There is no other way but to
  3868. wait for him to come out, however tiresome it may be. So we sat up till
  3869. five in the morning.
  3870. The moment we saw them emerging from Kadoya, I and Porcupine followed
  3871. them. It was some time before the first train started and they had to
  3872. walk up to town. Beyond the limit of the hot springs town, there is a
  3873. road for about one block running through the rice fields, both sides of
  3874. which are lined with cedar trees. Farther on are thatch-roofed farm
  3875. houses here and there, and then one comes upon a dyke leading straight
  3876. to the town through the fields. We can catch them anywhere outside the
  3877. town, but thinking it would be better to get them, if possible, on the
  3878. road lined with cedar trees where we may not be seen by others, we
  3879. followed them cautiously. Once out of the town limit, we darted on a
  3880. double-quick time, and caught up with them. Wondering what was coming
  3881. after them, they turned back, and we grabbed their shoulders. We cried,
  3882. "Wait!" Clown, greatly rattled, attempted to escape, but I stepped in
  3883. front of him to cut off his retreat.
  3884. "What makes one holding the job of a head teacher stay over night at
  3885. Kadoya!" Porcupine directly fired the opening gun.
  3886. "Is there any rule that a head teacher should not stay over night at
  3887. Kadoya?" Red Shirt met the attack in a polite manner. He looked a
  3888. little pale.
  3889. "Why the one who is so strict as to forbid others from going even to
  3890. noodle house or dango shop as unbecoming to instructors, stayed over
  3891. night at a hotel with a geisha!"
  3892. Clown was inclined to run at the first opportunity; so kept I
  3893. before him.
  3894. "What's that Master Darling of a young tough!" I roared.
  3895. "I didn't mean you. Sir. No, Sir, I didn't mean you, sure." He insisted
  3896. on this brazen excuse. I happened to notice at that moment that I had
  3897. held my pockets with both hands. The eggs in both pockets jerked so when
  3898. I ran, that I had been holding them, I thrust my hand into the pocket,
  3899. took out two and dashed them on the face of Clown. The eggs crushed, and
  3900. from the tip of his nose the yellow streamed down. Clown was taken
  3901. completely surprised, and uttering a hideous cry, he fell down on the
  3902. ground and begged for mercy. I had bought those eggs to eat, but had not
  3903. carried them for the purpose of making "Irish Confetti" of them.
  3904. Thoroughly roused, in the moment of passion, I had dashed them at him
  3905. before I knew what I was doing. But seeing Clown down and finding my
  3906. hand grenade successful, I banged the rest of the eggs on him,
  3907. intermingled with "Darn you, you sonovagun!" The face of Clown was
  3908. soaked in yellow.
  3909. While I was bombarding Clown with the eggs, Porcupine was firing at
  3910. Red[S] Shirt.
  3911. "Is there any evidence that I stayed there over night with a geisha?"
  3912. "I saw your favorite old chicken go there early in the evening, and am
  3913. telling you so. You can't fool me!"
  3914. "No need for us of fooling anybody. I stayed there with Mr. Yoshikawa,
  3915. and whether any geisha had gone there early in the evening or not,
  3916. that's none of my business."
  3917. "Shut up!" Porcupine wallopped him one. Red Shirt tottered.
  3918. "This is outrageous! It is rough to resort to force before deciding the
  3919. right or wrong of it!"
  3920. "Outrageous indeed!" Another clout. "Nothing but wallopping will be
  3921. effective on you scheming guys." The remark was followed by a shower
  3922. of blows. I soaked Clown at the same time, and made him think he saw
  3923. the way to the Kingdom-Come. Finally the two crawled and crouched at
  3924. the foot of a cedar tree, and either from inability to move or to
  3925. see, because their eyes had become hazy, they did not even attempt to
  3926. break away.
  3927. "Want more? If so, here goes some more!" With that we gave him more
  3928. until he cried enough. "Want more? You?" we turned to Clown, and he
  3929. answered "Enough, of course."
  3930. "This is the punishment of heaven on you grovelling wretches. Keep
  3931. this in your head and be more careful hereafter. You can never talk
  3932. down justice."
  3933. The two said nothing. They were so thoroughly cowed that they could
  3934. not speak.
  3935. "I'm going to neither, run away nor hide. You'll find me at Minato-ya on
  3936. the beach up to five this evening. Bring police officers or any old
  3937. thing you want," said Porcupine.
  3938. "I'm not going to run away or hide either. Will wait for you at the same
  3939. place with Hotta. Take the case to the police station if you like, or do
  3940. as you damn please," I said, and we two walked our own way.
  3941. It was a little before seven when I returned to my room. I started
  3942. packing as soon as I was in the room, and the astonished old lady asked
  3943. me what I was trying to do. I'm going to Tokyo to fetch my Madam, I
  3944. said, and paid my bill. I boarded a train and came to Minato-ya on the
  3945. beach and found Porcupine asleep upstairs. I thought of writing my
  3946. resignation, but not knowing how, just scribbled off that "because of
  3947. personal affairs, I have to resign and return, to Tokyo. Yours truly,"
  3948. and addressed and mailed it to the principal.
  3949. The steamer leaves the harbor at six in the evening. Porcupine and I,
  3950. tired out, slept like logs, and when we awoke it was two o'clock. We
  3951. asked the maid if the police had called on us, and she said no. Red
  3952. Shirt and Clown had not taken it to the police, eh? We laughed.
  3953. That night I and Porcupine left the town. The farther the vessel steamed
  3954. away from the shore, the more refreshed we felt. From Kobe to Tokyo we
  3955. boarded a through train and when we made Shimbashi, we breathed as if we
  3956. were once more in congenial human society. I parted from Porcupine at
  3957. the station, and have not had the chance of meeting him since.
  3958. I forgot to tell you about Kiyo. On my arrival at Tokyo, I rushed into
  3959. her house swinging my valise, before going to a hotel, with "Hello,
  3960. Kiyo, I'm back!"
  3961. "How good of you to return so soon!" she cried and hot tears streamed
  3962. down her cheeks. I was overjoyed, and declared that I would not go to
  3963. the country any more but would start housekeeping with Kiyo in Tokyo.
  3964. Some time afterward, some one helped me to a job as assistant engineer
  3965. at the tram car office. The salary was 25 yen a month, and the house
  3966. rent six. Although the house had not a magnificent front entrance, Kiyo
  3967. seemed quite satisfied, but, I am sorry to say, she was a victim of
  3968. pneumonia and died in February this year. On the day preceding her
  3969. death, she asked me to bedside, and said, "Please, Master Darling, if
  3970. Kiyo is dead, bury me in the temple yard of Master Darling. I will be
  3971. glad to wait in the grave for my Master Darling."
  3972. So Kiyo's grave is in the Yogen temple at Kobinata.
  3973. --(THE END)--
  3974. [A: Insitent]
  3975. [B: queershaped]
  3976. [C: The original just had the Japanese character, Unicode U+5927, sans
  3977. description]
  3978. [D: aweinspiring]
  3979. [E: about about]
  3980. [F: atomosphere]
  3981. [G: Helloo]
  3982. [H: you go]
  3983. [I: goo-goo eyes]
  3984. [J: proper hyphenation unknown]
  3985. [K: pin-princking]
  3986. [L: Procupine]
  3987. [M: celabration]
  3988. [N: wans't]
  3989. [O: paper.]
  3990. [P: girl shead]
  3991. [Q: stumblieg]
  3992. [R: Rad]
  3993. End of Project Gutenberg's Botchan (Master Darling), by Kin-nosuke Natsume
  3994. *** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BOTCHAN (MASTER DARLING) ***
  3995. ***** This file should be named 8868.txt or 8868.zip *****
  3996. This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
  3997. http://www.gutenberg.org/8/8/6/8868/
  3998. Produced by David Starner and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
  3999. Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
  4000. will be renamed.
  4001. Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
  4002. one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
  4003. (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
  4004. permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
  4005. set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
  4006. copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
  4007. protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
  4008. Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
  4009. charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
  4010. do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
  4011. rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
  4012. such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
  4013. research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
  4014. practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
  4015. subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
  4016. redistribution.
  4017. *** START: FULL LICENSE ***
  4018. THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
  4019. PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
  4020. To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
  4021. distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
  4022. (or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
  4023. Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
  4024. Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
  4025. www.gutenberg.org/license.
  4026. Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
  4027. electronic works
  4028. 1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
  4029. electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
  4030. and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
  4031. (trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
  4032. the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
  4033. all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
  4034. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
  4035. Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
  4036. terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
  4037. entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
  4038. 1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
  4039. used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
  4040. agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
  4041. things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
  4042. even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
  4043. paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
  4044. Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
  4045. and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
  4046. works. See paragraph 1.E below.
  4047. 1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
  4048. or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
  4049. Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
  4050. collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
  4051. individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
  4052. located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
  4053. copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
  4054. works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
  4055. are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
  4056. Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
  4057. freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
  4058. this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
  4059. the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
  4060. keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
  4061. Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
  4062. 1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
  4063. what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
  4064. a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
  4065. the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
  4066. before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
  4067. creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
  4068. Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
  4069. the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
  4070. States.
  4071. 1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
  4072. 1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
  4073. access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
  4074. whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
  4075. phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
  4076. Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
  4077. copied or distributed:
  4078. This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
  4079. almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
  4080. re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
  4081. with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
  4082. 1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
  4083. from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
  4084. posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
  4085. and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
  4086. or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
  4087. with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
  4088. work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
  4089. through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
  4090. Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
  4091. 1.E.9.
  4092. 1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
  4093. with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
  4094. must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
  4095. terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
  4096. to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
  4097. permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
  4098. 1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
  4099. License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
  4100. work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
  4101. 1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
  4102. electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
  4103. prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
  4104. active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
  4105. Gutenberg-tm License.
  4106. 1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
  4107. compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
  4108. word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
  4109. distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
  4110. "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
  4111. posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
  4112. you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
  4113. copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
  4114. request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
  4115. form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
  4116. License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
  4117. 1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
  4118. performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
  4119. unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
  4120. 1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
  4121. access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
  4122. that
  4123. - You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
  4124. the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
  4125. you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
  4126. owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
  4127. has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
  4128. Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
  4129. must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
  4130. prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
  4131. returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
  4132. sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
  4133. address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
  4134. the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
  4135. - You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
  4136. you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
  4137. does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
  4138. License. You must require such a user to return or
  4139. destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
  4140. and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
  4141. Project Gutenberg-tm works.
  4142. - You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
  4143. money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
  4144. electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
  4145. of receipt of the work.
  4146. - You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
  4147. distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
  4148. 1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
  4149. electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
  4150. forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
  4151. both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
  4152. Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
  4153. Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
  4154. 1.F.
  4155. 1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
  4156. effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
  4157. public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
  4158. collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
  4159. works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
  4160. "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
  4161. corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
  4162. property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
  4163. computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
  4164. your equipment.
  4165. 1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
  4166. of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
  4167. Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
  4168. Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
  4169. Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
  4170. liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
  4171. fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
  4172. LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
  4173. PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
  4174. TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
  4175. LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
  4176. INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
  4177. DAMAGE.
  4178. 1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
  4179. defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
  4180. receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
  4181. written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
  4182. received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
  4183. your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
  4184. the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
  4185. refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
  4186. providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
  4187. receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
  4188. is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
  4189. opportunities to fix the problem.
  4190. 1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
  4191. in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
  4192. WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
  4193. WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
  4194. 1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
  4195. warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
  4196. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
  4197. law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
  4198. interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
  4199. the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
  4200. provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
  4201. 1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
  4202. trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
  4203. providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
  4204. with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
  4205. promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
  4206. harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
  4207. that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
  4208. or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
  4209. work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
  4210. Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
  4211. Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
  4212. Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
  4213. electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
  4214. including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
  4215. because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
  4216. people in all walks of life.
  4217. Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
  4218. assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
  4219. goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
  4220. remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
  4221. Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
  4222. and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
  4223. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
  4224. and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
  4225. and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org
  4226. Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
  4227. Foundation
  4228. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
  4229. 501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
  4230. state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
  4231. Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
  4232. number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
  4233. Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
  4234. permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
  4235. The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
  4236. Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
  4237. throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at 809
  4238. North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email
  4239. contact links and up to date contact information can be found at the
  4240. Foundation's web site and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
  4241. For additional contact information:
  4242. Dr. Gregory B. Newby
  4243. Chief Executive and Director
  4244. gbnewby@pglaf.org
  4245. Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
  4246. Literary Archive Foundation
  4247. Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
  4248. spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
  4249. increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
  4250. freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
  4251. array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
  4252. ($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
  4253. status with the IRS.
  4254. The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
  4255. charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
  4256. States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
  4257. considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
  4258. with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
  4259. where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
  4260. SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
  4261. particular state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
  4262. While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
  4263. have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
  4264. against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
  4265. approach us with offers to donate.
  4266. International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
  4267. any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
  4268. outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
  4269. Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
  4270. methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
  4271. ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
  4272. To donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
  4273. Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
  4274. works.
  4275. Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
  4276. concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
  4277. with anyone. For forty years, he produced and distributed Project
  4278. Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
  4279. Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
  4280. editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
  4281. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
  4282. keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
  4283. Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
  4284. www.gutenberg.org
  4285. This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
  4286. including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
  4287. Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
  4288. subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.