ade the Japanese language. To denote "peace" he drew a picture of a roof with a woman under it. Evidently being a gentleman of exper
n Board of Missions, I felt like apologizing to the few feeble figures that stared accusingly at me from my small le
n one looked at me and said, "Moneys have all flewed away from my pockets. Only have vast consuming fire for learning." It being agains
risking the peace of my household, or pu
d a foothold where "Satsuma Emo" flourished. This year they were fatter and cheaper than ever before. I knew doze
As she grew stronger, she hinted at trying once again to live in her old quarters, that she m
ut the house and misses it when gone. She also resembled a fixed star in her belief that she had been divinely appointed to carry a message of h
with me, and I would not interfere with her work in the
me people cannot be convinced unless permitted to draw their own diagram o
ove. It took me some time to decide whether I should screen off Jane in the corner that commanded a full view of the wo
d wheel-chair before the open doors, looking into the sun-fl
plumes
a l
y dreams
es of me
gs for
y about my garden had a
e pigeons in the neighborhood fluttering about the open door, fearlessly perching on the invalid
to be less generous. The price of rice is higher than those pigeons can fly and, as for chicken, it's abou
them away. The cunning things! Every co
t's physical weakness, an
iet of emotion so tender that it bubble
h the funny little twist in her tongue, the poor excuse of a body seemed the last place power of any kind would choose for a habitation. I was
All my pink roses bloomed weeks earlier than they had any business to, and for the first time in years my old ga
spirit get loose. Sake help me fight. Me nice boy.
ls for his district and educational matters gave us a common interest. However, the late afternoon was an unusual hour for him to appear and one glance at his face showed trouble of a personal nature had drawn heavy lines in his mask of calmness. I had known Kishimoto San for twenty years. Part of him I could read like a prime
for a beginning. Not till I had exhausted small talk of current events and asked afte
de. I had never before seen a man so shaken, but then I hadn't seen many, much less one with the red blood of Daimyos i
istianity responsible for his woes. I, as a believer and an American,
family life. To me his home was a vague, blurred background in which possible members of his family moved. He surpris
ossessed a child. I knew his need for help must be imperative, that the wound was torn afresh, else
ere the girl lived with his sister who had absorbed many new ideas regarding liberty for women. Once he was absent from Japan a
penniless, which was bad, and a widow, which made it very difficult to marry her off again; but worse still was the half-breed child she had brought with her, a daugh
n flames when I asked par
nslatable. "She is a wild, untamed barbarian. She has neither manners nor modesty, and not only da
f Kishimoto San's will and not be crushed by the impact. My interest in the girl increas
pan. She handles it as deftly as a common fisherman. She goes to out-of-the-way places and there remains till it suits her impudence to return to my house. In the hours of th
each of custom to play with children. Your granddaugh
my visitor
t enough of my blood in her to make her bow to the law? Twice she has told me to attend to my own
, who are educated by modern methods as regarding laws gov
sea and mountain. The appealing beauty of the scene always soothed me as a lullaby would a restless child. I hoped as much for my di
ld have been directed by her mother-in-law. She was trained to obedience. See what the teachings of your country do to our women! In a letter she wrote telling me she had gone, she thanked me for teaching her the laws of submission. It helped her to bow to the commands of this man when he bade her marry him, and she loved him! Love! as i
epen my interest in this girl who could defy a will
irritate him. He tu
oasted freedom for women but license? Is their place never taught
y country, her people my people, and they stood to me for all that was great and honorable and righteous. The implication
the East is from the West. Tastes differ in manners as well as religion. If there are things in America that do not please you
mits a girl to question her elder's authority and to defy the greatest of laws, filial piety. What manner of a country
that stood for a male cousin. But neither then nor now was it permissible in a land of man-made laws for men. Unless it was
his granddaughter and her mother had crossed the Pacific. He thought he was an American. Whenever the sh
own kind? But it could not be-not in Japan; though as innocent as two baby kittens playing on the green, it would bring shame upon the girl and th
o send her to you daily as a student? Besides her strange ways, she talks in strange English.
ion and a private pupil meant extra pay. What a little extra money wouldn't do in my house was
decision whether she is a natural, free-born American citizen, as she boasts, or if the gods have cursed her with a
n caught the sheen of his silk kimono and covered him with a
troubled silence. Then from the street far below came the shout of a boy at play. It was a voice full of the gladness of youth. In it was a challenge
ed his head as though he had felt a blow. "Ah," he
was dead, his greatest desire crushed, and by a creature out of the West, who not only stole his daughter but fathered
tell him that I was about as familiar with young girls from my home land as I was with young eagles, for the undaunted spirit of that child had aroused all my l
evening when I brought my invalid in f
nwittingly he made it easily possible for me to defy the tradition of hi