<h2><SPAN name="chap10"></SPAN>CHAPTER X.</h2>
<p>The town is going to celebrate a Japanese victory to-day, and there is no
school. The celebration is to be held at the parade ground, and Badger is to
take out all the students and attend the ceremony. As one of the instructors, I
am to go with them. The streets are everywhere draped with flapping national
flags almost enough to dazzle the eyes. There were as many as eight hundred
students in all, and it was arranged, under the direction of the teacher of
physical culture to divide them into sections with one teacher or two to lead
them. The arrangement itself was quite commendable, but in its actual operation
the whole thing went wrong. All students are mere kiddies who, ever too fresh,
regard it as beneath their dignity not to break all regulations. This rendered
the provision of teachers among them practically useless. They would start
marching songs without being told to, and if they ceased the marching songs,
they would raise devilish shouts without cause. Their behavior would have done
credit to the gang of tramps parading the streets demanding work. When they
neither sing nor shout, they tee-hee and giggle. Why they cannot walk without
these disorder, passes my understanding, but all Japanese are born with their
mouths stuck out, and no kick will ever be strong enough to stop it. Their
chatter is not only of simple nature, but about the teachers when their back is
turned. What a degraded bunch! I made the students apologize to me on the
dormitory affair, and considered the incident closed. But I was mistaken. To
borrow the words of the old lady in the boarding house, I was surely wrong Mr.
Wright. The apology they offered was not prompted by repentance in their
hearts. They had kowtowed as a matter of form by the command of the principal.
Like the tradespeople who bow their heads low but never give up cheating the
public, the students apologize but never stop their mischiefs. Society is made
up, I think it probable, of people just like those students. One may be branded
foolishly honest if he takes seriously the apologies others might offer. We
should regard all apologies a sham and forgiving also as a sham; then
everything would be all right. If one wants to make another apologize from his
heart, he has to pound him good and strong until he begs for mercy from his
heart.</p>
<p>As I walked along between the sections, I could hear constantly the voices
mentioning “tempura” or “dango.” And as there were so
many of them, I could not tell which one mentioned it. Even if I succeeded in
collaring the guilty one I was sure of his saying, “No, I didn’t
mean you in saying tempura or dango. I fear you suffer from nervousness and
make wrong inferences.” This dastardly spirit has been fostered from the
time of the feudal lords, and is deep-rooted. No amount of teaching or
lecturing will cure it. If I stay in a town like this for one year or so, I may
be compelled to follow their example, who knows,—clean and honest though
I have been. I do not propose to make a fool of myself by remaining quiet when
others attempt to play games on me, with all their excuses ready-made. They are
men and so am I—students or kiddies or whatever they may be. They are
bigger than I, and unless I get even with them by punishment, I would cut a
sorry figure. But in the attempt to get even, if I resort to ordinary means,
they are sure to make it a boomerang. If I tell them, “You’re
wrong,” they will start an eloquent defence, because they are never short
of the means of sidestepping. Having defended themselves, and made themselves
appear suffering martyrs, they would begin attacking me. As the incident would
have been started by my attempting to get even with them, my defence would not
be a defence until I can prove their wrong. So the quarrel, which they had
started, might be mistaken, after all, as one begun by me. But the more I keep
silent the more they would become insolent, which, speaking seriously, could
not be permitted for the sake of public morale. In consequence, I am obliged to
adopt an identical policy so they cannot catch men in playing it back on them.
If the situation comes to that, it would be the last day of the Yedo kid. Even
so, if I am to be subjected to these pin-pricking[L] tricks, I am a man and got
to risk losing off the last remnant of the honor of the Yedo kid. I became more
convinced of the advisability of returning to Tokyo quickly and living with
Kiyo. To live long in such a countrytown would be like degrading myself for a
purpose. Newspaper delivering would be preferable to being degraded so far as
that.</p>
<p>I walked along with a sinking heart, thinking like this, when the head of our
procession became suddenly noisy, and the whole came to a full stop. I thought
something has happened, stepped to the right out of the ranks, and looked
toward the direction of the noise. There on the corner of Otemachi, turning to
Yakushimachi, I saw a mass packed full like canned sardines, alternately
pushing back and forth. The teacher of physical culture came down the line
hoarsely shouting to all to be quiet. I asked him what was the matter, and he
said the middle school and the normal had come to a clash at the corner.</p>
<p>The middle school and the normal, I understood, are as much friendly as dogs
and monkeys. It is not explained why but their temper was hopelessly crossed,
and each would try to knock the chip off the shoulder of the other on all
occasions. I presume they quarrel so much because life gets monotonous in this
backwoods town. I am fond of fighting, and hearing of the clash, darted forward
to make the most of the fun. Those foremost in the line are jeering, “Get
out of the way, you country tax!”[12] while those in the rear are
hollowing “Push them out!” I passed through the students, and was
nearing the corner, when I heard a sharp command of “Forward!” and
the line of the normal school began marching on. The clash which had resulted
from contending for the right of way was settled, but it was settled by the
middle school giving way to the normal. From the point of school-standing the
normal is said to rank above the middle.</p>
<p class="footnote">
[Footnote 12: The normal school in the province maintains the students mostly
on the advance-expense system, supported by the country tax.]</p>
<p>The ceremony was quite simple. The commander of the local brigade read a
congratulatory address, and so did the governor, and the audience shouted
banzais. That was all. The entertainments were scheduled for the afternoon, and
I returned home once and started writing to Kiyo an answer which had been in my
mind for some days. Her request had been that I should write her a letter with
more detailed news; so I must get it done with care. But as I took up the
rolled letter-paper, I did not know with what I should begin, though I have
many things to write about.</p>
<p>Should I begin with that? That is too much trouble. Or with this? It is not
interesting. Isn’t there something which will come out smoothly, I
reflected, without taxing my head too much, and which will interest Kiyo. There
seemed, however, no such item as I wanted. I grated the ink-cake,
wetted the
writing brush, stared at the letter-paper—stared at the letter-paper,
wetted the writing brush, grated the ink-cake—and, having repeated the
same thing several times, I gave up the letter writing as not in my line, and
covered the lid of the stationery box. To write a letter was a bother. It would
be much simpler to go back to Tokyo and see Kiyo. Not that I am unconcerned
about the anxiety of Kiyo, but to get up a letter to please the fancy of Kiyo
is a harder job than to fast for three weeks.</p>
<p>I threw down the brush and letter-paper, and lying down with my bent arms as a
pillow, gazed at the garden. But the thought of the letter to Kiyo would come
back in my mind. Then I thought this way; If I am thinking of her from my
heart, even at such a distance, my sincerity would find responsive appreciation
in Kiyo. If it does find response, there is no need of sending letters. She
will regard the absence of letters from me as a sign of my being in good
health. If I write in case of illness or when something unusual happens, that
will be sufficient.</p>
<p>The garden is about thirty feet square, with no particular plants worthy of
name. There is one orange tree which is so tall as to be seen above the board
fence from outside. Whenever I returned from the school I used to look at this
orange tree. For to those who had not been outside of Tokyo, oranges on the
tree are rather a novel sight. Those oranges now green will ripen by degrees
and turn to yellow, when the tree would surely be beautiful. There are some
already ripened. The old lady told me that they are juicy, sweet oranges.
“They will all soon be ripe, and then help yourself to all you
want,” she said. I think I will enjoy a few every day. They will be just
right in about three weeks. I do not think I will have to leave the town in so
short a time as three weeks.</p>
<p>While my attention was centered on the oranges, Porcupine[M] came in.</p>
<p>“Say, to-day being the celebration[N] of victory, I thought I would get
something good to eat with you, and bought some beef.”</p>
<p>So saying, he took out a package covered with a bamboo-wrapper, and threw it
down in the center of the room. I had been denied the pleasure of patronizing
the noodle house or dango shop, on top of getting sick of the sweet potatoes
and tofu, and I welcomed the suggestion with “That’s fine,”
and began cooking it with a frying pan and some sugar borrowed from the old
lady.</p>
<p>Porcupine, munching the beef to the full capacity of his mouth, asked me if I
knew Red Shirt having a favorite geisha. I asked if that was not one of the
geishas who came to our dinner the other night, and he answered, “Yes, I
got the wind of the fact only recently; you’re sharp.”</p>
<p>“Red Shirt always speaks of refinement of character or of mental
consolation, but he is making a fool of himself by chasing round a geisha. What
a dandy rogue. We might let that go if he wouldn’t make fuss about others
making fools of themselves. I understand through the principal he stopped your
going even to noodle houses or dango shops as unbecoming to the dignity of the
school, didn’t he?”</p>
<p>“According to his idea, running after a geisha is a mental consolation
but tempura or dango is a material pleasure, I guess. If that’s mental
consolation, why doesn’t the fool do it above board? You ought to see the
jacknape skipping out of the room when the geisha came into it the other
night,—I don’t like his trying to deceive us, but if one were to
point it out for him, he would deny it or say it was the Russian literature or
that the haiku is a half-brother of the new poetry, and expect to hush it up by
twaddling soft nonsense. A weak-knee like him is not a man. I believe he lived
the life of a court-maid in former life. Perhaps his daddy might have been a
kagema at Yushima in old days.”</p>
<p>“What is a kagema?”</p>
<p>“I suppose something very unmanly,—sort of emasculated chaps. Say,
that part isn’t cooked enough. It might give you tape worm.”</p>
<p>“So? I think it’s all right. And, say, Red Shirt is said to
frequent Kadoya at the springs town and meet his geisha there, but he keeps it
in dark.”</p>
<p>“Kadoya? That hotel?”</p>
<p>“Also a restaurant. So we’ve got to catch him there with his geisha
and make it hot for him right to his face.”</p>
<p>“Catch him there? Suppose we begin a kind of night watch?”</p>
<p>“Yes, you know there is a rooming house called Masuya in front of Kadoya.
We’ll rent one room upstairs of the house, and keep peeping through a
loophole we could make in the shoji.”</p>
<p>“Will he come when we keep peeping at him?”</p>
<p>“He may. We will have to do it more than one night. Must expect to keep
it up for at least two weeks.”</p>
<p>“Say, that would make one pretty well tired, I tell you. I sat up every
night for about one week attending my father when he died, and it left me
thoroughly down and out for some time afterward.”</p>
<p>“I don’t care if I do get tired some. A crook like Red Shirt should
not go unpunished that way for the honor of Japan, and I am going to administer
a chastisement in behalf of heaven.”</p>
<p>“Hooray! If things are decided upon that way, I am game. And we are going
to start from to-night?”</p>
<p>“I haven’t rented a room at Masuya yet, so can’t start it
to-night.”</p>
<p>“Then when?”</p>
<p>“Will start before long. I’ll let you know, and want you help
me.”</p>
<p>“Right-O. I will help you any time. I am not much myself at scheming, but
I am IT when it comes to fighting.”</p>
<p>While Porcupine and I were discussing the plan of subjugating Red Shirt, the
old lady appeared at the door, announcing that a student was wanting to see
Professor Hotta. The student had gone to his house, but seeing him out, had
come here as probable to find him. Porcupine went to the front door himself,
and returning to the room after a while, said:</p>
<p>“Say, the boy came to invite us to go and see the entertainment of the
celebration. He says there is a big bunch of dancers from Kochi to dance
something, and it would be a long time before we could see the like of it
again. Let’s go.”</p>
<p>Porcupine seemed enthusiastic over the prospect of seeing that dance, and
induced me to go with him. I have seen many kinds of dance in Tokyo. At the
annual festival of the Hachiman Shrine, moving stages come around the district,
and I have seen the Shiokumi and almost any other variety. I was
little
inclined to see that dance by the sturdy fellows from Tosa province, but as
Porcupine was so insistent, I changed my mind and followed him out. I did not
know the student who came to invite Porcupine, but found he was the younger
brother of Red Shirt. Of all students, what a strange choice for a messenger!</p>
<p>The celebration ground was decorated, like the wrestling amphitheater at
Ryogoku during the season, or the annual festivity of the Hommonji temple, with
long banners planted here and there, and on the ropes that crossed and
recrossed in the mid-air were strung the colors of all nations, as if they were
borrowed from as many nations for the occasion and the large roof presented
unusually cheerful aspect. On the eastern corner there was built a temporary
stage upon which the dance of Koehi was to be performed. For about half a
block, with the stage on the right, there was a display of flowers and plant
settings arranged on shelves sheltered with reed screens. Everybody was looking
at the display seemingly much impressed, but it failed to impress me. If
twisted grasses or bamboos afforded so much pleasure, the gallantry of a
hunchback or the husband of a wrong pair should give as much pleasure to their
eyes.</p>
<p>In the opposite direction, aerial bombs and fire works were steadily going on.
A balloon shot out on which was written “Long Live the Empire!” It
floated leisurely over the pine trees near the castle tower, and fell down
inside the compound of the barracks. Bang! A black ball shot up against the
serene autumn sky; burst open straight above my head, streams of luminous green
smoke ran down in an umbrella-shape, and finally faded. Then another balloon.
It was red with “Long Live the Army and Navy” in white. The wind
slowly carried it from the town toward the Aioi village. Probably it would fall
into the yard of Kwanon temple there.</p>
<p>At the formal celebration this morning there were not quite so many as here
now. It was surging mass that made me wonder how so many people lived in the
place. There were not many attractive faces among the crowd, but as far as the
numerical strength went, it was a formidable one. In the meantime that dance
had begun. I took it for granted that since they call it a dance, it would be
something similar to the kind of dance by the Fujita troupe, but I was greatly
mistaken.</p>
<p>Thirty fellows, dressed up in a martial style, in three rows of ten each, stood
with glittering drawn swords. The sight was an eye-opener, indeed. The space
between the rows measured about two feet, and that between the men might have
been even less. One stood apart from the group. He was similarly dressed but
instead of a drawn sword, he carried a drum hung about his chest. This fellow
drawled out signals the tone of which suggested a mighty easy-life, and then
croaking a strange song, he would strike the drum. The tune was outlandishly
unfamiliar. One might form the idea by thinking it a combination of the Mikawa
Banzai and the Fudarakuya.</p>
<p>The song was drowsy, and like syrup in summer is dangling and slovenly. He
struck the drum to make stops at certain intervals. The tune was kept with
regular rhythmical order, though it appeared to have neither head nor tail. In
response to this tune, the thirty drawn swords flash, with such dexterity and
speed that the sight made the spectator almost shudder. With live men within
two feet of their position, the sharp drawn blades, each flashing them in the
same manner, they looked as if they might make a bloody mess unless they were
perfectly accurate in their movements. If it had been brandishing swords alone
without moving themselves, the chances of getting slashed or cut might have
been less, but sometimes they would turn sideways together, or clear around, or
bend their knees. Just one second’s difference in the movement, either
too quick or too late, on the part of the next fellow, might have meant
sloughing off a nose or slicing off the head of the next fellow. The drawn
swords moved in perfect freedom, but the sphere of action was limited to about
two feet square, and to cap it all, each had to keep moving with those in front
and back, at right and left, in the same direction at the same speed. This
beats me! The dance of the Shiokumi or the Sekinoto would make no show compared
with this! I heard them say the dance requires much training, and it could not
be an easy matter to make so many dancers move in a unison like this.
Particularly difficult part in the dance was that of the fellow with drum stuck
to his chest. The movement of feet, action of hands, or bending of knees of
those thirty fellows were entirely directed by the tune with which he kept them
going. To the spectators this fellow’s part appeared the easiest. He sang
in a lazy tune, but it was strange that he was the fellow who takes the
heaviest responsibility.</p>
<p>While Porcupine and I, deeply impressed, were looking at the dance with
absorbing interest, a sudden hue and cry was raised about half a block off. A
commotion was started among those who had been quietly enjoying the sights and
all ran pell-mell in every direction. Some one was heard saying
“fight!” Then the younger brother of Red Shirt came running forward
through the crowd.</p>
<p>“Please, Sir,” he panted, “a row again! The middles are going
to get even with the normals and have just begun fighting. Come quick,
Sir!” And he melted somewhere into the crowd.</p>
<p>“What troublesome brats! So they’re at it again, eh? Why
can’t they stop it!”</p>
<p>Porcupine, as he spoke, dashed forward, dodging among the running crowd. He
meant, I think, to stop the fight, because he could not be an idle spectator
once he was informed of the fact. I of course had no intention of turning tail,
and hastened on the heels of Porcupine. The fight was in its fiercest. There
were about fifty to sixty normals, and the middles numbered by some ninety. The
normals wore uniform, but the middles had discarded their uniform and put on
Japanese civilian clothes, which made the distinction between the two hostile
camps easy. But they were so mixed up, and wrangling with such violence, that
we did not know how and where we could separate them.</p>
<p>Porcupine, apparently at a loss what to do, looked at the wild scene awhile,
then turned to me, saying:</p>
<p>“Let’s jump in and separate them. It will be hell if cops get on
them.”</p>
<p>I did not answer, but rushed to the spot where the scuffle appeared most
violent.</p>
<p>“Stop there! Cut this out! You’re ruining the name of the school!
Stop this, dash you!”</p>
<p>Shouting at the top of my voice, I attempted to penetrate the line which seemed
to separate the hostile sides, but this attempt did not succeed. When about ten
feet into the turmoil, I could neither advance nor retreat. Right in my front,
a comparatively large normal was grappling with a middle about sixteen years of
ago.</p>
<p>“Stop that!”</p>
<p>I grabbed the shoulder of the normal and tried to force them apart when some
one whacked my feet. On this sudden attack, I let go the normal and fell down
sideways. Some one stepped on my back with heavy shoes. With both hands and
knees upon the ground, I jumped up and the fellow on my back rolled off to my
right. I got up, and saw the big body of Porcupine about twenty feet away,
sandwiched between the students, being pushed back and forth, shouting,
“Stop the fight! Stop that!”</p>
<p>“Say, we can’t do anything!” I hollered at him, but unable to
hear, I think, he did not answer.</p>
<p>A pebble-stone whiffled through the air and hit squarely on my cheek bone; the
same moment some one banged my back with a heavy stick from behind.</p>
<p>“Profs mixing in!” “Knock them down!” was shouted.</p>
<p>“Two of them; big one and small. Throw stones at them!” Another
shout.</p>
<p>“Drat you fresh jackanapes!” I cried as I wallopped the head of a
normal nearby. Another stone grazed my head, and passed behind me. I did not
know what had become of Porcupine, I could not find him. Well, I could not help
it but jumped into the teapot to stop the tempest. I wasn’t[O] a
Hottentot to skulk away on being shot at with pebble-stones. What did they
think I was anyway! I’ve been through all kinds of fighting in Tokyo, and
can take in all fights one may care to give me. I slugged, jabbed and banged
the stuffing out of the fellow nearest to me. Then some one cried, “Cops!
Cops! Cheese it! Beat it!” At that moment, as if wading through a pond of
molasses, I could hardly move, but the next I felt suddenly released and both
sides scampered off simultaneously. Even the country fellows do creditable work
when it comes to retreating, more masterly than General Kuropatkin, I might
say.</p>
<p>I searched for Porcupine who, I found his overgown torn to shreds, was wiping
his nose. He bled considerably, and his nose having swollen was a sight. My
clothes were pretty well massed with dirt, but I had not suffered quite as much
damage as Porcupine. I felt pain in my cheek and as Porcupine said, it bled
some.</p>
<p>About sixteen police officers arrived at the scene but, all the students having
beat it in opposite directions, all they were able to catch were Porcupine and
me. We gave them our names and explained the whole story. The officers
requested us to follow them to the police station which we did, and after
stating to the chief of police what had happened, we returned home.</p>
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