Read Daughters of the Samurai: A Journey From East to West and Back Online

Authors: Janice P. Nimura

Tags: #Asia, #History, #Japan, #Nonfiction, #Retail

Daughters of the Samurai: A Journey From East to West and Back (43 page)

200
  Tokyo’s Charity Hospital: “Our Roots—To Serve the Suffering Poor,” The Jikei University
School of Medicine, 2004, http://www.jikei.ac.jp/eng/our.html.

200
  “You don’t know what an undertaking”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, April 5, 1884, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 147–50.

200
  Their handicrafts: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, June 15, 1884, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 160–63.

201
  “These were made for the occasion”: Ibid.

201
  Ume helped Mrs. Ito: “Notes,”
Japan Weekly Mail
, June 14, 1884.

201
  “they urged the people to buy”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, June 15, 1884, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 160–63.

201
  “It is a matter for universal admiration”: “The Opening of the Charity Bazaar,”
Japan Weekly Mail
, June 14, 1884. (Translated from
Mainichi & Choya Shimbun
.)

202
  “was neither refined, elegant”: “Notes,”
Japan Weekly Mail
, June 28, 1884.

202
  “We have a very sincere admiration”: Ibid.

202
  
The
Chugai Bukka Shimpo
: Ibid.

202
  “I must say she began early”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, July 17, 1884, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 166.

203
  “At such a time”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, June 23, 1884, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 163–65.

203
  “On the whole, I am glad”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, December 21, 1884, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 171–72.

204
  “‘accompanied by a relative’”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, September 25, 1885, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 219–22.

204
  “We had quite a grand dinner”: Ibid.

204
  “I have such a nice desk here”: Ibid.

205
  “I know just how I ought to do”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, November 10, 1885, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 229–30.

205
  gold brocade gown: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, September 15, 1885, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 218–19.

205
  “My dress really did look nice”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, November 20, 1885, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 230–32.

205
  “I did not know what to do”: Ibid.

206
  “a very empty title”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, July 14, 1884, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 165–66.

206
  “After the music ceased”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, November 20, 1885, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 230–32.

206
  “We consider women’s duty”: Miki Yamaguchi, “The Education of Peeresses in Japan,”
Far East
, January 20, 1898, 406.

207
  “So they asked me
privately
”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, November 9, 1885, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 227–28.

12:  
ALICE IN TOKYO

208
  “as very few of the better classes catch it”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, August 9, 1886, in
Yoshiko Furuki, ed.,
The Attic Letters: Ume Tsuda’s Correspondence to Her American Mother
(New York: Weatherhill, 1991), 257.

208
  Ryo Yoshimasu: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, September 10, 1886, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 260–61.

209
  “Just suppose, if on the Japanese stage”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, September 23, 1886, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 263.

209
  “I send you a newspaper”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, November 23, 1886, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 268–69.

209
  “old Emperors waltzing”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, April 22, 1887, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 283–85.

209
  “The fancy ball made a great stir”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, May 1, 1887, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 285.

210
  “I love to think of you two”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, January 29, 1887, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 276–77.

210
  “I have received notice”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, September 22, 1886, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 261–62.

210
  “The girls of the nobility”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, September 25, 1885, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 219–22.

210
  “I wonder if these human dolls”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, October 20, 1885, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 224–26.

210
  “It is far from easy work”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, October 20, 1886, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 266.

211
  In addition to Japanese: Miki Yamaguchi, “The Education of Peeresses in Japan,”
Far East
, January 20, 1898, 408.

211
  Most of the students arrived: Barbara Rose,
Tsuda Umeko and Women’s Education in Japan
(New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1992), 71.

211
  “You know, she has”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, July 20, 1887, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 292–94.

211
  “Your letter with its unexpectedly”: Alice Bacon to Ume Tsuda, October 12, 1887, TCA, II-3-4 (1).

212
  “It costs so much more”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, September 5, 1887, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 297–98.

212
  “Alice has been very busy”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, September 9, 1888, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 316–17.

213
  “a dear little sweet-faced widow”: Alice Mabel Bacon,
A Japanese Interior
(Boston: Houghton, Mifflin, 1894), 5.

213
  “He will insist on following”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, September 9, 1888, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 316–17.

213
  “The dog is an attendant”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, September 18, 1888, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 317–18.

213
  “Apparently, a foreign lady”: Bacon,
Japanese Interior
, 3–4.

214
  “Their lives are more or less”: Ibid., 10.

214
  “Universal History”: Ibid., 13.

214
  “I have just learned”: Ibid., 15.

215
  General Oyama protested merrily: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, February 19, 1886, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 240–42.

215
  she was bending over a steam inhaler: Akiko Kuno,
Unexpected Destinations: The Poignant Story of Japan’s First Vassar Graduate
, trans. Kirsten McIvor (New York: Kodansha International, 1993), 168.

215
  one paper even hinted: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, August 27, 1887, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 296–97; Kuno,
Unexpected Destinations
, 166.

215
  “Sutematsu feels very badly”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, May 2, 1887, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 285–86.

215
  “Japan has not quite”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, December 7, 1887, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 304–5.

215
  “Would that I could go about”: Sutematsu Oyama to Elizabeth Howe, 1886 SYOP, Box 1, Folder 8, VSC.

216
  Little Takashi “regards me with great favor”: Bacon,
Japanese Interior
, 81–82.

216
  “most rare of all”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, December 6, 1888, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 321.

216
  it tasted like home: Bacon,
Japanese Interior
, 82–83.

216
  “He did not look to me”: Ibid., 50–51.

217
  “It was a funny sight”: Ibid., 88.

217
  “lest a particle of dust”: Ibid.

218
  “The one thing that strikes one”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, January 5, 1889, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 325–26.

218
  “As girls take more interest”: Bacon,
Japanese Interior
, 89–90.

219
  “The procession was the finest”: Ibid., 134.

219
  “With the greatest pride”: Ibid., 145.

220
  “It seems so terrible”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, February 15, 1889, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 326–28.

220
  the imperial accessories: Bacon,
Japanese Interior
, 189–92.

221
  “The girls rose in their places”: Ibid., 193–94.

221
  “At last there was a rustle”: Ibid., 194–95.

221
  “rather loaded down”: Ibid., 195.

221
  “feeling quite light hearted”: Ibid.

221
  “As I was following”: Ibid., 197.

222
  Then it was Alice’s turn: Ibid., 197–98.

222
  “I was very glad”: Ibid., 199.

222
  Her students brought farewell gifts: Ibid., 232.

222
  “Here, nobody ever makes a noise”: Ibid., 224–25.

223
  “not at all like the sheepskins”: Ibid., 234.

223
  “my back fairly ached”: Ibid., 236.

223
  “Even a diamond”: Julia Meech-Pekarik,
The World of the Meiji Print: Impressions of a New Civilization
(New York: Weatherhill, 1986), 119.

223
  “Lose no time”: Meech-Pekarik,
World of the Meiji Print
, 119–20.

223
  “Somehow I always feel sorry”: Bacon,
Japanese Interior
, 237.

224
  “The word ‘civilization’”: Ibid., 228.

224
  “Miss A. Bacon”: “Passengers: Departed,”
Japan Weekly Mail
, September 28, 1889.

13:  
ADVANCES AND RETREATS

225
  “My dear Mrs. Lanman”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, August 1889, in Yoshiko Furuki, ed.,
The Attic Letters: Ume Tsuda’s Correspondence to Her American Mother
(New York: Weatherhill, 1991), 332–33.

225
  “I often wish I had had”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, May 6, 1886, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 248–50.

226
  catalogs from Smith College: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, July 10, 1888 and August 5, 1888, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 314, 315–16.

227
  “Mrs. Morris may be very kind”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, March 9, 1889, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 328–29.

227
  “Won’t it be splendid!”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, May 26, 1889, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 331.

227
  “You can not imagine”: Ume Tsuda to Adeline Lanman, June 13, 1889, in Furuki,
Attic Letters
, 331–32.

227
  “Our failures only marry”: Barbara Rose,
Tsuda Umeko and Women’s Education in Japan
(New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1992), 82.

228
  “Miss Tsuda was guest of honor”: Anna C. Hartshorne, “The Years of Preparation: A Memory of Miss Tsuda,” in Ume Tsuda,
The Writings of Umeko Tsuda
[
Tsuda Umeko monjo
] (Kodaira, Japan: Tsuda College, 1984), 513.

228
  “Like a princess”: Rose,
Tsuda Umeko
, 84.

228
  Here was a chance to prove: Ibid., 94.

228
  “I have today handed over”: Alice Bacon to Ume Tsuda, September 26, 1890, TCA, II-3-4 (2).

229
  “Better laws, broader education”: Alice Mabel Bacon,
Japanese Girls and Women
, rev. ed. (Boston: Houghton, Mifflin, 1902), 115.

229
  “in the name of our childhood’s friendship”: Ibid., viii.

229
  “She does not evade”: “New Publications,”
New-York Times
, August 17, 1891.

229
  “This is the glory”: “The Imperial Rescript on Education,” Children and Youth in History, Item 136, 1996–2014, http://chnm.gmu.edu/cyh/primary-sources/136.

230
  “I do not think it is so compromising”: Sutematsu Oyama to Alice Bacon and Ume Tsuda, August 6, 1891, TCA, II-6-1 (3).

230
  “If it will do any good”: Alice Bacon to Ume Tsuda, August 9, 1891, TCA, II-3-4 (4).

230
  “Education and Culture”: Rose,
Tsuda Umeko
, 89.

231
  “Japanese tea and chopstick supper”:
Norfolk (CT) Tower
, August 13, 1891.

231
  “Wives must fit themselves”: Ume Tsuda, “The Education of Japanese Women,” in
Writings of Umeko Tsuda
, 31.

231
  “all together too sympathetic”: Sutematsu Oyama to Alice Bacon and Ume Tsuda, August 6, 1891, TCA, II-6-1 (3).

232
  “Are you horrified?”: Sutematsu Oyama to Anne Southworth Wyman, May 30, 1893, SYOP, Box 1, Folder 8, VSC.

232
  “Advisor on Westernization”: Akiko Kuno,
Unexpected Destinations: The Poignant Story of Japan’s First Vassar Graduate
, trans. Kirsten McIvor (New York: Kodansha International, 1993), 178.

232
  “I have no patience with her”: Sutematsu Oyama to Alice Bacon and Ume Tsuda, August 6, 1891, TCA, II-6-1 (3).

233
  “deep thinker”: Sutematsu Yamakawa to Alice Bacon, March 8, 1884, SYOP, Box 1, Folder 5, VSC.

233
  “What do you think the girls”: Sutematsu Oyama to Alice Bacon and Ume Tsuda, August 6, 1891, TCA, II-6-1 (3).

233
  “for their mother was too wise”: Marian P. Whitney, “Stematz Yamakowa, Princess Oyama,”
Vassar Quarterly
, July 1919, 270.

233
  He arrived at the Oyamas’: Kuno,
Unexpected Destinations
, 180.

234
  “an intelligent, apt and diligent student”: Yoshiko Furuki,
The White Plum, a Biography of Ume Tsuda: Pioneer in the Higher Education of Japanese Women
(New York: Weatherhill, 1991), 86.

Other books

Retorno a la Tierra by Jean-Pierre Andrevon
Jess the Lonely Puppy by Holly Webb
Breathe for Me by Rhonda Helms
Hawke's Tor by Thompson, E. V.
Pasta, Risotto, and Rice by Robin Miller


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024