Read Daughters of the Samurai: A Journey From East to West and Back Online
Authors: Janice P. Nimura
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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.