FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3101   3102   3103   3104   3105   3106   3107   3108   3109   3110   3111   3112   3113   3114   3115   3116   3117   3118   3119   3120   3121   3122   3123   3124   3125  
3126   3127   3128   3129   3130   3131   3132   3133   3134   3135   3136   3137   3138   3139   3140   3141   3142   3143   3144   3145   3146   3147   3148   3149   3150   >>   >|  
fforts to arrange matters we succeed often only in disarranging Irritating laugh which is peculiar to Japan Ordinary, trivial, every-day objects Seeking for a change which can no longer be found MADAME CHRYSANTHEME By PIERRE LOTI BOOK 2. CHAPTER XII HAPPY FAMILIES! July 18th. By this time, four officers of my ship are married like myself, and inhabiting the slopes of the same suburb. This arrangement is quite an ordinary occurrence, and is brought about without difficulties, mystery, or danger, through the offices of the same M. Kangourou. As a matter of course, we are on visiting terms with all these ladies. First, there is our very merry neighbor Madame Campanule, who is little Charles N-----'s wife; then Madame Jonquille, who is even merrier than Campanule, like a young bird, and the daintiest fairy of them all; she has married X-----, a fair northerner who adores her; they are a lover-like and inseparable pair, the only one that will probably weep when the hour of parting comes. Then Sikou-San with Doctor Y-----; and lastly the midshipman Z------with the tiny Madame Touki-San, no taller than a boot: thirteen years old at the outside, and already a regular woman, full of her own importance, a petulant little gossip. In my childhood I was sometimes taken to the Learned Animals Theatre, and I remember a certain Madame de Pompadour, a principal role, filled by a gayly dressed old monkey; Touki-San reminds me of her. In the evening, all these folk usually come and fetch us for a long processional walk with lighted lanterns. My wife, more serious, more melancholy, perhaps even more refined, and belonging, I fancy, to a higher class, tries when these friends come to us to play the part of the lady of the house. It is comical to see the entry of these ill-matched pairs, partners for a day, the ladies, with their disjointed bows, falling on all fours before Chrysantheme, the queen of the establishment. When we are all assembled, we set out, arm in arm, one behind another, and always carrying at the end of our short sticks little white or red paper lanterns; it is a pretty custom. We are obliged to scramble down the kind of street, or rather goat's-path, which leads to the Japanese Nagasaki--with the prospect, alas! of having to climb up again at night; clamber up all the steps, all the slippery slopes, stumble over all the stones, before we shall be able to get home,
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3101   3102   3103   3104   3105   3106   3107   3108   3109   3110   3111   3112   3113   3114   3115   3116   3117   3118   3119   3120   3121   3122   3123   3124   3125  
3126   3127   3128   3129   3130   3131   3132   3133   3134   3135   3136   3137   3138   3139   3140   3141   3142   3143   3144   3145   3146   3147   3148   3149   3150   >>   >|  



Top keywords:
Madame
 
lanterns
 
married
 

slopes

 

Campanule

 

ladies

 

Animals

 
friends
 

higher

 
refined

Theatre

 

belonging

 

comical

 

arrange

 
Learned
 

melancholy

 

evening

 

principal

 

reminds

 

dressed


monkey

 

filled

 

Pompadour

 

fforts

 
lighted
 
processional
 
remember
 

Japanese

 
prospect
 

Nagasaki


street

 
obliged
 
scramble
 

stones

 
stumble
 

slippery

 

clamber

 

custom

 

pretty

 

falling


Chrysantheme

 

establishment

 

disjointed

 
matched
 

partners

 
childhood
 

assembled

 

sticks

 

carrying

 

brought