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226 HONDA THE SAMURAI. of seventeen guns respectively in honor of the Ty- coon and of his envoy, Professor Hayashi. " There are the men whom our people call barba- rians," said Okuma Ei, the teacher whom we met in Yedo, to his pupil Noge" Toro. Both were standing in the crowd on a little swell of land at the foot of the bluffs. " Yes, teacher," respectfully answered " Noge". Do you think it a strange name to " give them ? " Why, yes ; we may live to see the day when our rulers and people will be ashamed to apply the term i-jin to men who can build ships and cannon like these." " Yet, teacher, are they not barbarous, who, ignorant of the doctrines of the sages, know nothing of the ambition and ideals of a Japanese ? " " Well, their religion is very different from ours ; yet I imagine they must be men of study and moral culture, done." or they never could do what they have "Are not the Americans inferior to the Euro- peans? Have I not read that the country of the United States of America was once used by Great Britain as a penal settlement and place of exile like our Hachijo Island?" The teacher laughed and said : "No; that idea, I think, is not correct, though some of our people believe it. The Americans are much like the English, speaking the same language. They revolted against Great Britain about seventyfive years ago, and became a separate nation. They
AN OBJECT LESSON. 227 have recently had a war with Mexico, a country near by ; but though they won many battles, they did not subjugate the country." "Are these the same ships, soldiers, and cannon that were used in Mexico ? " "Yes; the Admiral Perry and many of his offi- cers and men were there, and some of the very can- non on that big paddle-wheel steamer formed a battery at Vera Cruz, which in a few hours battered the walls to rubbish. Our castle walls would not be of much avail against such artillery, and besides the shells could set all Yedo on fire in a few hours." " I have heard, too, that the Americans are great in invention Is and have made many wonderful it not so ? dis- " coveries. ' " Yes ; and I hope Perry has brought some ma- chines and will show them. To see how they talk at the life." end of a wire would be the delight of my Each of the two friends had a secret purpose, which neither communicated to the other. Okuraa fortunately knew one of the servants, named Kichibi, employed in the gang about the treaty-house. In figure, face, and tint of skin* weight, and walk, this man resembled him, and with him Okuma had made a bargain while in Yedo. On the second night after Perry's landing Okuma met him back of a shrine just across the canal, below the slope on which is now the foreign cemetery, and there borrowed the servant's clothes, kitte", and pass-word. He put on the tight trowsers shortened above the
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AN OBJECT LESSON. 227<br />
have recently had a war with Mexico, a country near<br />
by ;<br />
but though they won many battles, they did not<br />
subjugate the country."<br />
"Are these the same ships, soldiers, and cannon<br />
that were used in Mexico ? "<br />
"Yes; the Admiral Perry and many of his offi-<br />
cers and men were there, and some of the very can-<br />
non on that big paddle-wheel steamer formed a<br />
battery at Vera Cruz, which in a few hours battered<br />
the walls to rubbish. Our castle walls would not be<br />
of much avail against such artillery, and besides the<br />
shells could set all Yedo on fire in a few hours."<br />
"<br />
I have heard, too, that the Americans are great<br />
in invention<br />
Is<br />
and have made many wonderful<br />
it not so ?<br />
dis-<br />
"<br />
coveries. '<br />
" Yes ; and I hope Perry has brought some ma-<br />
chines and will show them. To see how they talk<br />
at the<br />
life."<br />
end of a wire would be the delight of my<br />
Each of the two friends had a secret purpose,<br />
which neither communicated to the other. Okuraa<br />
fortunately knew one of the servants, named Kichibi,<br />
employed in the gang about the treaty-house.<br />
In figure, face, and tint of skin* weight, and walk,<br />
this man resembled him, and with him Okuma had<br />
made a bargain while in Yedo. On the second night<br />
after Perry's landing Okuma met him back of a<br />
shrine just across the canal, below the slope on<br />
which is now the foreign cemetery, and there borrowed<br />
the servant's clothes, kitte", and pass-word.<br />
He put on the tight trowsers shortened above the