<h2><SPAN name="chap08"></SPAN>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
<p>On my way back from the fishing to which I was invited by Red Shirt, and since
then, I began to suspect Porcupine. When the latter wanted me to get out of
Ikagin’s house on sham pretexts, I regarded him a decidedly unpleasant
fellow. But as Porcupine, at the teachers’ meeting, contrary to my
expectation, stood firmly for punishing the students to the fullest extent of
the school regulations, I thought it queer. When I heard from the old lady
about Porcupine volunteering himself for the sake of Hubbard Squash to stop Red
Shirt meddling with the Madonna, I clapped my hands and hoorayed for him.
Judging by these facts, I began to wonder if the wrong-doer might be not
Porcupine, but Red Shirt the crooked one. He instilled into my head some flimsy
hearsay plausibly and in a roundabout-way. At this juncture I saw Red Shirt
taking a walk with the Madonna on the levy of the Nozeri river, and I decided
that Red Shirt may be a scoundrel. I am not sure of his being really scoundrel
at heart, but at any rate he is not a good fellow. He is a fellow with a double
face. A man deserves no confidence unless he is as straight as the bamboo. One
may fight a straight fellow, and feel satisfied. We cannot lose sight of the
fact that Red Shirt or his kind who is kind, gentle, refined, and takes pride
in his pipe had to be looked sharp, for I could not be too careful in getting
into a scrap with the fellow of this type. I may fight, but I would not get
square games like the wrestling matches at the Wrestling Amphitheatre
in Tokyo.
Come to think of it, Porcupine who turned against me and startled the whole
teachers’ room over the amount of one sen and a half is far more like a
man. When he stared at me with owlish eyes at the teachers’ meeting, I
branded him as a spiteful guy, but as I consider the matter now, he is better
than the feline voice of Red Shirt. To tell the truth, I tried to get
reconciled with Porcupine, and after the meeting, spoke a word or two to him,
but he shut up like a clam and kept glaring at me. So I became sore, and let it
go at that.</p>
<p>Porcupine has not spoken to me since. The one sen and a half which I paid him
back upon the desk, is still there, well covered with dust. I could not touch
it, nor would Porcupine take it. This one sen and a half has become a barrier
between us two. We two were cursed with this one sen and a half. Later indeed I
got sick of its sight that I hated to see it.</p>
<p>While Porcupine and I were thus estranged, Red Shirt and I continued friendly
relations and associated together. On the day following my accidental meeting
with him near the Nozeri river, for instance, Red Shirt came to my desk as soon
as he came to the school, and asked me how I liked the new boarding house. He
said we would go together for fishing Russian literature again, and talked on
many things. I felt a bit piqued, and said, “I saw you twice last
night,” and he answered, “Yes, at the station. Do you go there at
that time every day? Isn’t it late?” I startled him with the
remark; “I met you on the levy of the Nozeri river too, didn’t
I?” and he replied, “No, I didn’t go in that direction. I
returned right after my bath.”</p>
<p>What is the use of trying to keep it dark. Didn’t we meet actually face
to face? He tells too many lies. If one can hold the job of a head teacher and
act in this fashion, I should be able to run the position of Chancellor of a
university. From this time on, my confidence in Red Shirt became still less. I
talk with Red Shirt whom I do not trust, and I keep silent with Porcupine whom
I respect. Funny things do happen in this world.</p>
<p>One day Red Shirt asked me to come over to his house as he had something to
tell me, and much as I missed the trip to the hot springs, I started for his
house at about 4 o’clock. Red Shirt is single, but in keeping with the
dignity of a head teacher, he gave up the boarding house life long ago, and
lives in a fine house. The house rent, I understood, was nine yen and fifty
sen. The front entrance was so attractive that I thought if one can live in
such a splendid house at nine yen and a half in the country, it would be a good
game to call Kiyo from Tokyo and make her heart glad. The younger brother of
Red Shirt answered my bell. This brother gets his lessons on algebra and
mathematics from me at the school. He stands no show in his school work, and
being a “migratory bird” is more wicked than the native boys.</p>
<p>I met Red Shirt. Smoking the same old unsavory amber pipe, he said something to
the following effect:</p>
<p>“Since you’ve been with us, our work has been more satisfactory
than it was under your predecessor, and the principal is very glad to have got
the right person in the right place. I wish you to work as hard as you can, for
the school is depending upon you.”</p>
<p>“Well, is that so. I don’t think I can work any harder than
now…….”</p>
<p>“What you’re doing now is enough. Only don’t forget what I
told you the other day.”</p>
<p>“Meaning that one who helps me find a boarding house is dangerous?”</p>
<p>“If you state it so baldly, there is no meaning to it……. But that’s
all right,…… I believe you understand the spirit of my advice. And if you keep
on in the way you’re going to-day …… We have not been blind …… we might
offer you a better treatment later on if we can manage it.”</p>
<p>“In salary? I don’t care about the salary, though the more the
better.”</p>
<p>“And fortunately there is going to be one teacher transferred,…… however,
I can’t guarantee, of course, until I talk it over with the principal ……
and we might give you something out of his salary.”</p>
<p>“Thank you. Who is going to be transferred?”</p>
<p>“I think I may tell you now; ’tis going to be announced
soon. Koga
is the man.”</p>
<p>“But isn’t Koga-san a native of this town?”</p>
<p>“Yes, he is. But there are some circumstances …… and it is partly by his
own preference.”</p>
<p>“Where is he going?”</p>
<p>“To Nobeoka in Hiuga province. As the place is so far away, he is going
there with his salary raised a grade higher.”</p>
<p>“Is some one coming to take his place?”</p>
<p>“His successor is almost decided upon.”</p>
<p>“Well, that’s fine, though I’m not very anxious to have my
salary raised.”</p>
<p>“I’m going to talk to the principal about that anyway. And, we may
have to ask you to work more some time later …… and the principal appears to be
of the same opinion……. I want you to go[I] ahead with that in your mind.”</p>
<p>“Going to increase my working hours?”</p>
<p>“No. The working hours may be reduced……”</p>
<p>“The working hours shortened and yet work more? Sounds funny.”</p>
<p>“It does sound funny …… I can’t say definitely just yet …… it means
that we may have to ask you to assume more responsibility.”</p>
<p>I could not make out what he meant. To assume more responsibility might mean my
appointment to the senior instructor of mathematics, but Porcupine is the
senior instructor and there is no danger of his resigning. Besides, he is so
very popular among the students that his transfer or discharge would be
inadvisable. Red Shirt always misses the point. And though he did not get to
the point, the object of my visit was ended. We talked a while on sundry
matters, Red Shirt proposing a farewell dinner party for Hubbard Squash, asking
me if I drink liquor and praising Hubbard Squash as an amiable gentleman, etc.
Finally he changed the topic and asked me if I take an interest in
“haiku.”[8] Here is where I beat it, I thought, and,
saying
“No, I don’t, good by,” hastily left the house. The
“haiku” should be a diversion of Baseo[9] or the boss of a
barbershop. It would not do for the teacher of mathematics to rave over the old
wooden bucket and the morning glory.[10]</p>
<p class="footnote">
[Footnote 8: The 17-syllable poem.]</p>
<p class="footnote">
[Footnote 9: A famous composer of the poem.]</p>
<p class="footnote">
[Footnote 10: There is a well-known 17-syllable poem describing the scene of
morning glories entwining around the wooden bucket.]</p>
<p>I returned home and thought it over. Here is a man whose mental process defies
a layman’s understanding. He is going to court hardships in a strange
part of the country in preference of his home and the school where he is
working,—both of which should satisfy most anybody,—because he is
tired of them. That may be all right if the strange place happens to be a
lively metropolis where electric cars run,—but of all places, why Nobeoka
in Hiuga province? This town here has a good steamship connection, yet I became
sick of it and longed for home before one month had passed. Nobeoka is situated
in the heart of a most mountainous country. According to Red Shirt, one has to
make an all-day ride in a wagonette to Miyazaki, after he had left the vessel,
and from Miyazaki another all-day ride in a rikisha to Nobeoka. Its name alone
does not commend itself as civilized. It sounds like a town inhabited by men
and monkeys in equal numbers. However sage-like Hubbard Squash might be I
thought he would not become a friend of monkeys of his own choice. What a
curious slant!</p>
<p>Just then the old lady brought in my supper—“Sweet potatoes
again?” I asked, and she said, “No, Sir, it is tofu
to-night.” They are about the same thing.</p>
<p>“Say, I understand Koga-san is going to Nobeoka.”</p>
<p>“Isn’t it too bad?”</p>
<p>“Too bad? But it can’t be helped if he goes there by his own
preference.”</p>
<p>“Going there by his own preference? Who, Sir?”</p>
<p>“Who? Why, he! Isn’t Professor Koga going there by his own
choice?”</p>
<p>“That’s wrong Mr. Wright, Sir.”</p>
<p>“Ha, Mr. Wright, is it? But Red Shirt told me so just now. If
that’s wrong Mr. Wright, then Red Shirt is blustering Mr. Bluff.”</p>
<p>“What the head-teacher says is believable, but so Koga-san does not wish
to go.”</p>
<p>“Our old lady is impartial, and that is good. Well, what’s the
matter?”</p>
<p>“The mother of Koga-san was here this morning, and told me all the
circumstances.”</p>
<p>“Told you what circumstances?”</p>
<p>“Since the father of Koga-san died, they have not been quite well off as
we might have supposed, and the mother asked the principal if his salary could
not be raised a little as Koga-san has been in service for four years.
See?”</p>
<p>“Well?”</p>
<p>“The principal said that he would consider the matter, and she felt
satisfied and expected the announcement of the increase before long. She hoped
for its coming this month or next. Then the principal called Koga-san to his
office one day and said that he was sorry but the school was short of money and
could not raise his salary. But he said there is an opening in Nobeoka which
would give him five yen extra a month and he thought that would suit his
purpose, and the principal had made all arrangements and told Koga-san he had
better go…….”</p>
<p>“That wasn’t a friendly talk but a command. Wasn’t it?”</p>
<p>“Yes, Sir, Koga-san told the principal that he liked to stay here better
at the old salary than go elsewhere on an increased salary, because he has his
own house and is living with his mother. But the matter has all been settled,
and his successor already appointed and it couldn’t be helped, said the
principal.”</p>
<p>“Hum, that’s a jolly good trick, I should say. Then Koga-san has no
liking to go there? No wonder I thought it strange. We would have to go a long
way to find any blockhead to do a job in such a mountain village and get
acquainted with monkeys for five yen extra.”</p>
<p>“What is a blockhead, Sir?”</p>
<p>“Well, let go at that. It was all the scheme of Red Shirt. Deucedly
underhand scheme, I declare. It was a stab from behind. And he means to raise
my salary by that; that’s not right. I wouldn’t take that raise.
Let’s see if he can raise it.”</p>
<p>“Is your salary going to be raised, Sir?”</p>
<p>“Yes, they said they would raise mine, but I’m thinking of refusing
it.”</p>
<p>“Why do you refuse?”</p>
<p>“Why or no why, it’s going to be refused. Say, Red Shirt is a fool;
he is a coward.”</p>
<p>“He may be a coward, but if he raises your salary, it would be best for
you to make no fuss, but accept it. One is apt to get grouchy when young, but
will always repent when he is grown up and thinks that it was pity he
hadn’t been a little more patient. Take an old woman’s advice for
once, and if Red Shirt-san says he will raise your salary, just take it with
thanks.”</p>
<p>“It’s none of business of you old people.”</p>
<p>The old lady withdrew in silence. The old man is heard singing
“utai” in the off-key voice. “Utai,” I think, is a
stunt which purposely makes a whole show a hard nut to crack by giving to it
difficult tunes, whereas one could better understand it by reading it. I cannot
fathom what is in the mind of the old man who groans over it every night
untired. But I’m not in a position to be fooling with “utai.”
Red Shirt said he would have my salary raised, and though I did not care much
about it, I accepted it because there was no use of leaving the money lying
around. But I cannot, for the love of Mike, be so inconsiderate as to skin the
salary of a fellow teacher who is being transferred against his will. What in
thunder do they mean by sending him away so far as Nobeoka when the fellow
prefers to remain in his old position? Even Dazai-no-Gonnosutsu did not have to
go farther than about Hakata; even Matagoro Kawai [11] stopped at Sagara. I
shall not feel satisfied unless I see Red Shirt and tell him I refuse the
raise.</p>
<p class="footnote">
[Footnote 11: The persons in exile, well-known in Japanese history.]</p>
<p>I dressed again and went to his house. The same younger brother of Red Shirt
again answered the bell, and looked at me with eyes which plainly said,
“You here again?” I will come twice or thrice or as many times as I
want to if there is business. I might rouse them out of their beds at
midnight;—it is possible, who knows. Don’t mistake me for one
coming to coax the head teacher. I was here to give back my salary. The younger
brother said that there is a visitor just now, and I told him the front door
will do; won’t take more than a minute, and he went in. Looking about my
feet, I found a pair of thin, matted wooden clogs, and I heard some one in the
house saying, “Now we’re banzai.” I noticed that the visitor
was Clown. Nobody but Clown could make such a squeaking voice and wear such
clogs as are worn by cheap actors.</p>
<p>After a while Red Shirt appeared at the door with a lamp in his hand, and said,
“Come in; it’s no other than Mr. Yoshikawa.”</p>
<p>“This is good enough,” I said, “it won’t take
long.” I looked at his face which was the color of a boiled lobster. He
seemed to have been drinking with Clown.</p>
<p>“You told me that you would raise my salary, but I’ve changed my
mind, and have come here to decline the offer.”</p>
<p>Red Shirt, thrusting out the lamp forward, and intently staring at me, was
unable to answer at the moment. He appeared blank. Did he think it strange that
here was one fellow, only one in the world, who does not want his salary
raised, or was he taken aback that I should come back so soon even if I wished
to decline it, or was it both combined, he stood there silent with his mouth in
a queer shape.</p>
<p>“I accepted your offer because I understood that Mr. Koga was being
transferred by his own preference…….”</p>
<p>“Mr. Koga is really going to be transferred by his own preference.”</p>
<p>“No, Sir. He would like to stay here. He doesn’t mind his present
salary if he can stay.”</p>
<p>“Have you heard it from Mr. Koga himself?”</p>
<p>“No, not from him.”</p>
<p>“Then, from who?”</p>
<p>“The old lady in my boarding house told me what she heard from the mother
of Mr. Koga.”</p>
<p>“Then the old woman in your boarding house told you so?”</p>
<p>“Well, that’s about the size of it.”</p>
<p>“Excuse me, but I think you are wrong. According to what you say, it
seems as if you believe what the old woman in the boarding house tells you, but
would not believe what your head teacher tells you. Am I right to understand it
that way?”</p>
<p>I was stuck. A Bachelor of Arts is confoundedly good in oratorical combat. He
gets hold of unexpected point, and pushes the other backward. My father used to
tell me that I am too careless and no good, and now indeed I look that way. I
ran out of the house on the moment’s impulse when I heard the story from
the old lady, and in fact I had not heard the story from either Hubbard Squash
or his mother. In consequence, when I was challenged in this Bachelor-of-Arts
fashion, it was a bit difficult to defend myself.</p>
<p>I could not defend his frontal attack, but I had already declared in my mind a
lack of confidence on Red Shirt. The old lady in the boarding house may be
tight and a grabber, I do not doubt it, but she is a woman who tells no lie.
She is not double faced like Red Shirt. I was helpless, so I
answered.</p>
<p>“What you say might be right,—anyway, I decline the raise.”</p>
<p>“That’s still funnier. I thought your coming here now was because
you had found a certain reason for which you could not accept the raise. Then
it is hard to understand to see you still insisting on declining the raise in
spite of the reason having been eradicated by my explanation.”</p>
<p>“It may be hard to understand, but anyway I don’t want it.”</p>
<p>“If you don’t like it so much, I wouldn’t force it on you.
But if you change your mind within two or three hours with no particular
reason, it would affect your credit in future.”</p>
<p>“I don’t care if it does affect it.”</p>
<p>“That can’t be. Nothing is more important than credit for us.
Supposing, the boss of the boarding house…….”</p>
<p>“Not the boss, but the old lady.”</p>
<p>“Makes no difference,—suppose what the old woman in the boarding
house told you was true, the raise of your salary is not to be had by reducing
the income of Mr. Koga, is it? Mr. Koga is going to Nobeoka; his successor is
coming. He comes on a salary a little less than that of Mr. Koga, and we
propose to add the surplus money to your salary, and you need not be shy. Mr.
Koga will be promoted; the successor is to start on less pay, and if you could
be raised, I think everything be satisfactory to all concerned. If you
don’t like it, that’s all right, but suppose you think it over once
more at home?”</p>
<p>My brain is not of the best stuff, and if another fellow flourishes his
eloquence like this, I usually think, “Well, perhaps I was wrong,”
and consider myself defeated, but not so to-night. From the time I came to this
town I felt prejudiced against Red Shirt. Once I had thought of him in a
different light, taking him for a fellow kind-hearted and feminished. His
kindness, however, began to look like anything but kindness, and as a result, I
have been getting sick of him. So no matter how he might glory himself in
logical grandiloquence, or how he might attempt to out-talk me in a
head-teacher-style, I don’t care a snap. One who shines in argument is
not necessarily a good fellow, while the other who is out-talked is not
necessarily a bad fellow, either. Red Shirt is very, very reasonable as far as
his reasoning goes, but however graceful he may appear, he cannot win my
respect. If money, authority or reasoning can command admiration, loansharks,
police officers or college professors should be liked best by all. I cannot be
moved in the least by the logic by so insignificant a fellow as the head
teacher of a middle school. Man works by preference, not by logic.</p>
<p>“What you say is right, but I have begun to dislike the raise, so I
decline. It will be the same if I think it over. Good by.” And I left the
house of Red Shirt. The solitary milky way hung high in the sky.</p>
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