登陆注册
22898500000044

第44章

The streets were crowded with people.Priests were passing in processions,beating their dreary tambourines;police and custom-house officers with pointed hats encrusted with lac,and carrying two sabres hung to their waists;soldiers,clad in blue cotton with white stripes,and bearing guns;the Mikado's guards,enveloped in silken doublets,hauberks,and coats of mail;and numbers of military folk of all ranks-for the military profession is as much respected in Japan as it is despised in China-went hither and thither in groups and pairs.Passepartout saw,too,begging friars,long-robed pilgrims,and ****** civilians,with their warped and jet-black hair,big heads,long busts,slender legs,short stature,and complexions varying from copper-colour to a dead white,but never yellow,like the Chinese,from whom the Japanese widely differ.He did not fail to observe the curious equipages,-carriages and palanquins,barrows supplied with sails,and litters made of bamboo;nor the women,-whom he thought not especially handsome,-who took little steps with their little feet,whereon they wore canvas shoes,straw sandals,and clogs of worked wood,and who displayed tight-looking eyes,flat chests,teeth fashionably blackened,and gowns crossed with silken scarfs,tied in an enormous knot behind,-an ornament which the modern Parisian ladies seem to have borrowed from the dames of Japan.

Passepartout wandered for several hours in the midst of this motley crowd,looking in at the windows of the rich and curious shops,the jewellery establishments glittering with quaint Japanese ornaments,the restaurants decked with streamers and banners,the tea-houses,where the odorous beverage was being drunk withsaki',a liquor concocted from the fermentation of rice,and the comfortable smoking-houses,where they were puffing,not opium,which is almost unknown in Japan,but a very fine,stringy tobacco.He went on till he found himself in the fields,in the midst of vast rice plantations.There he saw dazzling camellias expanding themselves,with flowers which were giving forth their last col-ours and perfumes,not on bushes,but on trees;and within bamboo enclosures,cherry,plum,and apple trees,which the Japanese cultivate rather for their blossoms than their fruit,and which queerly-fashioned grinning scarecrows protected from the sparrows,pigeons,ravens,and other voracious birds.On the branches of the cedars were perched large eagles;amid the foliage of the weeping willows were herons,solemnly standing on one leg;and on every hand were crows,ducks,hawks,wild birds,and a multitude of cranes,which the Japanese consider sacred,and which to their minds symbolize long life and prosperity.

As he was strolling alone,Passepartout espied some violets among the shrubs.

Good!said he;I'll have some supper.

But,on smelling them,he found that they were odourless.

No chance there,thought he.

The worthy fellow had certainly taken good care to eat as hearty a breakfast as possible before leaving theCarnatic',but as he had been walking about all day,the demands of hunger were becoming importunate.He observed that the butchers'stalls contained neither mutton,goat,nor pork;and knowing also that it is a sacrilege to kill cattle,which are preserved solely for farming,he made up his mind that meat was far from plentiful in Yokohama,nor was he mistaken;and in default of butcher's meat,he could have wished for a quarter of wild boar or deer,a partridge,or some quails,some game or fish,which,with rice,the Japanese eat almost exclusively.But he found it necessary to keep up a stout heart,and to postpone the meal he craved till the following morning.Night came,and Passepartout re-entered the native quarter,where he wandered through the streets,lit by vari-coloured lanterns,looking on at the dancers who were executing skilful steps and boundings,and the astrologers who stood in the open air with their telescopes.Then he came to the harbour,which was lit up by the rosin torches of the fishermen,who were fishing from their boats.

The streets at last became quiet,and the patrol,the officers of which,in their splendid costumes,and surrounded by their suites,Passepartout thought seemed like ambassadors,succeeded the bustling crowd.Each time a company passed,Passepartout chuckled,and said to himself:Good!another Japanese embassy departing for Europe!

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 天才剑仙

    天才剑仙

    修仙少年重生都市,持最锋利的剑,凭巅峰的速度,穿墙、隐身、飞天,纵横都市!看天才剑仙降临花都,谱写出一段霸气而香艳的传奇旅程,众生膜拜,神鬼颤栗!
  • 纨绔世子妃6定乾坤(上、下册)

    纨绔世子妃6定乾坤(上、下册)

    新帝登基,西南战火绵延千里。帝业如棋,江山霎时风起云涌。昔日的染小王爷、荣王府景世子不复存在。昔日的云王府浅月小姐亦换了一重身份。百年风云浮出水面,明刀暗箭落幕,铁血马蹄争鸣。两个棋逢对手的人终是登阶而上,为爱争夺,抢行独木桥。荣华宫种下牡丹,凤凰关桃花纸贵。痴情如利剑,爱意有深有浅。一局棋不到最后一刻,论不出输赢!这一场江山爱情豪赌,谁来定乾坤?
  • 乱世生存笔记

    乱世生存笔记

    在群雄争霸,群魔乱舞的时代里,一个身在底层的小人物,没有吊炸天的功法,没有深似海的背景,没有无敌的技能,没有爆表的智商,只有不屈的灵魂,只想活下去的信念。
  • 剑道圣主

    剑道圣主

    我有一位剑兄弟。剑在我手,我可灭迹一方世界。剑在我手,我可斩尽邪恶妖魔。主人公张玄宇疑似上古剑主转世,因为在一次意外张玄宇在宗门早上修习时被李阳等人欺负,最后被打的晕死过去时,待到一淡紫光闪过张玄宇的天灵盖时。最后发生在张玄宇识海中的事从此改变了张玄宇这个资质一般的后面的一生。直到巅峰。斩魔神,灭妖邪。宽幅剑道,成就剑道之主。本小说简单介绍,修炼境界划分,炼气,灵元,聚灵,灵海,净灵,升华,半步圣王。下一镜阶为圣境,圣王,圣皇,圣帝,圣仙,圣神。各分九阶。
  • 死党来自修罗道

    死党来自修罗道

    或是为了最强的尊号……或是为了从永无止尽的战斗中解脱……亿千万年来在修罗道、在人间道、在大宇宙的三千世界不断轮回上演着残酷而血腥的凄景……然而,这并不关高峻什么鸟事!!!直到某一天,他发现自己最好的朋友,也沦为了那血界战线中的一员。“吾友啊,就让我来陪你战个痛吧!”
  • 都市超级幽默:快乐笑话俱乐部

    都市超级幽默:快乐笑话俱乐部

    英国作家萨克雷有句名言:“生活是一面镜子,你对它笑,它就对你笑;你对它哭,它也对你哭。”我们许多人总是在推迟我们的快乐——无限期地推迟。只要你打开本书,不论是信手翻阅,还是仔细阅读,你可以马上开心地笑起来。
  • The Black Tulip

    The Black Tulip

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 王的独宠法则

    王的独宠法则

    他说,你是侵入我血液里的毒药,亦是拯救我的解药,来吧,快给我解毒;她说,大骗子,混蛋,要解自己解去,反正你已无药可救。当忠亲王拓跋晰从马蹄下抱起钟慕慕那一刻起,他就知道,他的心灯被点亮了。(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 重生之天眼贵女

    重生之天眼贵女

    杨诗诗一直都以为自己的人生就是一个茶几,上面摆满了杯具,然而,当她再次醉生梦死的时候,再睁眼,却回到了二十年前,她命运的转折点………
  • 大千玄界

    大千玄界

    洪福继承500年前祖先的传说,经过精心的实际考察,已经明确知道祖先并未撒谎,空间的破开即将开始,正在准备离开时,洪福却对现实世界充满失望,他觉得他应该用在所有人看来不计后果的方式提醒众人,他选择了在离开之前做一次匹夫······。当洪福完成一切来到异界后,却发现这并不是自己想象中的世界,这里依然冷酷,并且更加残酷,时空通道的改造给了洪福莫大的潜力,他决定,既然没有理想世界,那我就去创展!通天拳宗的修炼等级分为数个层次。入门,初步达到修炼要求。普通弟子,内功分为九层。正式弟子,九层。真传弟子,九层。精英弟子,九层。然后分为,大师九层。大宗师,九层。再往上就是王级九层,圣级。