first remark she 
addressed to me I found it impossible to understand her, and her 
ignorance of the language when I spoke to her was expressed in her 
vacant face. She seemed anxious to please me on that first day of my 
arrival, but I asked myself silently was there no one who could speak 
and understand English? 
A sudden and overwhelming home-sickness seized me, but it was 
impossible to yield to it, and I hurried down to tiffin, determined to 
make the best of everything. 
We had to pass through two sitting-rooms in order to reach the 
dining-room. All the floors were polished parquet. The rooms seemed 
half furnished, with only a sofa, armchair and six small chairs in each 
of them, and there were no curtains, pictures or ornaments of any kind.
The dining-room was equally bare and had a long, narrow table down 
the middle. 
The Prince and his four brothers sat one side of the table, and on the 
other side were the Princes' uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Whitehead, Mr. 
Nagasaki and myself. Each person had a printed menu with the Prince's 
crest on it, and several men-servants were in waiting. The luncheon was 
a long affair of endless courses, which the four little boys sat through, 
occasionally bursting out into laughter, and sometimes amusing 
themselves by pouring water from one glass into another. Apparently, 
no servant dared stop them from doing anything, nor venture to correct 
them. I felt quite anxious over them as they partook of every dish, even 
sipping wine (a thing they had never done before), and I was not 
surprised at their unceasing laughter, though they tried to suppress it. 
The Prince stood up and kindly drank to my health. After luncheon we 
went through into the first room for coffee, and discussed the work a 
little. We touched on the legal paper which I had brought unsigned, and 
it was decided that I should remain on trial for a month to see what the 
work was like, an arrangement which greatly comforted me, as I felt I 
could return home as long as the paper was left unsigned. 
Soon after the guests left I went to my room to unpack, but on the way 
up I was taken to see the bath-room which had been built especially for 
me. How I rued this kind attention later on! I had to go downstairs and 
to pass through the large play-room, also the billiard-room, and a 
number of passages, which were very cold. It was a wooden room, 
containing an ordinary English bath, with two taps, one for cold water, 
and the other, intended to be for hot water, which merely served for 
ornament. Besides, there was no outlet for the water to escape! 
Never shall I forget my first bath. It was a cause of great excitement to 
my amah. Having told her to prepare it, I went down and found a 
round-faced coolie, who instantly prostrated himself on the floor, as 
was customary on the part of all servants and inferiors of this 
oldfashioned conservative family. He had a pail, such as we use for 
cleaning carriages, and was endeavouring to clean the bath, but to all 
appearances had only succeeded in making it dirty. After this
preliminary, with one door open all the time and a bitter wind coming 
in, he brought two wooden pails full of boiling water. The steam and 
heat were intense, but the Japanese, I found, like to take their baths 
almost at boiling point. A doctor told me that by having it so hot the 
bath acts as a tonic to the skin, and that the use of cooler water in a hot 
climate is very relaxing. The Japanese, after having boiled themselves, 
sit in the bathroom without clothes for a short time and fan themselves. 
On this occasion I dispensed with one pail and had the contents of the 
other poured into the bath, gradually turning on the cold water, much to 
their wonder and delight. There was no dish for the soap or sponge, nor 
any mat to stand on. I afterwards informed Koma, my amah, that I 
would like these articles, the result being that there arrived a leather 
case, with gentlemen's hair brushes, powder and hair-pin boxes with 
metal tops, endless sponges to choose from, and a travelling soap-case. 
From this first experience of the bath to the end of my stay, if ever I 
expressed a wish for anything, supreme efforts were made to procure it, 
my only difficulty at first being to make people understand what I 
really wanted. 
After my bath I had to go down to a five o'clock dinner with the Prince, 
his brothers, Mr. Nagasaki and Baron Takaki, the Prince's consulting 
physician, whom I had not    
    
		
	
	
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