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3 182202465 1721 s$J%*mf- m^W Jfe*'^^*^ *'* WWW;: -'W - Library

3 182202465 1721 s$J%*mf- m^W Jfe*'^^*^ *'* WWW;: -'W - Library

3 182202465 1721 s$J%*mf- m^W Jfe*'^^*^ *'* WWW;: -'W - Library

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THE WEDDING OF A PRINCESS. 291<br />

her parents: she could do nothing higher or more<br />

fraught with happiness. She was to be a wife<br />

woman's highest honor and a Japanese woman's<br />

only aim. She was to marry a noble by name,<br />

nature, and achievement, with health, family, wealth,<br />

and honor. The house of Echizen was most illustrious<br />

and closely related to the Tokugawa. Kiku<br />

lived in a new world of anticipation and of vision,<br />

the gate of which the Japanese call iro, and we,<br />

love. At times, as she tried on for the twentieth<br />

time her white silk robe and costly girdle, she fell<br />

into a revery, half-sad and half-joyful. She thought<br />

of leaving her mother to go back alone with no<br />

daughter, and then Kiku's bright eyes dimmed and<br />

her bosom heaved. Then she thought of living in<br />

her new home, in a new house, with new faces, new<br />

responsibilities. What if her mother-in-law should<br />

be severe or jealous? Kiku's cheeks paled. What<br />

if<br />

Fujimaro, her husband, should achieve some great<br />

exploit and she share his joy as did the honorable<br />

women of old? What if his present position should<br />

give her occasional access to the highest ladies in the<br />

land, the female courtiers of the castle in Yedo?<br />

Her eyes flashed. What if<br />

Fujimaro, in the near<br />

future, should become lord of Echizen ? No ! that<br />

was impossible until gray hairs came and they were<br />

old.<br />

The wedding night had come, seeming to<br />

out of the starry heavens from the gods.<br />

descend<br />

Marriages<br />

rarely take place in the daytime in Japan. The solemn<br />

and joyful hour of evening, usually about nine

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