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the house of pride and other tales of hawaii-第18部分

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principal。  Likewise; when he verbally guaranteed the disastrous 

Kakiku Ditch Scheme; at a time when the least sanguine did not dream 

a guarantee necessary〃Signed his cheque for two hundred thousand 

without a quiver; gentlemen; without a quiver;〃 was the report of 

the secretary of the defunct enterprise; who had been sent on the 

forlorn hope of finding out Ah Chun's intentions。  And on top of the 

many similar actions that were true of his word; there was scarcely 

a man of repute in the islands that at one time or another had not 

experienced the helping financial hand of Ah Chun。



So it was that Honolulu watched his wonderful family grow up into a 

perplexing problem and secretly sympathized with him; for it was 

beyond any of them to imagine what he was going to do with it。  But 

Ah Chun saw the problem more clearly than they。  No one knew as he 

knew the extent to which he was an alien in his family。  His own 

family did not guess it。  He saw that there was no place for him 

amongst this marvellous seed of his loins; and he looked forward to 

his declining years and knew that he would grow more and more alien。  

He did not understand his children。  Their conversation was of 

things that did not interest him and about which he knew nothing。  

The culture of the West had passed him by。  He was Asiatic to the 

last fibre; which meant that he was heathen。  Their Christianity was 

to him so much nonsense。  But all this he would have ignored as 

extraneous and irrelevant; could he have but understood the young 

people themselves。  When Maud; for instance; told him that the 

housekeeping bills for the month were thirty thousandthat he 

understood; as he understood Albert's request for five thousand with 

which to buy the schooner yacht Muriel and become a member of the 

Hawaiian Yacht Club。  But it was their remoter; complicated desires 

and mental processes that obfuscated him。  He was not slow in 

learning that the mind of each son and daughter was a secret 

labyrinth which he could never hope to tread。  Always he came upon 

the wall that divides East from West。  Their souls were inaccessible 

to him; and by the same token he knew that his soul was inaccessible 

to them。



Besides; as the years came upon him; he found himself harking back 

more and more to his own kind。  The reeking smells of the Chinese 

quarter were spicy to him。  He sniffed them with satisfaction as he 

passed along the street; for in his mind they carried him back to 

the narrow tortuous alleys of Canton swarming with life and 

movement。  He regretted that he had cut off his queue to please 

Stella Allendale in the prenuptial days; and he seriously considered 

the advisability of shaving his crown and growing a new one。  The 

dishes his highly paid chef concocted for him failed to tickle his 

reminiscent palate in the way that the weird messes did in the 

stuffy restaurant down in the Chinese quarter。  He enjoyed vastly 

more a half…hour's smoke and chat with two or three Chinese chums; 

than to preside at the lavish and elegant dinners for which his 

bungalow was famed; where the pick of the Americans and Europeans 

sat at the long table; men and women on equality; the women with 

jewels that blazed in the subdued light against white necks and 

arms; the men in evening dress; and all chattering and laughing over 

topics and witticisms that; while they were not exactly Greek to 

him; did not interest him nor entertain。



But it was not merely his alienness and his growing desire to return 

to his Chinese flesh…pots that constituted the problem。  There was 

also his wealth。  He had looked forward to a placid old age。  He had 

worked hard。  His reward should have been peace and repose。  But he 

knew that with his immense fortune peace and repose could not 

possibly be his。  Already there were signs and omens。  He had seen 

similar troubles before。  There was his old employer; Dantin; whose 

children had wrested from him; by due process of law; the management 

of his property; having the Court appoint guardians to administer it 

for him。  Ah Chun knew; and knew thoroughly well; that had Dantin 

been a poor man; it would have been found that he could quite 

rationally manage his own affairs。  And old Dantin had had only 

three children and half a million; while he; Chun Ah Chun; had 

fifteen children and no one but himself knew how many millions。



〃Our daughters are beautiful women;〃 he said to his wife; one 

evening。  〃There are many young men。  The house is always full of 

young men。  My cigar bills are very heavy。  Why are there no 

marriages?〃



Mamma Achun shrugged her shoulders and waited。



〃Women are women and men are menit is strange there are no 

marriages。  Perhaps the young men do not like our daughters。〃



〃Ah; they like them well enough;〃 Mamma Chun answered; 〃but you see; 

they cannot forget that you are your daughters' father。〃



〃Yet you forgot who my father was;〃 Ah Chun said gravely。  〃All you 

asked was for me to cut off my queue。〃



〃The young men are more particular than I was; I fancy。〃



〃What is the greatest thing in the world?〃 Ah Chun demanded with 

abrupt irrelevance。



Mamma Achun pondered for a moment; then replied:  〃God。〃



He nodded。  〃There are gods and gods。  Some are paper; some are 

wood; some are bronze。  I use a small one in the office for a paper…

weight。  In the Bishop Museum are many gods of coral rock and lava 

stone。〃



〃But there is only one God;〃 she announced decisively; stiffening 

her ample frame argumentatively。



Ah Chun noted the danger signal and sheered off。



〃What is greater than God; then?〃 he asked。  〃I will tell you。  It 

is money。  In my time I have had dealings with Jews and Christians; 

Mohammedans and Buddhists; and with little black men from the 

Solomons and New Guinea who carried their god about them; wrapped in 

oiled paper。  They possessed various gods; these men; but they all 

worshipped money。  There is that Captain Higginson。  He seems to 

like Henrietta。〃



〃He will never marry her;〃 retorted Mamma Achun。  〃He will be an 

admiral before he dies〃



〃A rear…admiral;〃 Ah Chun interpolated。



〃Yes; I know。  That is the way they retire。〃



〃His family in the United States is a high one。  They would not like 

it if he married 。 。 。 if he did not marry an American girl。〃



Ah Chun knocked the ashes out of his pipe; thoughtfully refilling 

the silver bowl with a tiny pleget of tobacco。  He lighted it and 

smoked it out before he spoke。



〃Henrietta is the oldest girl。  The day she marries I will give her 

three hundred thousand dollars。  That will fetch that Captain 

Higginson and his high family along with him。  Let the word go out 

to him。  I leave it to you。〃



And Ah Chun sat and smoked on; and in the curling smoke…wreaths he 

saw take shape the face and figure of Toy ShueyToy Shuey; the maid 

of all work in his uncle's
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