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961
"
No
chance
there
,
"
thought
he
.
962
The
worthy
fellow
had
certainly
taken
good
care
to
eat
as
hearty
a
breakfast
as
possible
before
leaving
the
Carnatic
;
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
resin
torches
of
the
fishermen
,
who
were
fishing
from
their
boats
.
963
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
!
"
Отключить рекламу
964
The
next
morning
poor
,
jaded
,
famished
Passepartout
said
to
himself
that
he
must
get
something
to
eat
at
all
hazards
,
and
the
sooner
he
did
so
the
better
.
He
might
,
indeed
,
sell
his
watch
;
but
he
would
have
starved
first
.
Now
or
never
he
must
use
the
strong
,
if
not
melodious
voice
which
nature
had
bestowed
upon
him
.
He
knew
several
French
and
English
songs
,
and
resolved
to
try
them
upon
the
Japanese
,
who
must
be
lovers
of
music
,
since
they
were
for
ever
pounding
on
their
cymbals
,
tam-tams
,
and
tambourines
,
and
could
not
but
appreciate
European
talent
.
965
It
was
,
perhaps
,
rather
early
in
the
morning
to
get
up
a
concert
,
and
the
audience
prematurely
aroused
from
their
slumbers
,
might
not
possibly
pay
their
entertainer
with
coin
bearing
the
Mikado
's
features
.
Passepartout
therefore
decided
to
wait
several
hours
;
and
,
as
he
was
sauntering
along
,
it
occurred
to
him
that
he
would
seem
rather
too
well
dressed
for
a
wandering
artist
.
The
idea
struck
him
to
change
his
garments
for
clothes
more
in
harmony
with
his
project
;
by
which
he
might
also
get
a
little
money
to
satisfy
the
immediate
cravings
of
hunger
.
The
resolution
taken
,
it
remained
to
carry
it
out
.
966
It
was
only
after
a
long
search
that
Passepartout
discovered
a
native
dealer
in
old
clothes
,
to
whom
he
applied
for
an
exchange
.
The
man
liked
the
European
costume
,
and
ere
long
Passepartout
issued
from
his
shop
accoutred
in
an
old
Japanese
coat
,
and
a
sort
of
one-sided
turban
,
faded
with
long
use
.
A
few
small
pieces
of
silver
,
moreover
,
jingled
in
his
pocket
.
967
Good
!
"
thought
he
.
"
I
will
imagine
I
am
at
the
Carnival
!
"
Отключить рекламу
968
His
first
care
,
after
being
thus
"
Japanesed
,
"
was
to
enter
a
tea-house
of
modest
appearance
,
and
,
upon
half
a
bird
and
a
little
rice
,
to
breakfast
like
a
man
for
whom
dinner
was
as
yet
a
problem
to
be
solved
.
969
"
Now
,
"
thought
he
,
when
he
had
eaten
heartily
,
"
I
must
n't
lose
my
head
.
I
ca
n't
sell
this
costume
again
for
one
still
more
Japanese
.
I
must
consider
how
to
leave
this
country
of
the
Sun
,
of
which
I
shall
not
retain
the
most
delightful
of
memories
,
as
quickly
as
possible
.
"
970
It
occurred
to
him
to
visit
the
steamers
which
were
about
to
leave
for
America
.
He
would
offer
himself
as
a
cook
or
servant
,
in
payment
of
his
passage
and
meals
.
Once
at
San
Francisco
,
he
would
find
some
means
of
going
on
.
The
difficulty
was
,
how
to
traverse
the
four
thousand
seven
hundred
miles
of
the
Pacific
which
lay
between
Japan
and
the
New
World
.