OCR Text |
Show JAPANESE FISHERMEN. Their lives aro not all fogs and storms, for on summer mornings, oven beforo the first pink blush or sunrise, whole -fleets of their little boats, each manned by two or throe stalwart fishermen, creep through tho H placid waters, out of tho rivers and iH inlets to tlic ocean. Though the fish- H ermen have just gone through tho H farewell to wife and children, which H is nlmo.st a ceremony, they bend their H backs to the oam and accompany IH their long, swinging stroke with tho H funa-uta (sailor-song) that puts en- H orgy Into the work and cheers the H spirits, too. To Western ears these H sailor songs have little musical qual- H ity, and do not at all resemble the H lollicklng choruses which we associ- H ate with sailors and fishermen. Often H when their notes, coming from a dis- H lance, wako thc uninitiated ear from H its morning slumbers they will bo IH mistaken for the solitary piping of a IH |