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rel="nofollow" href="#u8f399fcb-c409-5a16-9915-d84c50a8fe9d">20.Society in Japan

       21.Marriage Customs

       22.Washoku and O-furo

       23.My Royal Neighbours

       24.Two Composers

       25.London and Paris

       26.Harps and Angels

       27.Back to Work in Japan

       28.Dreaming of Elephants

       29.Finding the Brittons

       30.Sea Shells

       31.The ‘Katakana Prison’ and Mr Suzuki

       32.Poetry

       33.The Island in Between

       34.Marrying ‘Boy’ – 1968

       35.The Japanese Crane – Bird of Happiness

       36.Comfort and Solace with Ted

       Dorothy Britton’s Published Works

       Index

      Preface

      MY LIFE has been so full of remarkable friendships that this book could have gone on and on. I wish I could have told about all of them. They usually had fascinating beginnings, too. The Australian actress Geraldine Ward was sitting opposite us on a train from Hastings to London, and was so mystified by Derek, in his father’s RAF blazer, who seemed unable to speak. She came to the conclusion he must have suffered a plane crash in the war and she started a sympathetic conversation. We became friends, and she used to visit us in Japan on her way to Australia, and we always got together when in London. Then there was the phone call from a Japanese secretary at the US Naval Base in Yokosuka, who knew I was the widow of an RAF air marshal, and thought I might be interested to know that a lady Captain had just arrived with a retired British air force commander husband. When I rang him, he said yes, he was a commander – but in the Royal Navy! ‘You sound English,’ he said. ‘Let’s meet.’ And Ted and Derek and I became very close friends of the interesting Balink-Whites, whom we visited in their home in Florida as well as in New Zealand where she was once posted – the only country which agreed to take a female naval attaché!

      And there was a remarkable coincidence. A group of high school teachers from the USA came to my house to hear about my translating Japanese literature. When I had finished talking, and we were having refreshments, one of the women casually mentioned that her great aunt had been killed in the Great Earthquake in Yokohama. My spine tingled, and I asked if her name was Edith Lacy. Next day I took her to see the grave with our aunts’ names upon it. And then there was Edna Read, whom Paul Norbury, my wonderful publisher, asked me to meet to persuade her to write her own extraordinary Anglo-Japanese story.

      And what would Derek and I have done without the Hoiseths? Our grocer all of a sudden introduced our neighbour Rodney who was in need of a blurb for his splendid book for learning English. We became friends, and eventually since they were unencumbered with children, he and his lovely wife Junko agreed to share my house with Derek and me after Ted passed away. I take Derek with me almost everywhere, but occasionally it is not possible, and since I do not like to leave him at home alone, it is marvellous to be able to ask the Hoiseths to keep an eye on him. Like my husband Boy, Junko has a ‘green thumb’ when it comes to plants and flowers, so thanks to her our tiny garden always looks lovely. And dear Rodney knows all about computers! We get along so well and feel like family. What a wonderful coincidence that Rodney needed that blurb! My whole life has been an example of how intertwined our karma is, and how one thing leads to another.

      JAPANESE NAMES

      Throughout this memoir I have presented Japanese names according to Western styling, that is, with the given name first followed by the family name. Also, for the sake of simplicity, I have avoided using the macron to mark the long vowel in Japanese words comprising an ‘o’ or ‘u’. I hope my scholarly friends will not be too critical of this decision!

      DB

      List of Plates

      1Alice Hiller in Yokohama en route to Shanghai in 1920

      2Frank Britton’s house in Yokohama, c. 1920

      3Frank Britton’s enlarged and improved house in Yokohama

      4Frank and Alice Britton enjoying making music together

      5Dorothy Britton not yet two, with her aunt Dorothy

      6A building similar to this came down in the earthquake and crushed Dorothy Britton’s aunt Dorothy and a friend

      7Christ Church (after the earthquake), where Dorothy Britton had been christened

      8Frank Britton’s office after the earthquake

      9Kin-san – Dorothy Britton’s nanny

      10Following the earthquake, the Britton house was temporarily used by a contingent of military police

      11Dorothy with the Okubos in Hayama

      12Dorothy’s fancy dress Valentine’s Day birthday party at the Britton house in Yokohama

      13Dorothy aged c. six at the new house in Hayama

      14Departing for England in 1935 on the Tatsuta Maru

      15Dorothy with cousin Anna Rendell and her daughters Joan and Isabel

      16The Butterfield’s sailing boat at Pitt’s Bay, Bermuda

      17French composer Darius Milhaud at Mills College, California, in 1943

      18Dorothy with the niece of the President of Haiti – the first black student at Mills

      19Dorothy singing folksongs with her ukulele at a charity garden fete

      20Dorothy with her Irish harp

      21Dorothy back in Japan in August, 1949, with her mother and Mrs ‘TQ’

      22The British Embassy, Tokyo

      23Queen Victoria’s god-daughter Victoria Drummond

      24Dorothy working on her cantata with librettist Elizabeth Baskerville McNaughton

      25Dorothy interpreting Ikuma Dan’s talk about Japanese music for the Tokyo English

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