
THE USURPER - An Episode in Japanese History - BY - JUDITH GAUTIER - TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH - BY - ABBY LANGDON ALGER - BOSTON - ROBERTS BROTHERS - 1884
CHAPTER I. - THE LEMON GROVE.
CHAPTER II. - NAGATO'S WOUND.
CHAPTER III. - FEAST OF THE SEA-GOD.
CHAPTER IV. - THE SISTER OF THE SUN.
CHAPTER V. - THE KNIGHTS OF HEAVEN.
CHAPTER VI. - THE FRATERNITY OF BLIND MEN.
CHAPTER VII. - PERJURY.
CHAPTER VIII. - THE CASTLE OF OWARI.
CHAPTER IX. - THE TEA-HOUSE.
In the hush of early dawn, Osaka awakens beneath a sky that shifts from deep blue to a trembling purple. Two young samurai—one modest in gray and blue, the other cloaked in moon‑lit silk—wander through a hidden lemon grove, its blossoms glittering like frosted pearls. Their easy banter and quiet reverence for the fleeting beauty of the flowers hint at a bond forged in both loyalty and rivalry.
Beyond the fragrant trees, the city’s towering palace looms, its distant gong marking the rhythm of a world bound by ritual and power. As the friends pause to admire the fleeting bloom, an undercurrent of ambition begins to stir, suggesting that the serenity of the grove may soon give way to the machinations of a court on the brink of change. Listeners are invited to step into this vivid tableau, where the delicate scent of lemon blossoms masks the tension of a Japan poised on the edge of a new era.
Language
en
Duration
~9 hours (562K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Marc D'Hooghe (Images generously made available by the Internet Archive.)
Release date
2014-09-29
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1845–1917
A pioneering French writer, poet, and translator, she helped introduce Asian literature and ideas to French readers in the 19th century. Her work moved between poetry, fiction, and translation, with a lifelong taste for the exotic, the musical, and the dramatic.
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