Book
1 II| the officials renounced extravagance.~ All this was sixty or
2 II| ago but now everywhere is extravagance. We may well spend money
3 II| possessions were ruder still. Extravagance unrepressed destroys the
4 II| Ieyasu meant. This disease, extravagance, is not merely individual
5 II| country folk too fell into extravagance and competed in costly amusements.
6 II| simplicity and in the capital extravagance.~ ./. Nowadays, so far as
7 II| Alas! all the world praises extravagance and all the world desires
8 II| with limited coin their extravagance is unlimited and useful
9 II| to save their lives. From extravagance comes poverty and from poverty
10 II| punishments for crime, forbidding extravagance, reproving the idle and
11 II| throughout the empire conquering extravagance and evil. Without doubt
12 II| and evil. Without doubt extravagance would give way gradually
13 II| in the towns. And useless extravagance leads the fashion. The nobles,
14 II| a century of peace comes extravagance. That it may be replaced
15 II| cotton robe was really evil extravagance, while the seeming extravagance
16 II| extravagance, while the seeming extravagance of Kakushige35 in the end
17 II| frugality of the Shōgun, yet the extravagance of the lower orders ceases
18 II| also pure and free from extravagance; nor were they proud of
19 IV| the evil customs, forbade extravagance in dress and equipage and
20 IV| But in a short three years extravagance had ceased and riot and
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