bold = Main text
Chapter grey = Comment text
1 I | some degree this state of things still exists in the more
2 I | towns and cities, of course, things were differently ordered;
3 I | the memory of living man. Things never seen before were making
4 I | before; but he remembered things told him in his childhood
5 I | for having said naughty things. Whereupon the people woke
6 II | said, "is an old song: - ~Things never changed since the
7 II | he himself was a boy: - ~Things never changed since the
8 III | moss of ages; and climbing things have developed stems a foot
9 III | was satisfactory; the only things Japanese were the mattings
10 III | and, among other precious things, an essay on Japan, opening
11 III | and a pleasure. Of all the things which I picked up here and
12 III | everybody; but~{p. 77}~now, poor things! they begin to fall even
13 III | think later about these things. . . . Even now, for me,
14 III | uncommon person who does noble things; and the people, seeing
15 III | Orient day, turns common things to gold.~{p. 84}~
16 IV | Bodhisattva look upon all things as having the nature of
17 IV | sense of the voidness of things comes only when the temperature
18 IV | is possible to think of things as they are, - when ocean,
19 IV | majority detest this state of things: multitudes would gladly
20 V | only regarded as common things in Japan." Common things
21 V | things in Japan." Common things I Common, perhaps, in the
22 V(1) | art is capable of great things in ideal facial expression
23 V | conscious of the charm of many things, the reason of the charm
24 V | plants as "the most masterly things" that he ever saw. "Every
25 V | larger comprehension of things as they are. Thus he was
26 V | artists like to draw horrible things?"~ "What horrible things?"
27 V | things?"~ "What horrible things?" I inquired.~ "These,"
28 VII | all kinds of jutting things. At intervals you can see
29 VII | Many curious and beautiful things have vanished; but Old Japan
30 VII | exotic, prototypal; and things never~{p. 155}~before seen
31 VII | are ever so many curious things; but I shall only venture
32 VII | showed me extraordinary things until my eyes ached. We
33 VIII | instability of all material things, and the hollowness of all
34 VIII | compare their teaching as to things ghostly, - and especially
35 VIII | darkness comes with love.2~All things change, we are told, in
36 VIII(3)| the song is: "Since all things in this {footnote p. 200}
37 IX(1) | CHÛ-IN-KYÔ."~ "Even swords and things of metal are manifestations
38 IX | of the mind in graceful things. On earth these are classed
39 IX | about which many curious things are written; but neither
40 IX | to use as steps to higher things are not dead, nor even likely
41 X | because it suggests many things besides the possibility
42 X | is hard to believe such things. But I beg to make report
43 X | now I forget many, many things. But I still remember that
44 X | is very good to do these things.2 . . . After that, I only
45 X(2) | it is called Kami; in all things it is called Spirit; in
46 XI | dreams of longing for the things of sense.~ "But he who
47 XI | pleasure of imagining those things for which men miserably
48 XI | noble or ignoble, - all things imagined or done for any
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