bold = Main text
Chapter grey = Comment text
1 I | household shrines, I should see the holy lights lighted
2 I | the Deity will rejoice to see.~ "Before the great bright
3 I | would be honored. I should see my pilgrims tying sandals
4 I | strength of foot.~ I should see fine moss, like emerald
5 I | those lions; - I should see the sprouting of~{p. 10}~
6 I | ujigami.1 The old man could see the festival banners (nobori)
7 II(1) | See Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan,
8 II | I like too?~VI~Going to see the beloved, a thousand
9 II | thousand ri.~VII~Going to see the beloved, even the water
10 II | tears.~p. 40}~II~Even to see the birds flying freely
11 II | to gain.~V~If I may not see the face, but only look
12 II | better far only in dreams to see.~VI~Though his body were
13 II | his manuscript again to see if I can make a choice.
14 III | the spot that, in order to see the back of the monument,
15 III | punishment is inability to see, to hear, to feel, and to
16 III | nature with delight, we must see them through illusions,
17 IV | strokes of the character. "Now see," she says: "each stands
18 V | intelligence, grace, and beauty. I see the women of the Japanese
19 V | studied in detail. We never see all the details of the body
20 V | of a creature it is. We see the typical, never the individual
21 V | but, as we shall presently see, signification of detail.~
22 V | much worse."~ "Only to see them," she exclaimed, "I
23 VI | is! - there! - do you not see her?' We would tell him
24 VI | tell him that we could not see anything. Then he would
25 VII | things. At intervals you can see mattings hanging out, and
26 VII | went to Ôsaka chiefly to see the temples, especially
27 VII | what Tennôji is, one must see the weirdness of its decay, -
28 VII | premonition of being about to see the extraordinary in religion
29 VII | down over the railing, you see, in the dimness below, a
30 VII | points turned up. One may see the same costume in the
31 VII | of the people about me to see the same types, - to meet
32 VII(1) | See Professor Chamberlain's
33 VII | could the good Emperor see, from his shrine of Kôzu, -
34 VII | back to the temple. You see the ground under these palms
35 VII | never speak roughly. You see how very hard all these
36 VIII(1)| person as well as a Buddha. (See my Glimpses of Unfamiliar
37 VIII(1)| small stone," or "longing to see." In the bed of the phantom
38 VIII(1)| Chichi koishi! haha koishi!" (See Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan,
39 IX | thoughts, and cause them to see that the vast and deep intelligence
40 IX | Nin mité, hô toké" (see first the person, then preach
41 IX(1) | See a curious legend in the
42 X | daily from various places to see Katsugorô.~ A deposition
43 X | one visits the house to see him, he becomes shy at once,
44 XI | it has been permitted to see something of their preëxistence.
45 XI | endure to look far. Power to see all former births belongs
46 XI | of a cloudless day, - to see the mountains shift their
47 XI | beauty. And therefore to see your former births could
|