Chapter
1 I | white like the women of the city, O Daimyôjin!"~{p. 7}~ - "
2 I | 14}~than was permitted to city girls. She might be known
3 III| part of the pleasures of city life which all can share.
4 III| at the outskirts of the city. I took a kuruma forthwith,
5 VII| wrote concerning the great city of Ôsaka (as the name is
6 VII| It is still a very great city and one of the chief seaports
7 VII| and keen, feared the great city, and deemed it necessary
8 VII| it is now only the second city of the empire; but it remains,
9 VII| Kobé. But the energetic city, which has its own steamship
10 VII| of Bombay.~ Every great city in the world is believed
11 VII| the same man in his own city, you would probably find
12 VII| than in any other large city of Japan. No crowds are
13 VII| high. The great mass of the city is an agglomeration of low
14 VII| streets of Tôkyô; and the city as a whole is more picturesque
15 VII| are noisy.~ ~ No other city in Japan has so many bridges
16 VII| Ôsaka is the best-ordered city, commercially, in the empire,
17 VII| world. It has always been a city of guilds; and the various
18 VII| hall with a mansard roof, a city hall with a classical porch
19 VII| Far-Eastern character of the city. However, there is one purely
20 VII| building: indeed, no Japanese city shows less favor than Ôsaka
21 VII| daily news of the great city furnishes the apprentice
22 VII| easily than in this great city of ship-building, watch-making,
23 VII| in this busy commercial city;~{p. 161}~for many thousands
24 VII| Tôkyô. Nearly every great city of Japan has a pair of such
25 VII| whence a fine view of the city can be obtained - is the
26 VII| rich."~ Outside of the city there is a still more famous
27 VII| former essay that a Japanese city is little more than a wilderness
28 VII| dwellings of any Japanese city are works of art; and perhaps
29 VII| works of art; and perhaps no city possesses more charming
30 VII| and power of the mightiest city of Japan.~{p. 185}~
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