Chapter
1 I | but he remembered things told him in his childhood by
2 III | 52}~IV~Feeling hungry, I told my runner to take me to
3 IV | if these little ones were told, some bright morning, that
4 V | occasionally beautiful. If I am told that no other European would
5 V | commonplace or vulgar. If I am told that~p. 103}~trained art
6 VI | wondered. Then the neighbors told us that we must make a ningyô-no-haka
7 VI | put off doing what they told him. Perhaps he did not
8 VI | while I shall come!' Then he told us that mother was pulling
9 VII | fourteen years. Such, I am told, is the time of service
10 VII | of rushing water. I was told that the basin becomes filled
11 VII | of this world!' And they told the thing to the Blessed
12 VII | are very clever; and I am told that nearly every large
13 VIII| All things change, we are told, in this world of change
14 VIII| of impermanency, we are told in another dodoitsu that - ~
15 IX | a soul is denied. We are told that the misfortunes of
16 IX | absolute annihilation. We are told that in the first of these
17 IX | which priest and poet have told us to use as steps to higher
18 X | Katsugorô, the son of Genzô, told to his elder sister the
19 X | however, when Katsugorô had told her the same story over
20 X | a strange thing, and she told her parents about it.~
21 X | with his own august lips told me about his visit to the
22 X | Fusa, being questioned, told them the truth. Then Genzô
23 X | else."~ ~ The grandmother told Genzô and his wife what
24 X | house all that Katsugorô had told her about his remembrance
25 X | Minamisempa, who collected stories told to him, or copied them from
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