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Chapter grey = Comment text
1 III | set of rooms furnished in foreign style. The windows were
2 III | by somebody accustomed to foreign service; but their innocent
3 III | auction sale in one of the foreign settlements. There was a
4 III | delegation ever vouchsafed to a foreign nation by that reticent
5 III | who feel or act.~ Some foreign spectators criticised the
6 V | scarcely now endure the foreign praise of Japanese art.
7 V(1) | visible even to a practiced foreign eye. The artist of the Asahi
8 V | that when I now look at a, foreign illustrated newspaper or
9 V | pages, ho exclaimed, "Why do foreign artists like to draw horrible
10 V | pushed my half-inspected foreign magazine out of the way.~{
11 VII | become the chief port of foreign trade, because Ôsaka is
12 VII | country. At present the foreign import and export trade
13 VII | population of two millions, and a foreign trade of at least 9300,000,
14 VII | Western plans. The really "foreign" buildings include a hotel,
15 VII | However, there is one purely foreign corner, - the old Concession,
16 VII(1)| The foreign legations left Ôsaka to
17 VII | feuilleton, translations from foreign fiction, and columns of
18 VII | a bitter opponent of the foreign religion, rebelled against
19 VII | interior world-is closed to the foreign tourist: he can find at
20 VII | travels.~ I wonder how many foreign travelers understand the
21 VII | A Japanese clerk in a foreign store is much better off."~ "
22 VII | well, and have learned the foreign way of doing business, may
23 VII | wages. I have worked in foreign houses, and I know."~ ~
24 IX | pantheism, again our idea is foreign to Buddhism.~ Nevertheless,
25 XI | the pleasure be totally foreign to common human experience,
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