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Chapter grey = Comment text
1 I | suddenly diverted by the sense of something not knowingly
2 III | grows upon you; and the sense of its vast antiquity defines
3 III | real difference: the art sense is superbly independent~{
4 III | artificial light. Artistic sense of line and color suffices
5 III | any educated Japanese, the sense of the humanity of his country'
6 IV | play at death. Before the sense of personal identity comes,
7 IV | a very real though vague sense of loss, and much wiping
8 IV | as Non-Reality.~ ~ This sense of the voidness of things
9 V | cultivation of the national art sense. Nay, those very means by
10 V | results of that very art sense to which his excellency
11 V | conventional only in the sense of symbols which, once interpreted,
12 V | Otherwise his art was in no sense aspirational; it was the
13 V | method scientific in the true sense. The higher art, the aspirational
14 V | imperfection is not, in the ethical sense, a subject for admiration.~
15 V | natural law in change, and the sense of life made harmonious
16 IX | qualification: "In the highest sense, O King, there is no such
17 IX | In the third stage the sense of the approaching perception
18 IX | language, the organs of sense - sight,~{p. 226}~smell,
19 IX | functionings of the organs of sense and movement. . . . A continuance
20 IX | spirit of tolerance, no sense of human brotherhood, no
21 IX | of the Mushiki-Kai, all sense of individuality is lost:
22 IX(1)| in the {footnote p. 258} sense of divine mind, is a term
23 IX | intensive quickening of the sense of beauty, - all multiply
24 XI | longing for the things of sense.~ "But he who truly wishes
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