Chapter
1 I | himself had never seen such a thing before; but he remembered
2 I | We cannot understand this thing."~ "Kita!" shouted the
3 II | me the shadow!~Only one thing remains which I cannot hope
4 III | was not the beauty of the thing in itself which impressed
5 III | fingers of that tiny hand. The thing was never the work of an
6 III | the same. Evidently the thing had been bought, together
7 III | Japan to understand why the thing appeared so exiled, so pathetically
8 III | bamboo spring, - the whole thing costing half a cent. An
9 III | souvenir some pretty or curious thing made only in that one place,
10 VII | priest to be, - ~What a nice thing!~Wife has, child has,~Good
11 VII | world!' And they told the thing to the Blessed One."~ ~
12 VII | effort. It is a very queer thing, - half-comical, half-furious
13 VII | variety. Taste! - what a rare thing it is in our Western world! -
14 VII | and the humor of the thing was enhanced by a few Chinese
15 VIII| conventionalisms. Such an exquisite thing as Rossetti's "Sudden Light," -
16 IX | there, Nagasena, such a thing as the soul?" "There is
17 IX | soul?" "There is no such thing as soul." (pp. 86-89.) [
18 IX | O King, there is no such thing."]~ "Is there any being,
19 IX | we learn that the one thing permanent is the Unknowable
20 X | think that it was a strange thing, and she told her parents
21 X | is, of course, a wretched thing. I send it to you supposing
22 X | shall~{p. 279}~tell that thing to father and mother." At
23 X | thought it a very strange thing. They called Katsugorô,
|