Chapter
1 I | that he may conquer and come back quickly to us, - soon,
2 I | robes of snowy white, would come to dance with tinkling of
3 II | thought, and somehow the tears come first!1~X~Crying for joy
4 II | of the stream.~IV~Letters come by the post; photographs
5 III | Buddhist Priest who had come to the hotel on~{p. 73}~
6 III | The season of rains will come next, and there will be
7 III | fortunate time that shall come."~ ~ The editor of the
8 IV | seem to go, but they all come back again after the snow
9 IV | the very best of me may come together again.~ ~ If
10 V | though here other laws too come into play) of the human
11 VI | in a little while I shall come!' Then he told us that mother
12 VII | runs, - "Every day to Ôsaka come a thousand ships." Junks
13 VII | certain suspicion that had come to me as I entered the temple
14 VII | bereaved father or mother would come to the door, pull the bell-rope,
15 VIII| promised:~Happy remembrances come, and each brings a smile
16 VIII| night the tempest will not come?2~p. 198}~Shadow and shape
17 IX | Great Sanctity. After these come the heavens called the Heavens
18 IX | thousand generations to come: they are too much alive; -
19 X | matter; and now persons come daily from various places
20 X | Elder Sister, where did you come from before you were born
21 XI | and name; and pain cannot come nigh them.~ "But to you,
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