Chapter
1 I | that I might delight in the charm of their grace. And there
2 II | country; and its most refined charm is the essence, irreproducible,
3 II | to give me fruit?~Womanly charm is compared to the cherry
4 III| But the lanterns made the charm of the display. In each
5 III| gradually, - the immense charm, the weird Buddhist charm
6 III| charm, the weird Buddhist charm of the place, grows and
7 III| thinking about the fugitive charm of Japanese amusements,
8 III| of these pleasures. The charm of Japanese life presents
9 III| significance than beauty. The charm of the bride was just that
10 III| express.~ Yet what was the charm made with? The wonderful
11 V | devoid of a certain weird charm, seemed to me impossible.
12 V | something of the intense charm of color in Japanese prints;
13 V | While conscious of the charm of many things, the reason
14 V | things, the reason of the charm I could not guess. I imagined
15 V | rather than the concrete charm of childhood.~ In the
16 V | refusal.~ What does the charm of an antique head express,
17 VII| and more than half of the charm of such interiors is the
18 VII| interpret the colorific charm would be a dearer and a
19 VII| travelers understand the charm of a Japanese inn, or even
20 VII| but how many write of the charm of that alcove where every
21 XI | fading of sunsets, - to find charm in the blossoming of plants
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