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1 I | grove.~{p. 5}~ Elfishly small my habitation might be,
2 I | might be, but never too small, because I should have neither
3 I | stood at the verge of a small plateau overlooking a bay.
4 III | to reach, at a cost too small to name, precisely the same
5 III | purchaser of a medal.~ Such small gifts and memories make
6 III | mementos of the tragedy: a small Japanese razor, blood-crusted,
7 III | loyalty of a nation. No small, mean, dry facts could ever
8 V | is likely to depend in no small degree upon the conservation
9 V(1) | when the drawing is upon a small scale; and the suggestion
10 V | countenances frequently hide small souls, "these anomalies
11 VI | wara-ningyô; and over that grave a small tombstone is set up, bearing
12 VII | nevertheless remarkably small. There are indeed between
13 VII | may be presented with a small gift of pocket money; -
14 VII | begin trade for himself on a small scale, or finds some other
15 VII | is never discharged for a small misdemeanor. A dismissal
16 VII | sits a priest who for a small fee writes the kaimyô. The
17 VII | one, - and that usually small, - the figure of Amida.
18 VII | may be helped to open a small store of his own."~ "Are
19 VIII(1)| written, may mean either "a small stone," or "longing to see."
20 X | door. But excepting these small matters, she never had done
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