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1 I | summit of a hill, guarded by stone lions and shadowed by a
2 III | is used. Paper, straw, or stone makes no real difference:
3 III | erected in front of the stone sheltered the offerings
4 III | Kyôto-folk-by erected this stone is." The Buddhist Kaimyô
5 IV | cemeteries, with bits of broken stone for monuments. And they
6 VII | as bridges of steel and stone) - seruing to passe ouer
7 VII | canal flows between high stone embankments supporting the
8 VII | in Western style - with stone, brick, and iron only when
9 VII | and crossed by a massive stone bridge. There are statues
10 VII | bridge. There are statues and stone lamps and lions and an enormous
11 VII | the dimness below, a large stone basin, into which water
12 VII | from the mouth of a great stone tortoise, black with age,
13 VII | chiseled upon a big disk of stone, probably weighing a ton;
14 VII | supported on the back of a stone image of a wrestler, - a
15 VII | monument of all is a great stone badger, sitting upright,
16 VIII | a Buddha of bronze or stone!2~And why a Buddha of wood,
17 VIII | Buddha of wood, or bronze, or stone? Because the living Buddha
18 VIII(2)| especially refers to the stone images of the Buddha {footnote
19 VIII(1)| may mean either "a small stone," or "longing to see." In
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