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Chapter grey = Comment text
1 III | put itself, Are not all pleasures keen in proportion to their
2 III | events, Japanese popular pleasures have the double peculiarity
3 III | amazing cheapness of these pleasures. The charm of Japanese life
4 III | Perhaps Japanese cheap pleasures might be broadly divided
5 III | compose a large part of the pleasures of city life which all can
6 VII | who are still enjoying the pleasures of this world!' And they
7 VIII | hollowness of all earthly pleasures, Christian and Buddhist
8 VIII(1)| temporary nature of all pleasures, - is here playfully referred
9 IX | passions, desires, pains and pleasures, of innumerable lives. But
10 IX | conscious of their unreality. Pleasures and pains and all the feelings
11 IX | and hopes and fears, and pleasures and pains, are illusions;1 -
12 IX | pronounces the ultimate nature of pleasures and pains to be inscrutable,
13 IX(1) | Pleasures and pains have their origin
14 IX | begin to diminish. The finer pleasures and the keener pains must
15 IX | powers are gained. Subjective pleasures become changed at will into
16 IX | changed at will into objective pleasures; - thoughts as well as wishes
17 IX | developed; and the subjective pleasures transmuted into objective
18 IX | but also of supernatural pleasures, - not only of selfhood
19 XI | phantasmagory.~ "For the pleasures that men term lofty or noble
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