bold = Main text
Chapter grey = Comment text
1 I | ethical, some industrial, some religious; and all matters were regulated
2 I | mutual help extended to religious matters: everybody was expected
3 III | a monastery, built as a religious retreat for emperors and
4 III | 62}~aid the work of the religious architect, and where it
5 V | the contrary, essentially religious by its method.~ Where
6 VII | according to the wealth and religious importance of the locality,
7 VII(1) | branches had a political, not a religious cause; and the sections
8 VII | sanctity of marriage as a religious bond; its doctrine of one
9 VIII(1)| surely part"), and to the religious phrase, Ai betsu ri ku ("
10 VIII | but my heart has become a religious;~A nun it shall always be
11 IX | counterparts in Western religious thought. Above all, it is.
12 IX | may be said, in Western religious phraseology, that throughout
13 IX | may have adopted the religious life thinking, to himself, '
14 IX | better than does any other religious hypothesis; and some of
15 IX | unfilled outline of a great religious hypothesis there will doubtless
16 IX | the revelation of larger religious possibilities, - the suggestions
17 IX | impossible, - when the most religious minds shrink from everything
18 X(2) | of Isshin's teaching, a religious association named Tomoyé-Ko.
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