Part
1 Primit| simplicity, that romantic purity, which so tempers the soul
2 Primit| Fujiwara. It impressed the purity of the sword-soul on the
3 Confuc| they are more than equal in purity of form to the Greek. Indeed,
4 Taoism| poets of the South that the purity of the "dew-drooping chrysanthemum,
5 Buddhi| drinking to their full of the purity of the Absolute, in their
6 Asuka | judge of that idealised purity of expression which characterises
7 Asuka | of intense refinement and purity, such as only great religious
8 Heian | strong form, whose fire of purity is death, who slays the
9 Fujiwa| the soul into His world of purity, called the Jodo, where,
10 Fujiwa| or Faith in the Land of Purity. The Fudo of this sculptor
11 Ashika| original calm, never losing its purity,~or its own nature. The
12 Ashika| in all its~intensity and purity. They were all Zen priests,
13 Toyoto| their aim to imitate the purity of Sesshu, but failed, of
14 Toyoto| spirit of Ashikaga in its purity, while Korin, through his
15 Meiji | which broods in transcendent purity the glory of a succession
16 Meiji | Indian ideals in all their purity amongst us, even where they
17 Meiji | while it loves the austere purity of the Ashikagas, holds
18 Meiji | Ruskin had interpreted the purity of pre-Raphaelite nobleness.
19 Meiji | the sword; the ethereal purity of the lotus rising out
20 Meiji | masters in their ancient purity, together with the study
21 Meiji | lost in the sky of golden purity, and holds in her hand a
22 Meiji | narcissus - the flower of silent purity - feeling the raging storm
23 Vista | in the tarnishing of the purity of the spiritual mirror,
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