A Japanese Interior |
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afternoon American anese audience Bandai beautiful began bettō Bruce Buddhist carriage ceremony chrysanthemum church clothes coach coffin cook crowd decorated delighted dolls door earthquake Emperor Emperor's birthday Empire of Japan Empress English excitement feel floor flowers foreign style front funeral funny garden girls groom ground half past head hibachi horse imperial Japan Japanese friends Japanese funeral Jimmu Tenno Kaio kimono kind Kiōtō Kobé Kōjimachi kuruma kurumaya lacquered lady letters look lunch mamushi Mikado Miné Miné's Mori morning mountain Nagoya night Nishino once palace parlor peeresses pleasant pretty pupils ride rōnins saké seated seemed sent servants Shimoda Shinto side silk soon stage stand stopped street teachers temple thing thought to-day Tōkyō took waiting walk weather whole Yasaku Yokohama
Popular passages
Page 145 - Japanese subjects shall, within limits not prejudicial to peace and order, and not antagonistic to their duties as subjects, enjoy freedom of religious belief.
Page 14 - ... is in the Peeresses' School a most remarkably high sense of honor, so that the teacher can be quite sure that her pupils will never be guilty of cheating, or shamming, or trying to improve their standing by any false methods. It is very interesting to me, in reading over the names on my class list, to notice that some of them were famous in Japanese history long before Columbus discovered America.
Page 42 - ... roof. The first thing a Japanese does in the morning is to throw open the entire front of his house. On entering a Japanese house the absence of chairs, tables, and bedsteads, — in fact, furniture of every kind, — seems to us very strange. Some one has said, " Babies never fall out of bed in Japan, because there are no beds ; they never tip themselves over in chairs, for a similar reason.
Page 231 - I am too Japanese for the foreigners, and too foreign for the Japanese, too worldly for the missionaries, and not worldly enough for the rest of the foreign colony ; and so, with the exception of my intimate Japanese friends, there is no one in Tokyo who does not seem to regard me as rather out of their line.
Page 12 - The only Historic Race is the Caucasian, the others having done little worth recording. It is usually divided into three great branches : the Ar'yan, the Semit'ic, and the Hamit'ic. The first of these, which includes the Persians, the Hindoos, and nearly all the European nations, is the one to which we belong. It has always been noted for its intellectual vigor. The second embraces the Assyrians...
Page 23 - See! See! What shall I see ? A horse's head where its tail should be.
Page 228 - I should say, except that the word " civilization " is so difficult to define and to understand, that I do not know what it means now as well as I did when I left home.
Page 24 - I have had my first ride this afternoon, and enjoyed it very much. It makes one feel very grand indeed to have a man run ahead all the way to clear the people out of the road. It seems to be absolutely necessary in Tokyo to have such a forerunner, for there are no sidewalks, and the streets are full of people, and especially of very...