I.J.M. Minister at Washington and London, was assassinated by a
Shint[=o] fanatic, February 11, 1889; T. J., p. 229; see Percival
Lowell's paper in the Atlantic Monthly.]
[Footnote 20: See Mr. P. Lowell's Esoteric Shint[=o], T.A.S.J., Vol.
XXI, pp. 165-167, and his "Occult Japan."]
[Footnote 21: S. and H., Japan, p. 83.]
[Footnote 22: See the Author's Introduction to the Arabian Nights'
Entertainments, Boston, 1891.]
[Footnote 23: B.N., Index and pp. 78-103; Edkins's Chinese Buddhism, p.
169.]
[Footnote 24: Satow's or Chamberlain's Guide-books furnish hundreds of
other instances, and describe temples in which the renamed kami are
worshipped.]
[Footnote 25: S. and H., p. 70.]
[Footnote 26: M.E., pp. 187, 188; S. and H., pp. 11, 12.]
[Footnote 27: San Kai Ri (Mountain, Sea, and Land). This work,
recommended to me by a learned Buddhist priest in Fukui, I had
translated and read to me by a Buddhist of the Shin Shu sect. In like
manner, even Christian writers in Japan have occasionally endeavored to
rationalize the legends of Shint[=o], see Kojiki, p. liii., where Mr. T.
Goro's Shint[=o] Shin-ron is referred to. I have to thank my friend Mr.
C. Watanabe, of Cornell University, for reading to me Mr.
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