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3 182202465 1721 s$J%*mf- m^W Jfe*'^^*^ *'* WWW;: -'W - Library

3 182202465 1721 s$J%*mf- m^W Jfe*'^^*^ *'* WWW;: -'W - Library

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A JAPANESE HOVE. 29<br />

or laid on gridirons. A thick cutting-board and flatsided<br />

knife to cut vegetables, another dirk-like one<br />

to slice raw fish, and an edgeless sheet of brass for<br />

bean-curd are among the necessary implements. A<br />

rasp, or unperforated piece of iron, is<br />

kept for grating<br />

purposes. Tubs, pails of all sizes, and dippers are<br />

numerous and made wholly of bamboo or of wood.<br />

Tinware is unheard of, except as a curiosity imported<br />

by the Dutch and called by the foreign word<br />

briki (instead of<br />

the New Jersey word " blickie," for<br />

the Japanese have no I in their alphabet). Mortars<br />

of wood and stone and sieves and baskets are set in<br />

their places. The domestic hand-mill is used especially<br />

to grind miso, or bean preparation. No such<br />

thing as fork (niku-sashi, " meat-sticker ") or spoon<br />

is known to the Japanese cook. She digs out the<br />

boiled rice with a flat paddle or a scoop, only slightly<br />

countersunk. Pieces of flat bamboo, with the end<br />

slightly indented like a spoon and lacquered in the<br />

cavity are called saji, and look like something between<br />

a gravy-ladle and a spoon proper. As the<br />

native of Japan neither defiles his tea with milk nor<br />

spoils its flavor with sugar, his nation even in this<br />

land of tea has lived without the knowledge of a teaspoon<br />

or even the need of it.<br />

Of furniture, as has been said, there is in a Japanese<br />

house almost none. The casual visitor sees<br />

no sofa, chairs, tables, stoves, curtains, or hat-rack.<br />

In the parlor, or room for receiving guests, are<br />

seen in the tokonoma, or raised space, a handsome<br />

sword-rack, flower vases, bronzes, or lacquered ware.

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