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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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32 HONDA THE SAMURAI.<br />

of the teapot, for many<br />

poured over their bowls of rice.<br />

like to have the hot cha<br />

It is wonderful what may be done with chopsticks.<br />

Even the little baby can use them. Fish is most<br />

dexterously carved and served by the two sticks and<br />

;<br />

soup can be eaten with them provided<br />

it is not too<br />

thin. A new guest always has a new pair of sticks,<br />

usually in the form of one piece of fresh, clean wood<br />

partly split, so that he can finish the process himself,<br />

and by making two sticks of one prove that it has<br />

not been used.<br />

Our impressions of a Japanese house would be that<br />

it is for summer weather a pleasant dwelling-place,<br />

but that in the cold winter it would not suit Americans.<br />

North of Osaka one needs fire six months in<br />

the year but the Japanese have no safe or convenient<br />

method of warming their houses, using only the<br />

;<br />

hibachi, or fire-bowl. Yet though we might think it<br />

uncomfortable, it is less so to a Japanese. As the<br />

cold weather increases, the natives put on additional<br />

layers of clothing, like skins to an onion, until they<br />

have as many as four, sfe, or even eight thicknesses<br />

of clothing. With their padded long clothes confining<br />

the heat of their bodies, as they<br />

sit in their<br />

kneeling fashion on the thick mats, they need warmth<br />

only on their hands, which the handful of coal in<br />

the brazier easily yields.

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