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Eating Stand for the Children

Eating Stand for the Children.png Boys' Concert—Flute, Drum, and SongThumbnailsKnight of the end of the Thirteenth CenturyBoys' Concert—Flute, Drum, and SongThumbnailsKnight of the end of the Thirteenth CenturyBoys' Concert—Flute, Drum, and SongThumbnailsKnight of the end of the Thirteenth CenturyBoys' Concert—Flute, Drum, and SongThumbnailsKnight of the end of the Thirteenth CenturyBoys' Concert—Flute, Drum, and SongThumbnailsKnight of the end of the Thirteenth Century
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Yoshi-san and his Grandmother go to visit the great temple at Shiba. They walk up its steep stairs, and arrive at the lacquered threshold. Here they place aside their wooden clogs, throw a few coins into a huge box standing on the floor. It is covered with a wooden grating so constructed as to prevent pilfering hands afterward removing the coin. Then they pull a thick rope attached to a big brass bell like an exaggerated sheep-bell, hanging from the ceiling, but which gives forth but a feeble, tinkling sound. To insure the god's attention, this is supplemented with three distinct claps of the hands, which are afterward clasped in prayer for a short interval; two more claps mark the conclusion. Then, resuming their clogs, they clatter down the steep, copper-bound temple steps into the grounds. Here are stalls innumerable of toys, fruit, fish-cakes, birds, tobacco-pipes, ironmongery, and rice, and scattered amidst the stalls are tea-houses, peep-shows, and other places of amusement. Of these the greatest attraction is a newly-opened chrysanthemum show.

Author
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Child-Life in Japan and Japanese Child Stories, by Mrs. M. Chaplin Ayrton
Published in 1901
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916*536
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