Manners and Customs of the Japanese: Japan and the Japanese, in the Nineteenth Century. From Recent Dutch Travels, Especially the Narrative of Von SieboldJ. Murray, 1852 - 423 Seiten |
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Seite ix
... ships in the 18th century . - American attempts . - Captain Stewart's disasters and schemes . - Baffled . -Shipwrecked Japanese sent from Macao . - Not suffered to land . - Russian attempts . - Count Resanoff's embassy . - Dif ...
... ships in the 18th century . - American attempts . - Captain Stewart's disasters and schemes . - Baffled . -Shipwrecked Japanese sent from Macao . - Not suffered to land . - Russian attempts . - Count Resanoff's embassy . - Dif ...
Seite x
... Ship - building . - Husbandry . - Culture of Tea , and mode of drying . — Art of dwarfing trees , and of produc- ing enormous - sized vegetables - 319-333 · CHAPTER XIII . RELIGION OF JAPAN . Sinsyu . - Cosmogony . - Celestial and ...
... Ship - building . - Husbandry . - Culture of Tea , and mode of drying . — Art of dwarfing trees , and of produc- ing enormous - sized vegetables - 319-333 · CHAPTER XIII . RELIGION OF JAPAN . Sinsyu . - Cosmogony . - Celestial and ...
Seite 5
... Ship's entering the Bay , —and on Land . - Smuggling . — Exclu- sion of a President's wife . - Reasons . - Personal ... ships , to which the Dutch trade with Japan is limited , sail for the Bay of Nagasaki . The voyage appears to occupy ...
... Ship's entering the Bay , —and on Land . - Smuggling . — Exclu- sion of a President's wife . - Reasons . - Personal ... ships , to which the Dutch trade with Japan is limited , sail for the Bay of Nagasaki . The voyage appears to occupy ...
Seite 6
... ship , and every individual on board , are subjected , ere permission to anchor in Nagasaki Bay be obtained . Occa- sionally , however , the unfitness of the native vessels to contend with the tempests alluded to , affords a ...
... ship , and every individual on board , are subjected , ere permission to anchor in Nagasaki Bay be obtained . Occa- sionally , however , the unfitness of the native vessels to contend with the tempests alluded to , affords a ...
Seite 7
... ship . It may seem that , under such circumstances , no great deliberation as to adopting the means of escape tendered could be requisite ; but when we shall be better acquainted with the character of the Japanese , with their laws ...
... ship . It may seem that , under such circumstances , no great deliberation as to adopting the means of escape tendered could be requisite ; but when we shall be better acquainted with the character of the Japanese , with their laws ...
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Manners and Customs of the Japanese: Japan and the Japanese in the ... Philipp Franz Von Siebold Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2018 |
Manners and Customs of the Japanese: Japan and the Japanese in the ... Philipp Franz Von Siebold Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2016 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
according afford allowed amongst appears appointed arms attended authority called carried ceremony character Chinese Christianity close commands course court death Dezima Doeff dress Dutch empire English European factory Fcap followed foreigners four friends further give given gold Governor ground guard hand head History honour interpreters island Italy Japan Japanese journey Klaproth known ladies land leave Letters lives Lord manner means mikado month Nagasaki native nature Notes object observed occasion offered officers original party passed persons Plates Portrait Post 8vo present President princes rank received relations remain respect Second Edition seems sent servants ship side Siebold swords taken temple Third tion town trade Translated travellers usual vessel visits Vols whilst whole women Woodcuts writers Yedo ziogoon
Beliebte Passagen
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Seite 133 - Then he ordered us to take off our cappa, or cloak, being our garment of ceremony ; then to stand upright, that he might have a full view of us ; again, to walk, to stand still, to compliment each other, to dance, to jump, to play the drunkard, to speak broken Japanese, to read Dutch, to paint, to sing, to put our cloaks on and off.
Seite 125 - Nagasaki and the chief interpreter are the only persons who accompany the opperhoefd, and give him the signal of retreat, which, like his entrance, is performed in a very stooping attitude ; so that, although the presence of numbers may be perceived, it is impossible, without violating the laws of Japanese courtesy, to look round for what should attract attention or excite curiosity.
Seite 134 - ... of us ; again, to walk, to stand still, to compliment each other, to dance, to jump, to play the drunkard, to speak broken Japanese, to read Dutch, to paint, to sing, to put our cloaks on and off. Meanwhile we...
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Seite 130 - Emperor sat on the other; and there, kneeling, he bowed his forehead quite down to the ground, and so crawled backwards like a crab, without uttering a single word. So mean and short a thing is the audience we have of this mighty monarch.