Page:Brinkley - Japan - Volume 6.djvu/265

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APPENDIX

events represented, but the motions and poses of the dancers are radically different. It may also be noted that the dances imitative of the movements of animals, so common among the autochthons of Africa, Asia, and Australasia, have very few parallels in Japan. The salient exception is the Dance of the Dog of Fo (shisbi-odori), which had its origin in China.

Note 27.—These conceptions are all of Chinese origin.

Note 28.—Meaningless interjections, thrown in by the musicians.

Note 29.—An allusion to a method of divining.

Note 30.—A game in which one player guesses the number of small objects—generally fragments of a chop-stick—concealed in the hand of the other.

Note 31.—The Government of the Restoration (1867) distinguished itself by drastic legislation against transactions that pledged women to a life of shame. It issued a law dissolving, without reserve, all existing covenants of that nature and annulling any monetary obligations connected with them. It proclaimed that all capital invested in immoral enterprise should be treated as stolen, and that, since prostitutes and geisha had dehumanised themselves, moneys due by them, or by others on their account, could not be recovered; and it prescribed severe penalties for any attempt to bind a girl to degrading service. But that passion of reform was soon cooled by contact with conditions that have proved too strong for legislation in all ages, and the statesmen of Japan, finding they could not eradicate the evil, adopted the wiser course of regulating it.

Note 32.—There are, nevertheless, some fifteen thousand licensed yu-jo in Tōkyō and its suburbs. The total sum squandered yearly on this kind of debauchery by the capital, with its million and a quarter of citizens, is two and one quarter million yen, which is found to be an average of eighty-eight sen (about 45 gold cents) per head of those that spend it.

Note 33.—A boat having its middle part covered by a roof (yane) under which the pleasure-seekers sit.

Note 34.—The rakugo-ka uses a fan only at his performance. He is not provided with the paper baton (bari) of the koshakushi. This trifling difference is nevertheless characteristic.

Note 35.—Anrakuan Shakuden, originally called Hira-

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