Page:Insect Literature by Lafcadio Hearn.djvu/90

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water to launch their rafts of eggs. And I read, in Dr. Holland’s[1] book, that the actual cost of freeing from mosquitoes one American town of fifty thousand inhabitants, does not exceed three hundred dollars!………


I wonder what would be said if the city-government of Tōkyō—which is aggressively scientific and progressive—were suddenly to command that all water-surfaces in the Buddhist cemeteries should be covered, at regular intervals, with a film of kerosene oil! How could the religion which prohibits the taking of any life—even of invisible life—yield to such a mandate? Would filial piety even dream of consenting to obey such an order? And then to think of the cost, in labor and time, of putting kerosene oil, every seven days, into the millions of mizutame, and the tens of millions of bamboo flower-cups, in the Tōkyō grave-yards!………Impossible! To free the city from mosquitoes it would be necessary to demolish the ancient grave-yards;—and that would signify the ruin of the Buddhist temples attached to them;—and that would mean the disparition[2] of so many charming gardens, with their lotus-ponds and Sanscrit-lettered monuments and humpy bridges and

  1. William Jacob Holland (1848 — 現存) 亞米利加の博物學者。1898 より Carnegie Museum 長たり。“The Butterfly Books" (1898), "The Moth Book" (1903) 其他の著書あり。
  2. disparition=disappearance