art, the face in,113;artist, Seven Gods of Good Fortune favourite theme of,115;Festival of Tanabata,126;bells, general description of,140;woman, cherry and plum blossoms associated with beauty andvirtue of,174;mirrors, significance of,190-198;English dolls compared with,214-216;fan, significance of,243;origin of namekanamé, applied to fans,244;cat, how regarded,264-268;art,senninin,357;poetry, note on,380-386JAPANESE LITERATURE, A HISTORY OF." Reference to,vJEWEL-S. Precious,28;the Tide-flowing and the Tide-ebbing,36;the Jewel-bearing Branch of Mount Horai,69-70;the Jewel in the Dragon's Head,71-73;the Flood-Tide and the Ebb-Tide, given by Dragon Kingto Empress Jingo,331;the Jewel-tears of Samébito,376-379JEWEL MAIDEN. THE STORY OF,95-98JIH-PÉN. Chinese equivalent for Japan,xivJIMMU TENNŌ. Variant, Kamu-Yamato-Iware-Biko;first human Emperor of Japan,37JIMPACHI. Kanshiro and,287-289JINGO, THE EMPRESS.Professor J. H. Longford writesre,329;legend of first Japanese invasion of Korea by,330-333;birth of her son Ojin,333;old couple's prayer for a child offered to,364JIZŌ. The God of Children,94,104;compared to Kwannon, Goddess of Mercy,104;the creation of Japanese mothers,104;little children play in the Sai-no-Kawara ("Dry Bed of the River ofSouls") with,106;hymn of,107,108;Cave of the Children's Ghosts and,109;Fountain of,110;Soga Sadayoshi remembered by,110,111;picture of, contrasted with pictorial representation of a Japanesegoblin,114,115JOFUKU. Attempts to wrest the secret of perpetual life fromMount Fuji,133;Shikaiya Wasōbiōye meets,375JŌSHI. Term applied to lovers' suicide—variants, "love-death,"or "passion-death,"144JURŌJIN. One of the Seven Gods of Good Fortune,115KKAIBARA. Treatise by, known asOnna Daigaku,113KADZUSA, STRAITS OF.Princess Ototachibana drowned in crossing,56KADZUTOYO. Story of the badger and,260-262KAGU-TSUCHI. The Fire God, child of Izanagi and Izanami,23KAGUYA, LADY("Precious-Slender-Bamboo-of-the-Field-of-Autumn").Discovered and reared by Sanugi no Miyakko,65;Prince Ishizukuri, Prince Kuramochi, the Sadaijin Dainagon Abeno Miushi, the Chiunagon Otomo no Miyuki, and Morotada, the Lord ofIso, suitors of,66-72;her plan to test the five suitors,67;fame of, reaches the Mikado, who sends Fusago to,73;Moonland Capital the birthplace of,75;departs to Moonland,79KAMAKURA. The one-time capital of Nippon,82;seat of the Shōguns,82;the Bronze Buddha of, and the Whale,82-86;city of, laid out by General Yoritomo,83;the bell of Enkakuji the largest in,140KAMATARI. A State Minister of Japan; father of Kohaku Jo,86KAMI DAIGO-DERA. Place at Uji, in Yamashiro;one of the thirty-three places sacred to Kwannon,203KAMINARI. Thunder Woman,252KAMISHAMA. One of the Oki Islands, to which Oribe Shima is banished,333KAMO, LADY. The Soul of the Mirror (Yayoi) falls into possession of,194KAMO NO CHŌMEI. A Buddhist recluse of twelfth century;his book calledHō-jō-kishows him a great Nature-lover,160KAMO YAMAKIKO. A magician, consulted by Yosoji,134KAMU-YAMATO-IWARE-BIKO. Descendant of Hoori;present equivalent, Jimmu Tennō; first human Emperor of Japan,37KANAGAWA. Urashima's tomb still shown in a temple in,328KANASOKA. A great artist; legendrethe painted horse of,116KANO HOGAI. Embroidery depicting Kwannon as the Divine Mother by,201KANSHIRO. The vengeance of,287-289KANSUKE. Father of Matakichi,340KANTAN'S PILLOW. Rosei rests upon,121KAPPA, THE. A river goblin; description of,350;people in village of Izumo refer to asKawako("The Childof the River"),350;the story of the promise of,351KARMA. The power of, one of the great Buddhist doctrines,143;signifies the desire to be—in contrast to Nirvana, the desirenot to be,144;reference to, in theRatana Sutra,145;Kiyo and the power of,145-148;power of, illustrated by story of Tsuyu,228,233KASHIMA. Origin ofkanamé, name applied to Japanese fans, and,244KATSUO-DERA. Place in Settsu; one of the thirty-three placessacred to Kwannon,204KATSUSHIKA, THE MAIDEN OF. Ballad of,316,317KAWACHI. River, near which is the temple known as Kawako-no-miya,350KAWACHI-MURA. Hamlet near Matsue,350KAWAKO("The Child of the River").SeeKappa,350KAWAKO-NO-MIYA. The temple of theKawako, orKappa,350KEN-CHO-JI. Visit of Soga Sadayoshi to temple of,110KENKŌ HŌSHI. Another legend of Raiko and the Goblin by,49-51KIKAZARU. The three mystic Apes which figure in Japanese legendare Mizaru, Iwazaru, and,272KIKU("Chrysanthemum"). Sawara weds,124;Sawara sends back to her parents,125KIKUO("Chrysanthemum-Old-Man"). Retainer of Tsugaru;story of,165-167KIMI. Story of her faithless behaviour toward Kurosuke,181KIMII-DERA. Place near Wakayama, in Kishū;one of the thirty-three places sacred to Kwannon,203KIMITAKA. The Goblin of Oye snatches away,45KI-NO-O-BAKÉ. A true spirit,176KINTARO. Otherwise the Golden Boy,367-369;named Sakata Kurando by Yorimitsu,368,369KISHIWADA, THE LORD OF.Sends Sonobé to great cryptomeria-tree on Oki-yama,181,182KITZUKI. The Deity of (Oho-kuninushi), and the Bronze Horse,275;the Deity of, spends much time catching birds and fish,277KIUCHI HEIZAYEMON. Adventures of, which illustrate theTengu-kakushi,353-355KIYO. The fairest girl in the tea-house near the Dragon'sClaw hill,145;her love for a Buddhist priest and its fatal ending,145-148KIYOMIZU-DERA. Place at Kyōto;one of the thirty-three places sacred to Kwannon,203KIYOMORI. Leader of the Taira clan,41;Tokiwa, widow of Yoshitomo, weds,41KŌBŌ DAISHI("Glory to the Great Teacher").The most famous of Japanese Buddhist saints,234;Kūkai name when living; Kōbō Daishi a posthumous title,234;founded Buddhist sect called the Shin-gon-shū,234;named by Chinese Emperor as Gohitsu-Oshō ("The Priest who writeswith Five Brushes"),236;Monju Bosatsu, the Lord of Wisdom, and,237;paints thetenby flinging his brush,237;work ridiculed by Kino Momoye and Onomo Toku,237,238;his voyage to Japan,238;Inari, the God of Rice, and,238,239;his death,239;temple at Kawasaki dedicated to,239KOBORI-ENSHIU. The great Japanese designer of gardens,156KOCHŌ. Reference to the play calledThe Flying Hairpin of Kochō,218KŌDŌ. Place at Kyōto; one of the thirty-three places sacredto Kwannon,204KOFUKUJI, TEMPLE OF,87-89KOHAKU JO. Daughter of Kamatari,86;Emperor of China hears of beauty of,86;Emperor of China wooes,86;sails for China,87;weds Emperor of China,87,88;sends treasures to temple of Kofukuji,89KOJIKI. "Records of Ancient Matters" completed A.D. 712,what it deals with, &c., xv;told in, that Izanagi presented mirrors to his children,191KŌJIN, THE GOD. Spirit of, resides in theenokitree;the God to whom very old dolls are dedicated,176,177,216KOKAWA-DERA. Place in Kishū; one of the thirty-three placessacred to Kwannon,203KOMAGAWA MIYAGI. A retainer of one of thedaimyōs;his love for Miyuki,245-249KOMPIRA. Originally an Indian God, identified with Susa-no-o;the shrine of, visited by Kiyo,147KO-NO-HANA-SAKU-YA-HIME. "The Princess who makes the Flowers of theTrees to Blossom";daughter of Oho-yama,34;weds Ninigi,34;mother of Hoderi and Hoori,34;seeSengen,132KOREA. Reference to legendary conquest of,282;Chosen, the Land of the Morning Calm, the old name for,328;troubled with armies of China and Japan,328;under glamour of Chinese civilisation,329;becomes a Japanese colony,329;legend of first invasion of, by Japan,329-333;King of, surrenders to Empress Jingo,332"KOREAN TOWERS."Lamps in Japanese gardens sometimes still known as,157KORINJI. Kimi prayed for by priests of temple,125KORIYAMA, THE LORD.Idzumi, place where lived,170;he and his wife and child stricken down with a strange malady,170;restored by planting lotus about his castle,170,171KŌSHIN. The God of Roads,176KOSO. Emperor of China; wooes and weds Kohaku Jo,86-88KOYURI. Son of Yurine,359KUMASO. Brigand, slain by Yamato,52KUMÉ. One of thesennin, who falls from his chariot of cloud,depicted in Japanese art,357KUNI-TOKO-TACHI. A Japanese God; origin of,21KURAMOCHI, PRINCE. One of Kaguya's five suitors,46-72KURANDO, SAKATA. An officer of the Emperor's bodyguard,367;falls in love with Yaégiri,367;see Kintaro,368KUROSUKE. Story how he was forsaken by Kimi,181KUSHI-NADA-HIME("Wondrous-Inada-Princess").Daughter of Ashi-nadzuchi and Te-nadzuchi,29;wooed and wedded by Susa-no-o,29,30KWANJIN. Chinese equivalent for Kwannon,200KWANNON. The Goddess of Mercy; two of Raiko's intending companionsvisit shrine of,45;ex-Emperor Toba desires to build a temple to,179;resemblance to Jizō,199;sometimes depicted as Senjiu-Kwannon,or Kwannon-of-the-Thousand-Hands,199;description of Jiu-ichi-men-Kwannon(the Kwannon-of-the-Eleven-Faces),199;the tiara of, sometimes takes title of Batō-Kwannon(Kwannon-with-the-Horse's-Head),199;Batō-Kwannon, the Goddess who protects dumb animals,200;Hito-Koto-Kwannon, the Kwannon who will only answer one prayer,200;the Gods of Love and Wisdom are frequently representedin conjunction with,200;not inappropriately called the Japanese Madonna,200;known in Chinese myth as Kwanjin,200;is the spiritual son of Amitâlbha, in China,200;Chūjō Hime, a Buddhist nun, an incarnation of,201;as the Divine Mother,201;thirty-three shrines sacred to Kwannon,201-204;the Lady of Mercy,202;the Goddess of Mercy,203;copper image of, in temple of Ni-gwarsu-dō,204;sacrifice of, in form of a deer, on behalf of Saion Zenji,204-206;Princess Sanjo visits temple of,365KWANNONJI. Place in Omi;one of the thirty-three places sacred to Kwannon,204KYŌTO. Stories current in, regarding the Goblin of Oyeyama,44;Matsumura journeys to,191;thirty-three shrines sacred to Kwannon in,201KYU-KUKEDO-SAN. An Ancient Cavern in Japan associated with Jizō,109KYUZAEMON. The Lady of the Snow and,152,153LLADDER OF HEAVEN.Ama-terasu, the Sun Goddess, climbs the,23;Tsuki-yumi, the Moon God, also climbs the,23LADY OF MERCY. Kwannon called the,202LAND OF ENDLESS PLENTY.Shikaiya Wasōbiōye visits the,375"LAND, THE EVERGREEN."Appears in the Japanese ballad "The Fisher Boy Urashima" asthe Dragon Palace,324LAND OF THE FOLLOWERS OF THE ANTIQUE.Shikaiya Wasōbiōye visits the,375LAND OF GIANTS.Shikaiya Wasōbiōye visits the,375LAND OF THE MORNING CALM. Chosen, the old name for Korea,328LAND OF PARADOXES.Shikaiya Wasōbiōye visits the,375LAND OF PERFECT HAPPINESS.The infant Emperor, Antoku Tenno, taken to,300LAND OF SHAMS.Shikaiya Wasōbiōye visits the,375LAUGHTER, GOD OF.SeeHotei,211-213LEGEND-S. Butterfly,216-219;fromThe Diary of a Convolvulus,244-249;Thunder,250-254;of Magical Animals255-275;theKojiki("The White Hare of Inaba"),255-260;the three mystic Apes figure in,272;birds in,276-281;of dragon-flies,282;of fire flies,285-289;of the tea-plant,297-299;of the Weird,300-304;of the sea,323-341;of Urashima,323;Japanese superstitions the source of,342;of the sea monsterShōjō,359-360;miscellaneous,370-379LIGHTNING, THE GODDESS OF,251LIGHTS, MIRACULOUS. Varieties in Japan,357,358LIU-KIU ISLANDS. Chinese equivalent for Japanese Luchu Islands,324LONG-AS-THE-ROCKS, PRINCESS. Variant for Iha-naga,34LONGFORD, JOSEPH H. Reference toThe Story of Korea, by,328,329LOTUS, THE GOLDEN. Legend of,80-82; the sacred flower of Buddhism,169"Lotus of the Law." Yōshō studies,356LOVE.Maiden imposes test of, as a corpse-eater,311,312;poems,seeJapanese Poetry,380-386;the Goddess of,206LUCHU ISLANDS. The Japanese pronunciation for the,324;Chinese equivalent, Liu-kiu,324LUCK, SEVEN DIVINITIES OF.Benten one of the,206;variants, the Goddess of the Sea, of Love, of Beauty,of Eloquence,206;charms to represent,348LUCKY RAINCOAT. Part of cargo of the Treasure Ship,115LUWUH. The first Chinese tea-master,292;hisChaking("The Holy Scripture of Tea"),292;sought after by Emperor Taisung,293MMADONNA, THE JAPANESE.The Goddess of Mercy not inappropriately called,200"MAIDEN'S GRAVE, THE." Burial-place of the Maiden of Unai,314MAIDEN OF KATSUSHIKA, THE.The tale of, as translated by Professor B. H. Chamberlain,316,317MAIDEN OF UNAI, THE.And her lovers,313-316;the grave of,315,316MAIDEN WITH THE WOODEN BOWL. The strange story of,317-322MAKI. Moor to which Tokutaro was challenged to go,98MAKI HIOGO. Attempts to capture the Spirit of the Peony,172,173MALAY ELEMENTS. Their contribution to Japanese characteristics,xiiiMAMIKIKO. Neighbour of Yurine; his unkindness to Koyuri,360-362"MASTER SINGERS OF JAPAN," Miss Clara A. Walsh's reference to, vMASON, W. B.Reference to temple at Kawasaki sacred to Kōbō Daishi, inMurray'sHandbook for Japan, by,239MATAKICHI. Son of Kansuke,340MATSU. Shingé's maid,167MATSUE.I. Daughter of a fisherman at Takasago,187;rescues Teoyo, their love,188,189.II. Bridge. Sacrifices associated with,343,344;Horiō Yoshiharu and,343.III. The Bronze Deer of,275MATSUMURA. A Shintō priest in charge of shrine of Ogawachi-Myōjin,191;journey to Kyōto to appeal to Shōgun,191;his strange sight of a beautiful woman's face in a well,192;the Poison Dragon and,193;the Soul of the Mirror and,193-196MATSUNOO-DERA. Place in Wakasa;one of the thirty-three places sacred to Kwannon,204MATSUYAMA, THE MIRROR OF,196-198MERCY, GODDESS OF. Kwannon, the; compared to Jizō,104MICHIMASA. An eleventh-century official;tankaby, quoted,383;addressedtankato the Princess Masako,383MIIDERA.I. The Bell of,141-143.II. Place near Otsu, in Omi; one of the thirty-three placessacred to Kwannon,203MIDZUNOE. Village in province of Tango, in which Urashima lived,324MIMUROTO-DERA. Place at Uji, in Yamashiro;one of the thirty-three places sacred to Kwannon,203MINAMOTO CLAN. Reference to great sea-fight between Taira clan and,300MINÉ. Wife of Tomozō,233Minokichi. Loved by the Lady of the Snow,150-151MIO. Shore of, on which the Moon Lady's Robe of Feathers is foundby Hairukoo,128MIONOSEKI. The God of, is the God of Mariners,276;detests cocks and hens,276MIRRORS. SIGNIFICANCE OF JAPANESE,190-198;the Divine, into which Sun Goddess gazes, reposes at Ise,191;the soul of the,193;old bronze mirrors contributed to form a bell,195;the mirror of Matsuyama,196-198MITFORD, A. B. (Lord Redesdale).Reference to hisTales of Old Japan,98,161MIUSHI. The Sadaijin Dainagon Abe no, one of Kaguya's five suitors,66-70MIWA DAIMYŌJIN. Japanese God, in connection with whom the Laughing