Shinto: The Way of the GodsShintoScholarly ReconstructionEnglish study drawing on Japanese sourcesShareShinto: The Way of the Gods 14Aston - EnglishMoreVersion - 1 availableAstonLanguageEnglishEspañol‹Shinto: The Way of the Gods 1Shinto: The Way of the Gods 2Shinto: The Way of the Gods 3Shinto: The Way of the Gods 4Shinto: The Way of the Gods 5Shinto: The Way of the Gods 6Shinto: The Way of the Gods 7Shinto: The Way of the Gods 8Shinto: The Way of the Gods 9Shinto: The Way of the Gods 10Shinto: The Way of the Gods 11Shinto: The Way of the Gods 12Shinto: The Way of the Gods 13Shinto: The Way of the Gods 14Shinto: The Way of the Gods 15Shinto: The Way of the Gods 16Shinto: The Way of the Gods 17Shinto: The Way of the Gods 18Shinto: The Way of the Gods 19Shinto: The Way of the Gods 20Shinto: The Way of the Gods 21Shinto: The Way of the Gods 22Shinto: The Way of the Gods 23Shinto: The Way of the Gods 24Shinto: The Way of the Gods 25Shinto: The Way of the Gods 26Shinto: The Way of the Gods 27Shinto: The Way of the Gods 28Shinto: The Way of the Gods 29Shinto: The Way of the Gods 30Shinto: The Way of the Gods 31›Footnotes:Shinto: The Way of the Gods 14ListenPlay this chapter in spoken English.Save chapterListen to chapter1[99] See above, p. 70; also Index--'Mirror.' 2[100] "The mirror is kept in a box of chamaecyparis wood, which rests on a low stand covered with a piece of white silk. It is wrapped in a bag of brocade, which is never opened or renewed, but when it begins to fall to pieces from age another bag is put on, so that the actual covering consists of many layers. Over the whole is placed a sort of wooden cage, with ornaments said to be of pure gold, over which again is thrown a cloth of coarse silk falling to the floor on all sides."--Murray's 'Japan,' fifth edition, p. 308. 3[102] A kind of hawk. 'Odyssey,' xv. 525. 4[103] Vide 'The Hinomaru' in the T. A. S. J., vol. xxii. p. 27. 5[105] 'In the Shinto Pantheon,' in the New World, December, 1896. 6[106] Japan is annually visited by destructive typhoons, accompanied by great darkness and a terrific downpour of rain. 7[110] 'Religions of Primitive Peoples,' p. 80. 8[111] I offer, for consideration only, two conjectures: first, that Tsuki-yomi was the Ise Moon-God, and Susa no wo the Idzumo lunar deity; and second, that Susa may possibly be an allotropic form of sasura, banish. 9[112] "The large, deep love of living sea and land."--Swinburne, 'Kynance Cove.' 10[113] Graphically described in Lafcadio Hearn's 'Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan.' 11[125] In Yucatan there were four Wind-Gods, who upheld the four corners of Heaven. 12[129] Is it possible that Fuji no yama is really for Futsu no yama, the mountain of fire? 13[130] The sword was deified in Teutonic myth. 14[131] "So called," says Hirata, "because heat makes things grow." 15[132] See Index--Ho-shidzume, Fire-drill. 16[136] Murray's 'Japan,' fifth edit., p. 383. 17[139] Compare our "nave," from the Latin navis. 18[145] Rhys, 'Celtic Heathendom,' p. 115. 19[146] 'In Japan,' edited by Capt. Brinkley. ‹Previous chapterShinto: The Way of the Gods 13Next chapterShinto: The Way of the Gods 15›Similar passagesBy tradition and source labelFind similarCompare selectedCompare with similarAsk Deep ThoughtSelect passages to search for parallels.Tap any verse to select it, then compare selected passages or ask Deep Thought. Public domain in the United States via Project Gutenberg