845 Clark, Francis E. (Francis Edward) (1851-1927)
Our journey around the world. 1895.

OUR JOURNEY AROUND THE WORLD, An Illustrated Record of a Year's Travel OF FORTY THOUSAND MILES THROUGH INDIA, CHINA, JAPAN, AUSTRALIA, NEW ZEALAND, EGYPT, PALESTINE, GREECE, TURKEY, ITALY, FRANCE, SPAIN, Etc. BY Rev. FRANCIS E. CLARK, D. D. President of the United Society of Christian Endeavor WITH GLIMPSES OF LIFE IN FAR OFF LANDS As Seen Through a Woman's Eyes BY Mrs. Harriet E. Clark, Superbly Illustrated WITH UPWARDS OF TWO HUNDRED CHOICE ENGRAVINGS, MAINLY FROM INSTANTANEOUS PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN FROM LIFE, REPRODUCED IN FACSIMILE BY EMINENT ARTISTS. SOLD ONLY BY SUBSCRIPTION.
 HARTFORD, CONN. A. D. WORTHINGTON & CO., PUBLISHERS, 1895.
 641, [1] p. 22 cm.

[G/440/Cl](00037018)


日本関係記事
CHAPTER XI. OUR STAY IN CHARMING JAPAN—SOCIAL CUSTOMS—SOME INTERESTING PERSONAL EXPERIENCES—LIFE AND SCENES ON A TEA PLANTATION.
The Best Preparation for a New Land—A Terrible Typhoon—Personal Experiences—The Lord is Able to Give Thee Much More Than This—The Most Beautiful of Mountains—Fujiyama in Spotless Ermine—Fiery Jack—Yokohama—The Rush of Jinrikishas—The Capture of the Man-of-War's Men—Fun in the Custom House—Crossing the Palm—A Lesson in Japanese Politeness—Bowing in Japanese—The Shop-keeper's Salaam—The Maid Servant's Obeisance Receiving Callers—A Hinge in the Spine—The Ohio Statesman's Mistake—My Fool of a Wife—Japanese Railways—Our Fellow Passengers—Progressive Japan—Telegraph Lines and Electric Lights—Postal Delivery Six Times a Day—Protecting the Windows—The Professor's Many Suits—The Obi—A Japanese Joseph—What we Saw from the Car Window—A Tea Plantation—Father's Pride and Mother's Joy—Thatch-Roofed Farm Houses. p. 191-205.
CHAPTER XII. A STROLL AMONG THE MIKADO'S SUBJECTS—EVERYDAY LIFE IN A JAPANESE HOUSE.
Tokio, its Parks, its Temples, and its Palace—Its University—A Study of Fish Parasites—What Missionaries have done—The Seismological Department—An Artificial Earthquake—Exceptional Earthquake Privileges—Wheat and Chaff—Canton and Tokio, or China versus Japan—The Frenchman of the East—A Japanese House—No Doors, No Windows, No Chimneys—A Walk in a Country Village—The Country Bakery—A Rice Mill—Division of Labor—An Initiation into the Art of Orange Eating—The Japanese Shoe Shop—The Villainous Daikon—Prices in Japan—A Pot of Tea for Two Cents—A Japanese Dinner in a Japanese Hotel—The Curious Crowds at the Window—The Motormen of the East—The Hilarious Jinrikisha Men—The Waitress and her Odd Position—Paying our Reckoning. p. 206-229.
CHAPTER XIII. OUR EXPERIENCE AT A CEREMONIAL TEA—JAPANESE SOCIAL LIFE—IN THE EMPEROR'S PALACE.
A Ceremonial Tea—Past Masters of Politeness—The Emperor's Device—A Dignified Function—A Contest in Politeness—White and Black Charcoal—With Measured Steps and Rhythmic Motion—Building the Fire—The Most Solemn Moment—Our Part in the Ceremony—No Laughing Matter—Smacking Our Lips—From Tokio to Kioto—The Garden of the World—Industrious and Careful Farmers—Woman's Rights in Japan—One of Japan's Honored Names—Missionary Life in the East—Flippant Globe-trotters—Cheating the Gods—Stone Children with Red Bibs—Confucius's Chilly Cult—The Temple of the Three Thousand Gods—Big Gods and Little Gods—Rope Made of Human Hair—How Heavy Timbers were Lifted into Place—Curious Sacrifice of Religious Devotees—In the Emperor's Palace—Osaka, its Mint, its Castle, and its Fish-Market. p. 230-256.
CLIMPSES of LIFE in FAR-OFF LANDS As Seen Through a Woman's Eyes. BY Harriet E. Clark.
CHAPTER II. AMONG THE WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF JAPAN—A JAPANESE PRAYER MEETING—NATIVE POLITENESS AND ETIQUETTE—MY EXPERIENCE WITH CHOPSTICKS.
Compensations—The Brown Babies of India—The Yellow Babies of Japan—Queensland Lucy—A Forlorn Little Black Girl—The Hottest Place on Earth—Home Life in Japan—Going to Prayer Meeting in a Jinrikisha—A Shuffling, Awkward Gait—Where We Left Our Shoes—Japanese Etiquette—A Cordial Welcome—Bowing to the Floor—Rock of Ages in Japanese—An Interesting Meeting—Struggling with a Foreign Language—Sayonara to our Friends—Japanese Refreshments—Eating Bean Soup with Chopsticks—A Difficult Operation—Drinking Soup from a Bowl—Delusive Beans—New Use for a Sleeve—A Japanese Pillow—The Professor of Flowers.—Artistic Bouquets. p. 603-615.

注  記
改装。
標題紙の次の紙葉に Lynell Pierce' との書き込み。
ページ表記:p. [iii]-x, xiii-xxxvi, 37-641.
落丁:p. i-ii, xi-xii.