Unbeaten Tracks In Japan By Isabella L. Bird
























































 -   This street,
marvellously thronged with pedestrians and kurumas, is the terminus
of a number of city stage lines, and twenty - Page 29
Unbeaten Tracks In Japan By Isabella L. Bird - Page 29 of 417 - First - Home

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This Street, Marvellously Thronged With Pedestrians And Kurumas, Is The Terminus Of A Number Of City "Stage Lines," And Twenty Wretched-Looking Covered Waggons, With Still More Wretched Ponies, Were Drawn Up In The Middle, Waiting For Passengers.

Just there plenty of real Tokiyo life is to be seen, for near a shrine of popular pilgrimage there are always numerous places of amusement, innocent and vicious, and the vicinity of this temple is full of restaurants, tea-houses, minor theatres, and the resorts of dancing and singing girls.

A broad-paved avenue, only open to foot passengers, leads from this street to the grand entrance, a colossal two-storied double-roofed mon, or gate, painted a rich dull red. On either side of this avenue are lines of booths - which make a brilliant and lavish display of their contents - toy-shops, shops for smoking apparatus, and shops for the sale of ornamental hair-pins predominating. Nearer the gate are booths for the sale of rosaries for prayer, sleeve and bosom idols of brass and wood in small shrines, amulet bags, representations of the jolly-looking Daikoku, the god of wealth, the most popular of the household gods of Japan, shrines, memorial tablets, cheap ex votos, sacred bells, candlesticks, and incense-burners, and all the endless and various articles connected with Buddhist devotion, public and private. Every day is a festival-day at Asakusa; the temple is dedicated to the most popular of the great divinities; it is the most popular of religious resorts; and whether he be Buddhist, Shintoist, or Christian, no stranger comes to the capital without making a visit to its crowded courts or a purchase at its tempting booths.

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