[ [99] See above, [p. 70]; also Index--'Mirror.'

[ [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.

[ [101] See [Index]--Naishidokoro.

[ [102] A kind of hawk. 'Odyssey,' xv. 525.

[ [103] Vide 'The Hinomaru' in the T. A. S. J., vol. xxii. p. 27.

[ [104] See above, [p. 65.]

[ [105] 'In the Shinto Pantheon,' in the New World, December, 1896.

[ [106] Japan is annually visited by destructive typhoons, accompanied by great darkness and a terrific downpour of rain.

[ [107] See above, [p. 106.]

[ [108] Egyptian is one.