Footnote 11:[(return)]
Davids's Buddhism, pp. 180, 200; S. and H., pp. (87) 389, 416.
Footnote 12:[(return)]
B.N., pp. 32-43.
Footnote 13:[(return)]
B.N., pp. 44-56.
Footnote 14:[(return)]
Japanese Fairy World, p. 282; Anderson's Catalogue, pp. l03-7.
Footnote 15:[(return)]
B.N., p. 62.
Footnote 16:[(return)]
Pfoundes, Fuso Mimi Bukuro, p. 102.
Footnote 17:[(return)]
B.N., p. 58. See also The Monist for January, 1894, p. 168.
Footnote 18:[(return)]
"Tien Tai, a spot abounding in Buddhist antiquities, the earliest, and except Puto the largest and richest seat of that religion in eastern China. As a monastic establishment it dates from the fourth century."—Edkins's Chinese Buddhism, pp. 137-142.
Footnote 19:[(return)]
S. and H., p. 87. See the paper read at the Parliament of Religions by the Zen bonze Ashitsu of Hiyéisan, the poem of Right Reverend Shaku Soyen, and the paper on The Fundamental Teachings of Buddhism, in The Monist for January, 1894; Japan As We Saw It, p. 297.