Milton Spenser Terry
The Shinto Cult
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Table of contents
THE SHINTO CULT.
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY.
FOOTNOTES:
THE SHINTO CULT.
1.
The Country. In
taking up the study of a religion which has never extended beyond the
limits of an easily defined territory, we may appropriately first of
all take a hasty glance at the geographical outlines of the system we
call Shinto, the primitive faith of the people of Japan. To
appreciate the geographical position of Japan, one needs to have
before him a map of the world. He may then see at a glance how
remarkably the three thousand islands of that Empire stretch for some
twenty-five hundred miles along the coast of Asia, from Kamchatka on
the north to the island of Formosa on the south, which island is
crossed by the tropic of Cancer. It may be called the longest and the
narrowest country in the world. It looks like an immense sea-serpent,
with its northern tail twisting toward the Aleutian Islands, which
our Government acquired from Russia in 1867, and its southern head
pointing toward the Philippine Islands, which we acquired from Spain
in recent years. It seems to guard the whole eastern coast of Asia,
and along with China, on the mainland, is suspected and feared by
some European diplomats as embodying some sort of a "Yellow
Peril." It may be that its noteworthy contiguity to our Alaskan
possessions at one extremity and our Philippine wards at the other
bodes some sort of peril to any Western nation that may hereafter
presume to enlarge its dominions in the Orient by force of arms.
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Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!