PART I | INDIA | | | PAGE | I. | In the Red Sea. | 3 | II. | Ajanta | 7 | III. | Ulster in India | 12 | IV. | Anglo-India | 16 | V. | A Mystery Play | 20 | VI. | An Indian Saint | 24 | VII. | A Village in Bengal | 28 | VIII. | Sri Ramakrishna | 32 | IX. | The Monstrous Regimen of Women | 38 | X. | The Buddha at Burupudur | 42 | XI. | A Malay Theatre | 47 | PART II | CHINA | I. | First Impressions of China | 55 | II. | Nanking | 60 | III. | In the Yangtse Gorges | 65 | IV. | Pekin | 72 | V. | The Englishman Abroad | 79 | VI. | China in Transition | 87 | VII. | A Sacred Mountain | 95 | PART III | JAPAN | I. | First Impressions of Japan | 105 | II. | A "No" Dance | 111 | III. | Nikko | 116 | IV. | Divine Right in Japan | 122 | V. | Fuji | 129 | VI. | Japan and America | 136 | VII. | Home | 142 | PART IV | AMERICA | I. | The "Divine Average" | 149 | II. | A Continent of Pioneers | 153 | III. | Niagara | 160 | IV. | "The Modern Pulpit" | 164 | V. | In the Rockies | 171 | VI. | In the Adirondacks | 178 | VII. | The Religion of Business | 184 | VIII. | Red-Bloods and "Mollycoddles" | 192 | IX. | Advertisement | 199 | X. | Culture | 205 | XI. | AntÆus | 211 | | Concluding Essay | 218 |
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