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About The Book
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<p>The Japanese man of the people-the skilled laborer able to underbid without effort any Western artisan in the same line of industry-remains happily independent of both shoemakers and tailors. His feet are good to look at his body is healthy and his heart is free. If he desire to travel a thousand miles he can get ready for his journey in five minutes. His whole outfit need not cost seventy-five cents; and all his baggage can be put into a handkerchief. On ten dollars he can travel for a year without work or he can travel simply on his ability to work or he can travel as a pilgrim. You may reply that any savage can do the same thing. Yes but any civilized man cannot; and the Japanese has been a highly civilized man for at least a thousand years. Hence his present capacity to threaten Western manufacturers.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>Japan is producing without capital in our large sense of the word. She has become industrial without becoming essentially mechanical and artificial. The vast rice crop is raised upon millions of tiny tiny farms; the silk crop in millions of small poor homes the tea crop on countless little patches of soil. If you visit Kyoto to order something from one of the greatest porcelain makers in the world one whose products are known better in London and in Paris than even in Japan you will find the factory to be a wooden cottage in which no American farmer would live.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>Of all peculiarly beautiful things in Japan the most beautiful are the approaches to high places of worship or of rest-the Ways that go to Nowhere and the Steps that lead to Nothing.</p><p>&nbsp;</p>