en alikewould be disheartened; and if refuge was again taken at Hiei-zan, theImperial prestige would suffer. ives, and thisdeception was once carried so far that an envoy sent to Kyoto fromYedo represented the | | Tadamasa Tadamori (served the Emperors Shirakawa, | Horikawa, a less, and overturescarried from Kyoto by one of the most distinguished of the Muromachigenerals, Ouchi Yoshihiro, were accepted.
r children, was that a thoroughly deserving eldest son,whether of wife or concubine, could claim one-fifth of the estate. ducation, fittingthe disciplinary and meditative methods of the Chinese propagandiston the pre-existing foundations of earlier sects. To plunder and annex a neighbouring provincebecame thenceforth a common feat on the part of these officials. d by the cenobites, resisted stoutly, and no impression wasmade on the defences for a considerable time.
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