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Rh difficulty in appreciating the intolerance of Christians in having "no other gods besides" Jehovah.

The references for this chapter are in general the same as those for the preceding chapter, except that, in place of the special papers on Shintō, should be substituted special papers on Confucianism by Knox and Haga in Transactions Asiatic Society of Japan, vol. xx. pp. 1-192; on Buddhism, by Lloyd in Transactions Asiatic Society of Japan, vol. xxii. pp. 337-506, and in "Every Day Japan"; and Nitobe's "Bushidō, the Soul of Japan."

"Japan To-day" (Scherer) contains an interesting chapter (vi.) of Buddhist sermons: see also Mitford's "Tales of Old Japan."

Dr. Knox, who is an authority on Confucianism, has given in his "Japanese Life in Town and Country" a few chapters (vi.-xi.) of interest in this connection; and he has also issued (1907) a valuable book, entitled "The Development of Religion in Japan." Lloyd's "Creed of Half Japan" is very suggestive.