Page:Eliza Scidmore--Jinrikisha days in Japan.djvu/101

 and wander together up and down its one steep street, and in and out of the maze of gardens, paying a copper or two at each gate-way. Giants and saintly images forty and fifty feet high are enshrined in mat pavilions as lofty as temples, and to these marvellous chrysanthemum creatures the phonograph has lately added its wonders. The coolie, who draws the visitor's jinrikisha, is as voluble