English: From original book: "Reference has been made to the fact that kura, or fire-proof buildings, are often fitted up for living-rooms.
Fig. 137 (see page 160) represents the lower room of the corner building shown on page 75 (
fig. 57). It has already been stated that the walls of such a building are of great thickness, and that one small window and doorway are often the only openings in the room. The walls are consequently cold and damp at certain seasons of the year.
For the fitting up of such a room, to adapt it for a living-place, a light frame-work of bamboo is constructed, which stands away from the walls at a distance of two or three feet; upon this, cloth is stretched like a curtain. The frame-work forms a ceiling as well, so that the rough walls and beams of the floor above are concealed by this device. At one side the cloth is arranged to be looped up like a curtain, so that one may pass outside the drapery.
The owner of this apartment was an eminent antiquarian, and the walls of the room were lined with shelves and cases which were filled with old books and pictures, rare scrolls, and bric-à-brac. A loft above, to which access was gained by a perilous flight of steps, was filled with ancient relics of all kinds, — stone implements, old pottery, quaint writing-desks, and rare manuscripts. The cloth which formed this supplementary partition was of a light, thin texture; and when the owner went in search of some object on the other side of it, I could trace him by his candlelight as he wandered about behind the curtain. The furniture used in the room, and shown in the sketch, — consisting of bookshelves, table, hibachi, and other objects, — was in nearly every case precious antiques.
That the rooms of kura were fitted up in this way in past times is evident in the fact that old books not only represent this method in their pictures, but special details of the construction of the framework are given. In an old book in the possession of Mr. K——, published one hundred and eighty years ago, a figure of one of these frames is given, with all the details of its structure, metal sockets, key-bolts, etc., a copy of which may be seen in fig. 138. "
Small for a room frame, looks like a chōdai frame?