Page:Brinkley - Japan - Volume 6.djvu/51

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FESTIVALS

been decided, the army of naked men wrestle and shout within the temple enclosure, the breath of the wild struggle hanging over them like a cloud in the frosty moonlight.

"Up, like spring's haze, the breath-mists creep,
"The wintry hills smile in their sleep."[1]

It is easy to see that the upper classes take no active part in celebrations such as those described above. The religious festival in Japan owes its vitality to superstitions prevalent among the middle and lower orders only.


  1. See Appendix, note 4.

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