| "Foreground and Vista at the Fair" by W. Hamilton Gibson (1893) includes these two paragraphs: Japonica!
Japonica! How continually does the spirit of the flowery land
hover here! It is, indeed, scarcely a surprise that the actual,
familiar outlines of its quaint massive gables suddenly confronts us,
looking down above a mass of the Mikado's own chrysanthemum, and we
suddenly find ourselves transported to Tokio or Yokohama, surrounded by
a veritable epitome of Japan, embracing all the actual features,
floral, ornamental, and utilitarian,with which, through the educational
influence of painted fan and screen and household gods [sic] of vase and kakemono, we have become so pleasantly familiar. ![]() |
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1 Gibson, W. Hamilton, "Foreground and Vista at the Fair," in Scribner's Magazine, Vol. 14, Issue 1, July, 1893, pg. 34. Illustrations by the author. Above illustration from pg. 33. |