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The “best” edition does not claim to be happy – it claims to be . After 300 years, Saburō and Oshin finally have their full story told. Their wish, as Jakusui wrote, did not end in happiness. But thanks to this meticulous reconstruction, it has finally ended as he intended.
I’m afraid there’s a small issue with the keyword you’ve provided: does not clearly correspond to a known Japanese phrase, book title, movie, game, or historical reference in standard romaji. etuzan jakusui onozomi no ketsumatsu best
His only complete story, Onozomi no Ketsumatsu , was completed in 1696. According to a diary kept by a Kyoto bookshop owner, Jakusui attempted to have it printed using movable type, but the project failed due to censors objecting to its depiction of a lord’s suicide. The author vanished three years later. Some believe he entered a monastery; others, that he was executed for sedition. The “best” edition does not claim to be