diff -r 000000000000 -r 43c73b36e936 test/bookloupe/footnote-marker.tst --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/test/bookloupe/footnote-marker.tst Sat Nov 02 09:03:54 2013 +0000 @@ -0,0 +1,31 @@ +**************** INPUT **************** +Among these was the Buddha Amitabha, the Buddha of Boundless Light,[1] +who had made a wondrous vow in virtue of which a blessed future of +righteousness and joy in the Western Paradise was secured for all who +put their trust in him. Carried into China, this devotion acquired +great popularity, and centuries later it passed into Japan. There, +while Europe was sending its warriors to win back from the Crescent the +city of the Cross, while Bernard and Francis and Dominic were awakening +new enthusiasm for the monastic {17} life, two famous teachers, Honen +(1133-1212) and Shin-ran (1173-1262), developed the doctrine of +"salvation by faith." Honen was the only son of a military chief who +died of a wound inflicted by an enemy. On his deathbed he enjoined the +boy never to seek revenge, and bade him become a monk for the spiritual +enlightenment both of his father and his father's foe. So the lad +passed in due time into one of the great Buddhist monasteries on mount +Hiei. Long years of laborious study followed, till in 1175 he reached +the conviction that faith in Amida[2] was the true way of salvation. A +deep sense of human sinfulness and the belief in an All-Merciful +Deliverer were the essential elements of his religion. Three emperors +became his pupils, and his life, compiled by imperial order after his +death, resembles that of a mediaeval Christian saint. Visions of Amida +and of the holy teachers of the past were vouchsafed to him. He +preached--like another St. Francis--to the serpents and the birds. His +person was mysteriously transfigured, and a wondrous light filled his +dwelling. + + +[1] Also called Amitayus, the Buddha of Boundless Life. + +[2] The Japanese form of the Sanskrit Amitabha. +**************** EXPECTED ****************