The Game of Go: The National Game of JapanMoffat, Yard, 1908 - 220 páginas |
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Página 13
... lost touch . Korschelt relates that for the first time about the year 1880 a Go player of the second degree from the Satsuma province visited those Islands and tried his skill with their best players , and found that he could easily ...
... lost touch . Korschelt relates that for the first time about the year 1880 a Go player of the second degree from the Satsuma province visited those Islands and tried his skill with their best players , and found that he could easily ...
Página 14
... lost by four stones , and the other nine games were not played . Inseki , however , mortified by his defeat , again challenged Shuwa . This game began on the 16th of May in the thirteenth year of Tempo , and lasted two days . Inseki ...
... lost by four stones , and the other nine games were not played . Inseki , however , mortified by his defeat , again challenged Shuwa . This game began on the 16th of May in the thirteenth year of Tempo , and lasted two days . Inseki ...
Página 15
... lost by four stones . In all these contests Inseki as the challenger had the first move , and he finally became convinced of his inability to win from the scion of the Honinbo family , and abandoned his life - long desire , and it is ...
... lost by four stones . In all these contests Inseki as the challenger had the first move , and he finally became convinced of his inability to win from the scion of the Honinbo family , and abandoned his life - long desire , and it is ...
Página 34
... lost or saved according as two disconnected " Me " can or cannot be formed in those spaces , and the most interesting play in the game occurs along the sides and especially in the corners of the board in attempting to form or attempting ...
... lost or saved according as two disconnected " Me " can or cannot be formed in those spaces , and the most interesting play in the game occurs along the sides and especially in the corners of the board in attempting to form or attempting ...
Página 46
... lost , and thus determine who is the victor . As a matter of practice , however , the Japanese do not do this immediately , but , purely for the purpose of facilitating the count , the player having the white pieces would fill up his ...
... lost , and thus determine who is the victor . As a matter of practice , however , the Japanese do not do this immediately , but , purely for the purpose of facilitating the count , the player having the white pieces would fill up his ...
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Términos y frases comunes
A B C D E F G H J K L M N O P Q R S T 19 18 A B C D E F G H J K L M N O P Q R S T PLATE actual play adversary beginner Black plays black stones Black would play Chess Chess openings Dame defend end game end positions following stones four stones game of Go Go players group of stones HANDICAP Plate 22 handicap stone Honinbo Dosaku Honinbo Shuye Inseki ishi Japan Japanese Joseki Jowa kakari kill Kogeima Komoku Korschelt means Murase Shuho necessary ninth degree Osaeru PLAYED AT H reply retains the Sente rule of Ko Sansha Seki Shogun shown in Plate side skill stone is played stones on line Takamoku Takes Tenuki vacant intersections vacant space Watari weaker player White attacks white group White plays white stones White's move Yasui Sanchi
Pasajes populares
Página v - KOREAN GAMES: WITH NOTES ON THE CORRESPONDING GAMES OF CHINA AND JAPAN, Stewart Culin.
Página v - ... existence in the south, chiefly in the province of Nedenaes. A KITCHEN-MIDDEN has just been discovered at Ginnerup, in Denmark, at the foot of a cliff near a dried-up sound. It is about a yard in depth and of considerable extent, and contains quantities of shells of oysters, mussels, &c. THE last numbers of the Journal of the China Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society (vol.
Página ix - ... rather than through the fighting of the common soldiers. Go, on the other hand, is not merely a picture of a single battle like Chess, but of a whole campaign of a modern kind, in which the strategical movements of the masses in the end decide the victory. Battles occur in various parts of the board, and sometimes several are going on at the aame time.
Página 67 - ... advanced. In the mean time the syringe was modified in France by a rack and pinion attached to the piston, so that water could be injected and withdrawn with great force, — a procedure not only useless, but detrimental to the bladder, if inflamed and thickened.
Página ix - Go, on the other hand, is not merely a picture of a single battle like Chess, but of a whole campaign of a modern kind, in which the strategical movements of the masses in the end decide the victory. Battles occur in various parts of the board, and sometimes several are going on at the same time. Strong positions are besieged and captured, and whole armies are cut off from their line of communications and are taken prisoners unless they can fortify themselves in impregnable positions, and a far-reaching...
Página 62 - PLATE 13 territory, and beginners are likely to play their stones directly in contact with the advancing forces. This merely results in their being engulfed by the attacking line, and the stones and territory are both lost. If you wish to stop your adversary's advance, play your stones a space or two apart from his, so that you have a chance to strengthen your line before his attack is upon you. The next thing we will speak of is what the Japanese r* j call the "Sente.
Página 31 - ... the board, and hence it would be impossible to surround this group of white stones unless two stones were played at once. The white stones, therefore, can never be surrounded, and form an impregnable position. This is the principle of the two "Me...
Página viii - Chess are of a past age, in which the king himself entered the conflict - his fall generally meaning the loss of the battle — and...
Página 32 - Me" are on the edges or in the corners of the board, or how far from each other they may be. Plate 3, Diagram vi, shows a group of stones containing two vacant "Me
Página 18 - Go Ban" as it is called in Japanese, is a solid block of wood, about seventeen and a half inches long, sixteen inches broad, and generally about four or five inches thick.