This is the solution given by Genbi.
Volume 3 covers yet another type of yose:
.
Genbi glosses this as "inside territory (living)." He includes ko as a way to make life,
but yet again a couple of examples will serve better to show what he intended.
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He gives rather a lot of these, then moves on to a very small handful of tesujis.
He mentions only watari and kiri, but in neither case are the examples really what we
would class under these terms today. His cuts (kiri) would be classed as things
like wedges today. As for watari, rather than simply using it for connecting
on the first line he gives the adjacent rather startling example (solution on next
page - Black to play).
At the end of this volume Genbi offers ten "ladder" problems - these being the full-board monsters that belong to the world of puzzles rather than go.