Produced by Sankar Viswanathan, Thierry Alberto, Henry
Craig, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
generously made available by The Internet Archive)









                         Transcriber's Note:

       The Table of Contents is not part of the original book.




                            THE SAYINGS OF

                              CONFUCIUS


                            TRANSLATED BY

                           LEONARD A. LYALL







                       LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO.

                     LONDON · NEW YORK · TORONTO



                     LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO. LTD.

                   39 PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON, E.C.4

                  6 OLD COURT HOUSE STREET, CALCUTTA

                        53 NICOL ROAD, BOMBAY

                        36A MOUNT ROAD, MADRAS



                       LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO.

                      114 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK

                    221 EAST 20TH STREET, CHICAGO

                      88 TREMONT STREET, BOSTON



                       LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO.

                   480 UNIVERSITY AVENUE, TORONTO

       *       *       *       *       *


CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION

NOTE

THE SAYINGS OF CONFUCIUS

BOOK  I

BOOK  II

BOOK  III

BOOK  IV

BOOK  V

BOOK  VI

BOOK  VII

BOOK  VIII

BOOK  IX

BOOK  X

BOOK  XI

BOOK  XII

BOOK  XIII

BOOK  XIV

BOOK  XV

BOOK  XVI

BOOK  XVII

BOOK  XVIII

BOOK  XIX

BOOK  XX

INDEX

       *       *       *       *       *




INTRODUCTION


Confucius was born in the year 550 B.C.,[1] in the land of Lu, in a
small village, situated in the western part of the modern province of
Shantung. His name was K'ung Ch'iu, and his style (corresponding to
our Christian name) was Chung-ni. His countrymen speak of him as K'ung
Fu-tzu, the Master, or philosopher K'ung. This expression was altered
into Confucius by the Jesuit missionaries who first carried his fame
to Europe.

[Footnote 1: According to the great historian Ssu-ma Ch'ien. Other
authorities say, 552 and 551 B.C.]

Since the golden days of the Emperors Yao and Shun, the legendary
founders of the Chinese Empire, nearly two thousand years had passed.
Shun chose as his successor Yü, who had been his chief minister, a man
whose devotion to duty was such that when engaged in draining the
empire of the great flood--a task that took eight years to
accomplish--he never entered his home till the work was done, although
in the course of his labours he had thrice to pass his door. He
founded the Hsia dynasty, which lasted till 1766 B.C. The last emperor
of this line, a vile tyrant, was overthrown by T'ang, who became the
first ruler of the house of Shang, or Yin. This dynasty again
degenerated in course of time and came to an end in Chou, or Chou Hsin
(1154-22 B.C.), a monster of lust, extravagance, and cruelty. The
empire was only held together by the strength and wisdom of the Duke
of Chou, or King Wen, to give him his popular title, one of the
greatest men in Chinese history. He controlled two-thirds of the
empire; but, believing that the people were not yet ready for a
change, he refrained from dethroning the emperor. In his day 'the
husbandman paid one in nine; the pay of the officers was hereditary;
men were questioned at barriers and at markets, but there were no
tolls; fishgarths were not preserved; the children of criminals were
sackless. The old and wifeless--the widower; the old and
husbandless--the widow; the old and childless--the lone one; the young
and fatherless--the orphan; these four are the people most in need
below heaven, and they have no one to whom to cry, so when King Wen
reigned his love went out first to them' (Mencius, Book II, chapter
5). After his death, his son, King Wu, decided that the nation was
ripe for change. He overcame Chou Hsin by force of arms, and, placing
himself on the throne, became the founder of the Chou dynasty.

In the time of Confucius the Chou dynasty still filled the throne. But
it had long since become effete, and all power had passed into the
hands of the great vassals. The condition of China was much like that
of Germany in the worst days of the Holy Roman Empire. The emperor was
powerless, the various vassal states were independent in all but name,
and often at war one with the other. These states again were
disintegrated, and their rulers impotent against encroaching
feudatories. In Confucius' native state, Lu, the duke was a mere
shadow. The younger branches of his house had usurped all power. Three
in number, they were called the Three Clans. The most important of the
three was the Chi, or Chi-sun clan, whose chiefs Chi Huan and Chi
K'ang are often mentioned by Confucius. But the power of the Chi, too,
was ill-secured. The minister Yang Huo overawed his master, and once
even threw him into prison. Nor was the condition of the other states
of the empire better than that of Lu. Confucius thought it worse.

Into this turbulent world Confucius was born. Though his father was
only a poor military officer, he could trace his descent from the
imperial house of Yin. Confucius married at nineteen, and is known to
have had one son and one daughter. Shortly after his marriage he
entered the service of the state as keeper of the granary. A year
later he was put in charge of the public fields. In 527 B.C. his
mother died, and, in obedience to Chinese custom, he had to retire
from public life. When the years of mourning were over, he did not
again take office, but devoted himself instead to study and teaching.
As the years rolled by his fame grew, and a band of pupils gathered
round him. In 517 B.C. the anarchy in Lu reached such a pitch that
Confucius moved to the neighbouring land of Ch'i. Here he had several
interviews with the reigning duke, but met with little encouragement
(xviii. 3). So he soon returned to his native country, and resumed for
fifteen years his work as student and teacher.

During these fifteen years the power of the duke sank lower and lower,
and the Chi was menaced by his minister Yang Huo. In times so dark,
men that loved quiet sought in the world of thought an escape from the
gloom around them, whilst others that were less resigned turned over
in their minds the causes of the realm's decay. Lao-tzu, the founder
of the mystic Taoist philosophy, taught that in inaction alone peace
can be found; Mo-tzu proclaimed the doctrine of universal love: that
we should love all men as we love self, love the parents of others as
we love our own parents. Upright men were driven or fled from the
world. Confucius often met them in his wanderings, and was reproved
for not doing as they did. But his practical mind told him that
inaction could not help the world, and that to find a remedy for the
nation's ills, their cause must first be learned. This could only be
done by historical study. He therefore devoted himself to the study of
past times, edited in later life the _Book of History_, and compiled
the work called _Spring and Autumn_, a history of his native state
from 722 to 481 B.C. To bring again the golden days of Yao and Shun a
return must be made to the principles of Wen and Wu, the kings that
had rebuilt the empire after tyranny and selfishness had laid it low.
Of impracticable ideals and renunciation of the world no good could
come.

At last in 501 B.C. Yang Huo was forced to flee from Lu, and prospects
brightened. A year later Confucius was appointed governor of a town.
So great was his success as governor that before long he was promoted
to be Superintendent of Works, and then to be Chief Criminal Judge. He
won great influence with his master, and did much to lighten the
general misery. He so strengthened the power of the duke that
neighbouring states grew jealous. To sow dissension between duke and
minister the men of Ch'i sent the duke a gift of singing girls. Such
joy they gave him that for three days no court was held. On this
Confucius left the land, 497 B.C.

For the next thirteen years Confucius wandered from land to land,
followed by his disciples, seeking in vain for a ruler that was
willing to employ him, and whom he was willing to serve. At times he
was exposed to danger, at other times to want. But as a rule he was
treated with consideration, although his teachings were ignored. Yet
thirteen years of homeless wandering, of hopes deferred and
frustrated, must have been hard to bear. When he left office Confucius
was already fifty-three years old, and his life so far seemed a
failure. The sense of his wasted powers may well have tempted him now
and again to take office under an unworthy ruler; but knowing that no
good could come of it he refrained, and probably he never seriously
thought of doing so.

In 483 B.C., when Confucius was sixty-six years old, through the
influence of his disciple Jan Yu, who was in the service of the Chi,
the Master was invited to return to his native land. Here he remained
till his death in 479 B.C. He had many interviews with the reigning
duke and the head of the Chi clan, but gained no influence over either
of them. So he turned once more to his favourite studies; edited the
_Book of Poetry_--perhaps the most interesting collection of ancient
songs extant--and wrote _Spring and Autumn_. His closing years were
darkened by the loss of those dearest to him. First his son died, then
Yen Yüan, the disciple whom he loved best. At his death the Master was
overcome by grief, and he left none behind him that loved learning.
Lastly Tzu-lu, the frank and bold, was killed in battle. A little
later, in his seventy-first year, Confucius himself passed away, 479
B.C.

This book of the Master's Sayings is believed by the Chinese to have
been written by the disciples of Confucius. But there is nothing to
prove this, and some passages in the book point the other way. Book
viii speaks of the death of Tseng-tzu, who did not die till 437 B.C.,
forty-two years after the Master. The chief authority for the text as
it stands to-day is a manuscript found in the house of Confucius in
150 B.C., hidden there, in all likelihood, between the years 213 and
211 B.C., when the reigning emperor was seeking to destroy every copy
of the classics. We find no earlier reference to the book under its
present name. But Mencius (372-289 B.C.) quotes seven passages from
it, in language all but identical with the present text, as the words
of Confucius. No man ever talked the language of these sayings. Such
pith and smoothness is only reached by a long process of rounding and
polishing. We shall probably come no nearer to the truth than Legge's
conclusion that the book was put together by the pupils of the
disciples of Confucius, from the words and notebooks of their masters,
about the year 400 B.C.

LEONARD A. LYALL.

AMALFI,

_January, 1909_

       *       *       *       *       *




NOTE


Such information as seemed necessary to enable the reader to
understand the text, or that appeared to me to be of general interest,
I have given in the notes at the foot of the page. Further details
about the men and places mentioned in the text will be found in the
Index.

Dates I have taken from Legge, Hirth and other standard authors.

In Chinese names, consonants are generally pronounced as in English,
vowels as in Italian.

_E_, when not joined with _i_, is pronounced nearly as German _ö_, or
much as _u_ in English l_u_ck.

_ao_ rhymes approximately with h_ow_
_ei_   "          "        "   th_ey_
_ou_   "          "        "   th_ough_
_uo_   "          "        "   p_oo_r,

the _u_ being equivalent to _w_.

_Chih_ and _Shih_ rhyme approximately with _her_. _Tzu_ is pronounced
much as _sir_ in the vulgar _yessir_, but with a hissing sound
prefixed.

       *       *       *       *       *




THE SAYINGS OF CONFUCIUS

BOOK I


1. The Master said, To learn and then do, is not that a pleasure? When
friends come from afar do we not rejoice? To live unknown and not
fret, is not that to be a gentleman?

2. Yu-tzu[2] said. Few men that are good sons and good brothers are
fond of withstanding those over them. A man that is not fond of
withstanding those over him and is yet fond of broils is nowhere
found. A gentleman heeds the roots. When the root has taken, the Way
is born. And to be a good son and a good brother, is not that the root
of love?

[Footnote 2: A disciple.]

3. The Master said, Smooth words and fawning looks are seldom found
with love.

4. Tseng-tzu[3] said, Thrice daily I ask myself: In dealing for
others, have I been unfaithful? Have I been untrue to friends? Do I
practise what I preach?

[Footnote 3: A disciple.]

5. The Master said, To guide a land of a thousand chariots, honour
business and be true; spend little and love men; time thy calls on the
people.

6. The Master said, The young should be dutiful at home, modest
abroad, careful and true, overflowing in kindness for all, but in
brotherhood with love. And if they have strength to spare they should
spend it on the arts.

7. Tzu-hsia[3] said, If a man eschews beauty and honours worth, if he
serves his father and mother with all his strength, if he is ready to
give his life for his lord, and keeps faith with his friends, though
others may say he has no learning, I must call him learned.

8. The Master said, A gentleman will not be looked up to unless he is
staid, nor will his learning be sound. Put faithfulness and truth
first; have no friends unlike thyself; be not ashamed to mend thy
faults.

9. Tseng-tzu[4] said, Heed the dead, follow up the past, and the soul
of the people will again grow great.

[Footnote 4: A disciple.]

10. Tzu-ch'in[5] said to Tzu-kung,[6] When he comes to a country the
Master always hears how it is governed; does he ask, or is it told
him?

[Footnote 5: A disciple.]

[Footnote 6: A disciple.]

Tzu-kung said, The Master gets it by his warmth and honesty, by
politeness, modesty and yielding. The way the Master asks is unlike
other men's asking.

11. The Master said, Whilst thy father lives look for his purpose;
when he is gone, look how he walked. To change nothing in thy father's
ways for three years may be called pious.

12, Yu-tzu[7] said, To behave with ease is the best part of courtesy.
This was the beauty of the old kings' ways; this they followed in
small and great. But knowing this, it will not do to give way to ease,
unchecked by courtesy. This too is wrong.

[Footnote 7: A disciple.]

13. Yu-tzu said, If pledges are close to right, word can be kept. If
attentions are close to courtesy, shame will be kept far. If we do not
choose our leaders wrong, we may worship them too.

14. The Master said, A gentleman that does not seek to eat his fill,
nor look for ease in his home, who is earnest at work and careful of
speech, who walks with those that keep the Way, and is guided by them,
may be said to love learning.

15. Tzu-kung[8] said, Poor, but no flatterer; rich, but not proud: how
would that be?

[Footnote 8: A disciple.]

It would do, said the Master; but better still were poor but merry;
rich, but loving courtesy.

Tzu-kung said, When the poem says:

    If ye cut, if ye file,
      If ye polish and grind,

is that what is meant?

The Master said, Now I can begin to talk of poetry to Tz'u. Tell him
what is gone, and he knows what shall come.

16. The Master said, Not to be known is no sorrow. My sorrow is not
knowing men.




BOOK II


1. The Master said, He that rules by mind is like the north star,
steady in his seat, whilst the stars all bend to him.

2. The Master said, The three hundred poems are summed up in the one
line, Think no evil.

3. The Master said, Guide the people by law, aline them by punishment;
they may shun crime, but they will want shame. Guide them by mind,
aline them by courtesy; they will learn shame and grow good.

4. The Master said, At fifteen, I had the will to learn; at thirty, I
could stand; at forty, I had no doubts; at fifty, I understood the
heavenly Bidding; at sixty, my ears were opened[9]; at seventy, I
could do as my heart lusted without trespassing from the square.

[Footnote 9: _Lit._, obedient.]

5. Meng Yi asked the duty of a son.

The Master said, Not to transgress.

As Fan Chi'ih[10] was driving him, the Master said, Meng-sun[11] asked
me the duty of a son; I answered, Not to transgress.

[Footnote 10: A disciple.]

[Footnote 11: Meng Yi.]

What did ye mean? said Fan Chi'ih.

To serve our father and mother with courtesy whilst they live; to bury
them with courtesy when they die, and to worship them with courtesy.

6. Meng Wu asked the duty of a son.

The Master said, He should not grieve his father and mother by
anything but illness.

7. Tzu-yu[12] asked the duty of a son.

[Footnote 12: A disciple.]

The Master said, He that can feed his parents is now called a good
son. But both dogs and horses are fed, and unless we honour our
parents, what is the difference?

8. Tzu-hsia[13] asked the duty of a son.

[Footnote 13: A disciple.]

The Master said, Our manner is the hard part. For the young to be a
stay in toil and leave the wine and food to their elders, is this to
fulfil their duty?

9. The Master said, If I talk all day to Hui,[14] like a dullard, he
never differs from me. But when he is gone, if I watch him when alone,
he can carry out what I taught. No, Hui is no dullard!

[Footnote 14: The disciple Yen Yüan.]

10. The Master said, See what he does; watch what moves him; search
what pleases him: can the man lie hidden? Can the man lie hidden?

11. The Master said, To keep old knowledge warm and get new makes the
teacher.

12. The Master said, A gentleman is not a vessel.

13. Tzu-kung[15] asked, What is a gentleman?

[Footnote 15: A disciple.]

The Master said, He puts words into deeds first, and follows these up
with words.

14. The Master said, A gentleman is broad and fair; the small man
takes sides and is narrow.

15. The Master said, Learning without thought is naught; thought
without learning is dangerous.

16. The Master said, To fight strange doctrines does harm.

17. The Master said, Yu,[16] shall I teach thee what is wisdom? To
know what we know, and know what we do not know, is wisdom.

[Footnote 16: The disciple Tzu-lu.]

18. Tsu-chang[17] learned with an eye to pay.

[Footnote 17: A disciple.]

The Master said, Hear much, leave all that is doubtful alone, speak
warily of everything else, and few will be offended. See much, leave
all that is dangerous alone, deal warily with everything else, and
thou wilt have little to rue. If thy words seldom give offence, and
thy deeds leave little to rue, pay will follow.

19. Duke Ai[18] asked, What should I do to win the people?

[Footnote 18: Of Lu.]

Confucius answered, Lift up the straight, put away the crooked; and
the people will be won. Lift up the crooked, put away the straight;
and the people will not be won.

20. Chi K'ang[19] asked how to make the people lowly, faithful and
painstaking.

[Footnote 19: The head of the Chi clan.]

The Master said, Meet them with dignity, they will be lowly; be a good
son and merciful, they will be faithful; lift up the good and teach
the unskilled, and they will take pains.

21. One said to Confucius, Why do ye not govern, Sir?

The Master said, What does the Book[20] say of a good son? 'To be a
good son and a friend to thy brothers is to show how to govern.'
This, too, is to govern. Must one be in office to govern?

[Footnote 20: The Book of History.]

22. The Master said, A man without truth, I know not what good he is!
A cart without a crosspole, a carriage without a yoke, how can they be
moved?

23. Tzu-chang[21] asked whether we can know what is to be ten
generations hence.

[Footnote 21: A disciple.]

The Master said, The Yin[22] took over the manners of the Hsia; the
harm and the good that they did them can be known. The Chou took over
the manners of the Yin; the harm and the good that they did them can
be known. And we may know what shall be, even an hundred generations
hence, whoever follows Chou.

[Footnote 22: Up to the time of Confucius, China had been ruled by
three lines of kings. First the T'ang, next the Yin or Shang, then the
Chou.]

24. The Master said, To worship the ghosts of men not akin to us is
fawning. To see the right and not do it is want of courage.




BOOK III


1. Of the Chi having eight rows of dancers[23] in his courtyard,
Confucius said, If this is to be borne, what is not to be borne?

[Footnote 23: An Imperial prerogative.]

2. When the sacrifice was ended, the Three Clans had the Yung hymn
sung.

The Master said,

    Princes and dukes assist.
    Solemn is the Son of heaven;

what meaning has this in the courtyard of the Three Clans?

3. The Master said, A man without love, what is courtesy to him? A man
without love, what is music to him?

4. Lin Fang asked what good form is at root.

The Master said, A big question! At high-tides, thrift is better than
waste; at burials, grief is worth more than nicety.

5. The Master said, Every wild tribe has its lord, whereas the lands
of Hsia[24] have none!

[Footnote 24: China.]

6. The Chi sacrificed to Mount T'ai.[25]

[Footnote 25: A prerogative of the Duke of Lu.]

The Master said to Jan Yu,[26] Canst thou not stop this?

[Footnote 26: A disciple in the service of the Chi.]

He answered, I cannot.

Alas! said the Master; dost thou think Mount T'ai less wise than Lin
Fang?

7. The Master said, A gentleman never strives with others. Or must he,
perhaps, in shooting? But then, as he bows and makes way in going up
or steps down to drink,[27] his strife is that of a gentleman.

[Footnote 27: The loser had to drink a cup of wine.]

8. Tzu-hsia asked, What is the meaning of:

    Her cunning smiles,
    Her dimples light,
    Her lovely eyes,
    So clear and bright,
    All unadorned,
    The background white.

Colouring, said the Master, is second to the plain ground.

Then good form is second, said Tzu-hsia.

Shang,[28] said the Master, thou hast hit my meaning! Now I can talk
of poetry to thee.

[Footnote 28: Tzu-hsia.]

9. The Master said, I can speak of the manners of Hsia; but as proof
of them Chi[29] is not enough. I can speak of the manners of Yin; but
as proof of them Sung is not enough. This is due to their dearth of
books and great men. If there were enough of these, I could use them
as proofs.

[Footnote 29: Chi was the homeland of the House of Hsia, Sung that of
the House of Yin.]

10. The Master said, After the drink offering at the Great Sacrifice,
I have no wish to see more.

11. One asked the meaning of the Great Sacrifice.

The Master said, I do not know. He that knew the meaning would
overlook all below heaven as I do this--and he pointed to his palm.

12. He worshipped as if those whom he worshipped were before him; he
worshipped the spirits as if they were before him.

The Master said: For me, to take no part in the sacrifice is the same
as not sacrificing.

13. Wang-sun Chia[30] said, What is the meaning of, It is better to
court the hearth-god than the god of the home?

[Footnote 30: Wang-sun Chia was minister of Wei, and had more
influence than his master. The hearth-god ranks below the god of the
home (the Roman _lares_), but since he sees all that goes on in the
house, and ascends to heaven at the end of the year to report what has
happened, it is well to be on good terms with him.]

Not so, said the Master. A sin against Heaven leaves no room for
prayer.

14. The Master said, Chou[31] looks back on two lines of kings. How
rich, how rich it is in art! I follow Chou.

[Footnote 31: The royal house of Chou, which was then ruling China.]

15. On going into the Great Temple the Master asked about everything.

One said, Who says that the Tsou man's son knows the rites? On going
into the Great Temple he asked about everything.

When he heard this, the Master said, Such is the rite.

16. The Master said, In shooting, the arrow need not go right through
the target, for men are not the same in strength. This was the old
rule.

17. Tzu-kung wished to do away with the sheep offering at the new
moon.

The Master said, Thou lovest the sheep, Tz'u: I love the rite.

18. The Master said: Serve the king with all courtesy, men call it
fawning.

19. Duke Ting asked how a lord should treat his lieges, and how lieges
should serve their lord.

Confucius answered, The lord should treat his lieges with courtesy;
lieges should serve their lord faithfully.

20. The Master said, The poem _The Osprey_ is glad, but not wanton; it
is sad, but not morbid.

21. Duke Ai asked Tsai Wo about the earth-altars.

Tsai Wo answered, The Emperors of the house of Hsia grew firs round
them; the men of Yin grew cypress; the men of Chou grew chestnut,
which was to say, Let the people tremble.[32]

[Footnote 32: _Tremble_ and _chestnut_ have the same sound in
Chinese.]

On hearing this, the Master said, I do not speak of what is ended,
chide what is settled, or find fault with what is past.[33]

[Footnote 33: In old times men had been sacrificed at the
earth-altars, and Tsai Wo's answer might seem to approve the
practice.]

22. The Master said, How shallow was Kuan Chung!

But, said one, was not Kuan Chung thrifty?

The Kuan, said the Master, owned San Kuei, and no one of his household
held two posts: was that thrift?

At least Kuan Chung knew good form.

The Master said, Kings screen their gates with trees; the Kuan, too,
had trees to screen his gate. When two kings are carousing, they have
a stand for the turned-down cups; the Kuan had a turned-down
cup-stand, too! If the Kuan knew good form, who does not know good
form?[34]

[Footnote 34: Kuan Chung (+ 645 B.C.), a famous man in his day, was
chief minister to the Duke of Ch'i, whom he raised to such wealth and
power that he became the leading prince of the empire. His chief merit
lay in taming the barbarous frontier tribes. The rest of his work was
built upon sand and died with him.]

23. The Master said to the Great Master[35] of Lu, We can learn how to
play music; at first each part in unison; then a swell of harmony,
each part distinct, rolling on to the finish.

[Footnote 35: Of music.]

24. The warden of Yi asked to see Confucius, saying, No gentleman has
ever come here whom I have failed to see.

The followers took him in.

On leaving he said, My two-three boys, why lament your fall? The Way
has long been lost below heaven! Now Heaven shall make the Master into
a warning bell.

25. The Master said of the music of Shao, It is thoroughly beautiful,
and thoroughly good, too. Of the music of Wu, he said, It is
thoroughly beautiful, but not thoroughly good.

26. The Master said, Rank without beauty; ceremony without reverence;
mourning without grief, why should I cast them a glance?




BOOK IV


1. The Master said, Love makes a spot beautiful: who chooses not to
dwell in love, has he got wisdom?

2. The Master said, Loveless men cannot bear need long, they cannot
bear fortune long. Loving men find peace in love, the wise find profit
in it.

3. The Master said, Love alone can love others, or hate others.

4. The Master said, A will set on love is free from evil.

5. The Master said, Wealth and honours are what men desire; but do not
go from the Way, to keep them. Lowliness and want are hated by men;
but do not go from the Way, to escape them.

Shorn of love, is a gentleman worthy of the name? Not for one moment
may a gentleman sin against love; he must not do so in flurry and
haste, nor do so in utter overthrow.

6. The Master said, I have seen no one that loves love and hates
uncharity. He that loves love will set nothing higher. The hater of
uncharity is so given to love that no uncharity can enter into his
life. If a man were to give his strength to love for one day, I have
seen no one whose strength would fail him. There may be such men, but
I have not seen one.

7. The Master said, A man and his faults are of a piece. By watching
his faults we learn whether love be his.

8. The Master said, To learn the Way at daybreak and die at eve were
enough.

9. The Master said, A knight[36] in quest of the Way, who is ashamed
of bad clothes and bad food, it is idle talking to.

[Footnote 36: _Shih:_ a gentleman entitled to bear arms, not a knight
in armour.]

10. The Master said, A gentleman has no likes or dislikes below
heaven. He follows right.

11. The Master said, The gentleman cherishes mind, the small man
cherishes dirt. Gentlemen trust in the law, the small man trusts in
favour.

12. The Master said, The chase of gain is rich in hate.

13. The Master said, What is it to sway a kingdom by courteous
yielding? If we cannot sway a kingdom by courteous yielding, what is
our courtesy worth?

14. The Master said, Care not for want of place; care for thy
readiness to fill one. Care not for being unknown, but seek to be
worthy of note.

15. The Master said, One line, Shen,[37] runs through my Way.

[Footnote 37: The disciple Tseng-tzu.]

Yes, said Tseng-tzu.

After the Master had left, the disciples asked what was meant.

Tseng-tzu said, The Master's Way is no more than faithfulness and
fellow-feeling.

16. The Master said, The gentleman is learned in right; the small man
is learned in gain.

17. The Master said, At sight of worth, think to grow like it; at
sight of baseness, search thyself within.

18. The Master said, A father or a mother may be gently chidden. If
thou seest they have no will to follow thee, be the more lowly, but do
not give way; nor murmur at the trouble they give thee.

19. The Master said, Whilst thy father and mother are living, do not
wander afar. If thou must travel, hold a set course.

20. The Master said, He that changes nothing in his father's ways for
three years may be called pious.

21. The Master said, A father and mother's years must be borne in
mind; with gladness on the one hand and fear on the other.

22. The Master said, The men of old were loth to speak, for not to
live up to their words would have shamed them.

23. The Master said, We shall seldom get lost if we hold to main
lines.

24. The Master said, A gentleman wishes to be slow to speak and quick
to do.

25. The Master said, A great soul is never friendless: he has always
neighbours.

26. Tzu-yu said, Nagging at kings brings disgrace, nagging at friends
estrangement.




BOOK V


1. Of Kung-yeh Ch'ang the Master said, A girl might be wedded to him.
Though he has been in fetters that was not his crime.

He gave him his daughter to wed.

Of Nan Jung the Master said, When the land keeps the Way he will not
be neglected; and if the land loses the Way he will escape punishment
and death.

He gave him his brother's daughter to wed.

2. Of Tzu-chien[38] the Master said, What a gentleman he is! But if
there were no gentlemen in Lu, where could he have picked it up?

3. Tzu-kung asked, And what of me?

Thou art a vessel, said the Master.

What kind of vessel?

A rich temple vessel.

4. One said, Yung[39] has love, but he is not glib.

[Footnote 38: A disciple born in Lu.]

[Footnote 39: The disciple Chung-kung.]

The Master said, What is the good of being glib? Fighting men with
tongue-craft mostly makes men hate you. Whether love be his I do not
know, but what is the good of being glib?

5. The Master moved Ch'i-tiao K'ai to take office.

He answered, For this I want confidence.

The Master was pleased.

6. The Master said, Forsaken is the Way! I must take ship and stem
the seas; and Yu[40] shall go with me.

When Tzu-lu heard this he was glad.

The Master said, Yu loves daring more than I do, but he is at a loss
how to take things.

7. Meng Wu asked whether Tzu-lu had love.

I do not know, said the Master.

He asked again.

A land of a thousand chariots might give Yu charge of its levies; but
whether love be his I do not know.

And how about Ch'iu?[41]

A town of a thousand households, a clan of an hundred chariots might
make Ch'iu governor; but whether love be his I do not know.

And how about Ch'ih?[42]

Standing in the court, girt with his sash, Ch'ih might entertain the
guests; but whether love be his I do not know.

8. The Master said to Tzu-kung, Which is the better man, thou or
Hui[43]?

He answered, How dare I look as high as Hui? When Hui hears one thing,
he understands ten; when I hear one thing I understand two.

The Master said, Thou art not his like. Neither art thou his like, nor
am I.

9. Tsai Yü[44] slept in the daytime.

[Footnote 40: Tzu-lu.]

[Footnote 41: The disciple Jan Yu.]

[Footnote 42: The disciple Kung-hsi Hua.]

[Footnote 43: The disciple Yen Yüan.]

[Footnote 44: The disciple Tsai Wo.]

The Master said, Rotten wood cannot be carved, nor are dung walls
plastered. Why chide with Yü?

The Master said, When I first met men I listened to their words and
took their deeds on trust. When I meet them now, I listen to their
words and watch their deeds. I righted this on Yü.

10. The Master said, I have met no firm man.

One answered, Shen Ch'ang.

The Master said, Ch'ang is passionate; how can he be firm?

11. Tzu-kung said, What I do not wish done to me, I likewise wish not
to do to others.

The Master said, That is still beyond thee, Tz'u.

12. Tzu-kung said, To hear the Master on his art and precepts is
granted us; but to hear him on man's nature and the Way of Heaven is
not.

13. Until Tzu-lu could do what he had heard, his only fear was to hear
more.

14. Tzu-kung asked, Why was K'ung-wen called cultured?

The Master said, He was quick and loved learning; he was not ashamed
to ask those beneath him: that is why he was called cultured.

15. The Master said, Of the ways of a gentleman Tzu-ch'an had four.
His life was modest; he honoured those that he served. He was kind in
feeding the people, and he was just in his calls upon them.

16. The Master said, Yen P'ing was a good friend. The longer he knew
you, the more attentive he grew.

17. The Master said, Tsang Wen lodged his tortoise with hills on the
pillars and reeds on the uprights: was this his wisdom?

18. Tzu-chang said, The chief minister, Tzu-wen, was thrice made
minister without showing gladness, thrice he left office with unmoved
looks. He always told the new ministers how the old ones had governed:
how was that?

He was faithful, said the Master.

But was it love?

I do not know, said the Master: how should this amount to love?

When Ts'ui murdered the lord of Ch'i, Ch'en Wen threw up ten teams of
horses and left the land. On coming to another kingdom he said, 'Like
my lord Ts'ui,' and left it. On coming to a second kingdom he said
again, 'Like my lord Ts'ui,' and left it: how was that?

He was clean, said the Master.

But was it love?

I do not know, said the Master: how should this amount to love?

19. Chi Wen thought thrice before acting.

On hearing this the Master said, Twice is enough.

20. The Master said, Whilst the land kept the Way Ning Wu showed
wisdom; when his land lost the Way he grew simple. His wisdom we may
come up to; such simplicity is beyond us.[45]

[Footnote 45: Ning Wu was minister of the Duke of Wei in the middle of
the seventh century B.C. The duke was driven from his throne and
deserted by the wise and prudent; but Ning Wu, in his simplicity,
stuck to his master and finally effected his restoration.]

21. When he was in Ch'en the Master said, Home, I must go home!
Zealous, or rash, or finished scholars, my young sons at home do not
know what pruning they still need!

22. The Master said, Because Po-yi and Shu-ch'i never remembered old
wickedness they made few enemies.[46]

23. The Master said, Who can call Wei-sheng Kao straight? A man begged
him for vinegar: he begged it of a neighbour, and gave it.

24. The Master said, Smooth words, fawning looks, and overdone
humility, Tso Ch'iu-ming thought shameful, and so do I. He thought it
shameful to hide ill-will and ape friendship, and so do I.

25. As Yen Yüan and Chi-lu[47] were sitting with him, the Master said,
Why not each of you tell me thy wishes?

[Footnote 46: Po-yi and Shu-ch'i were sons of the King of Ku-chu.
Their father left the throne to the younger of the two; but he would
not supplant the elder, nor would the elder go against his father's
wishes. So they both retired into obscurity. When King Wu overthrew
the tyrant Chou (1122 B.C.), they starved to death, rather than live
under a new dynasty. Of Po-yi Mencius tells us (Book X, chapter 1):
'His eyes would not look on an evil face, his ears would not listen to
an evil sound. He served none but his own lord, he ruled none but his
own people. He came in when there was order, and withdrew when tumults
came. Where lawless rule showed, or lawless people stayed, he could
not bear to dwell. To be together with country folk he thought like
sitting in court dress and court cap on dust and ashes. In Chou's time
he dwelt by the North Sea shore, waiting for all below heaven to grow
clean. So, hearing the ways of Po-yi, the fool grows honest, and the
weakling's purpose stands.']

[Footnote 47: Tzu-lu.]

Tzu-lu said, I should like carriages and horses, and clothes of light
fur to share with my friends, and, if they spoiled them, not to get
angry.

Yen Yüan said, I should like to make no boast of talent or show or
merit.

Tzu-lu said, We should like to hear your wishes, Sir.

The Master said, To give the old folk peace, to be true to friends,
and to have a heart for the young.

26. The Master said, It is finished! I have met no one that can see
his own faults and arraign himself within.

27. The Master said, In a hamlet of ten houses there must be men that
are as faithful and true men as I, but they do not love learning as I
do.




BOOK VI


1. The Master said, Yung[48] might fill the seat of a prince.

And might Tzu-sang Po-tzu? asked Chung-kung.

Yes, said the Master; but he is slack.

To be stern to himself, said Chung-kung, and slack in his claims on
the people, might do; but to be slack himself and slack with others
must surely be too slack.

The Master said, What Yung says is true.

2. Duke Ai asked which disciples loved learning.

Confucius answered, Yen Hui[49] loved learning. He did not carry over
anger; he made no mistake twice. Alas! his mission was short, he died.
Now that he is gone, I hear of no one that loves learning.

3. When Tzu-hua[50] was sent to Ch'i, the disciple Jan asked for grain
for his mother.

The Master said, Give her six pecks.

He asked for more.

The Master said, Give her sixteen.

Jan gave her eight hundred.

The Master said, On his way to Ch'i, Ch'ih[51] was drawn by sleek
horses and clad in light furs. I have heard that gentlemen help the
needy, not that they swell riches.

[Footnote 48: The disciple Chung-kung.]

[Footnote 49: The disciple Yen Yüan.]

[Footnote 50: The disciple Kung-hsi Hua, or Kung-hsi Ch'ih.]

[Footnote 51: Kung-hei Ch'ih.]

When Yüan Ssu was made governor he was given nine hundred measures of
grain, which he refused.

Not so, said the Master: why not take it and give it to thy neighbours
and countryfolk?

4. The Master said of Chung-kung, If the calf of a brindled cow be red
and horned, though men be shy to offer him, will the hills and streams
reject him?

5. The Master said, For three months together Hui's[52] heart never
sinned against love. The others may hold out for a day, or a month,
but no more.

6. Chi K'ang[53] asked whether Chung-yu[3] was fit to govern.

The Master said, Yu[54] is firm; what would governing be to him?

And is Tz'u[55] fit to govern?

Tz'u is thorough; what would governing be to him?

And is Ch'iu[56] fit to govern?

Ch'in is clever; what would governing be to him?

7. The Chi sent to make Min Tzu-ch'ien[6] governor of Pi.

Min Tzu-ch'ien said, Make some good excuse for me. If he sends again I
must be across the Wen.

8. When Po-niu[57] was ill the Master asked after him. Grasping his
hand through the window, he said, He is going. It is the Bidding; but
why this man of such an illness? Why this man of such an illness?

[Footnote 52: Yen Yüan.]

[Footnote 53: The head of the Chi clan after Chi Huan.]

[Footnote 54: The disciple Tzu-lu.]

[Footnote 55: The disciple Tzu-kung.]

[Footnote 56: The disciple Jan Yu.]

[Footnote 57: A disciple.]

9. The Master said. What a man was Hui![58] A bowl of rice, a gourd of
water, in a low alley; man cannot bear such misery! Yet Hui never fell
from mirth. What a man he was!

10. Jan Ch'iu[59] said, It is not that I take no pleasure in the
Master's Way: I want strength.

[Footnote 58: Yen Yüan.]

[Footnote 59: Jan Yu.]

The Master said, He that wants strength faints midway; but thou
drawest a line.

11. The Master said to Tzu-hsia, Study to be a gentleman, not as the
small man studies.

12. When Tzu-yu was governor of Wu-ch'eng, the Master said, Hast thou
gotten any men?

He answered, I have Tan-t'ai Mieh-ming. He will not take a short cut
when walking, and he has never come to my house except on business.

13. The Master said, Meng Chih-fan never brags. He was covering the
rear in a rout; but on coming to the gate he whipped his horse and
cried, Not courage kept me behind; my horse won't go!

14. The Master said, Unless we are glib as the reader T'o and fair as
Chao of Sung, escape is hard in the times that be!

15. The Master said, Who can go out except by the door? Why is it no
one keeps to the Way?

16. The Master said, Matter outweighing art begets roughness; art
outweighing matter begets pedantry. Matter and art well blent make a
gentleman.

17. The Master said, Man is born straight. If he grows crooked and
yet lives, he is lucky to escape.

18. The Master said, He that knows is below him that loves, and he
that loves below him that delights therein.

19. The Master said, To men above the common we can talk of higher
things; to men below the common we must not talk of higher things.

20. Fan Ch'ih[60] asked, What is wisdom?

The Master said, To foster right among the people; to honour ghosts
and spirits, and yet keep aloof from them, may be called wisdom.

He asked, What is love?

The Master said, To rank the effort above the prize may be called
love.

21. The Master said, Wisdom delights in water; love delights in hills.
Wisdom is stirring; love is quiet. Wisdom is merry; love grows old.

22. The Master said, By one revolution Ch'i might grow to be Lu; by
one revolution Lu might reach the Way.

23. The Master said, A drinking horn that is no horn! What a horn!
What a drinking horn!

24. Tsai Wo[61] said, If a man of love were told that a man is in a
well, would he go in after him?

[Footnote 60: A disciple.]

[Footnote 61: A disciple.]

The Master said, Why should he? A gentleman might be got to the well,
but not trapped into it, He may be cheated, but not fooled.

25. The Master said, By breadth of reading and the ties of courtesy,
a gentleman is kept, too, from false paths.

26. The Master saw Nan-tzu.[62] Tzu-lu was displeased.

The Master took an oath, saying, If I have done wrong, may Heaven
forsake me, may Heaven forsake me!

27. The Master said, The highest minds cleave to the Centre, the
Common. They have long been rare among the people.

28. Tzu-kung said, To treat the people with bounty and help the many,
how were that? Could it be called love?

The Master said, What has this to do with love? Must it not be
holiness? Yao and Shun[63] still yearned for this. Seeking a foothold
for self, love finds a foothold for others; seeking light for itself,
it enlightens others too. To learn from the near at hand may be called
the clue to love.

[Footnote 62: The dissolute wife of Duke Ling of Wei.]

[Footnote 63: Two emperors of the golden age.]




BOOK VII


1. The Master said, A teller and not a maker, one that trusts and
loves the past; I might liken myself to our old P'eng.[64]

2. The Master said, To think things over in silence, to learn and be
always hungry, to teach and never weary; is any of these mine?

3. The Master said, Not making the most of my mind, want of
thoroughness in learning, failure to do the right when told it, lack
of strength to overcome faults; these are my sorrows.

4. In his free moments the Master was easy and cheerful.

5. The Master said, How deep is my decay! It is long since I saw the
Duke of Chou[65] in a dream.

6. The Master said, Keep thy will on the Way, lean on mind, rest in
love, move in art.

7. The Master said, From the man that paid in dried meat upwards, I
have withheld teaching from no one.

8. The Master said, Only to those fumbling do I open, only for those
stammering do I find the word.

[Footnote 64: We should be glad to know more of old P'eng, but nothing
is known of him.]

[Footnote 65: Died 1105 B.C. He was the younger brother of King Wu,
the founder of the Chou dynasty, as great in peace as the King in war.
He was so bent on carrying out the old principles of government that
'if anything did not tally with them, he looked up and thought, till
day passed into night, and if by luck he found the answer he sat and
waited for the dawn' (Mencius, Book VIII, chapter 20).]

If I lift one corner and the other three are left unturned, I say no
more.

9. When eating beside a mourner the Master never ate his fill. On days
when he had been wailing, he did not sing.

10. The Master said to Yen Yüan, To go forward when in office and lie
quiet when not; only I and thou can do that.

Tzu-lu said, If ye had to lead three armies, Sir, whom would ye have
with you?

No man, said the Master, that would face a tiger bare-fisted, or
plunge into a river and die without a qualm; but one, indeed, who,
fearing what may come, lays his plans well and carries them through.

11. The Master said, If shouldering a whip were a sure road to riches
I should turn carter; but since there is no sure road, I tread the
path I love.

12. The Master gave heed to abstinence, war and sickness.

13. When he was in Ch'i, for three months after hearing the Shao
played, the Master knew not the taste of flesh.

I did not suppose, he said, that music could reach such heights.

14. Jan Yu said, Is the Master for the lord of Wei?[66]

[Footnote 66: The grandson of Duke Ling, the husband of Nan-tzu. His
father had been driven from the country for plotting to kill Nan-tzu.
When Duke Ling died, he was succeeded by his grandson, who opposed by
force his father's attempts to seize the throne.]

I shall ask him, said Tzu-kung.

He went in, and said, What kind of men were Po-yi[67] and Shu-ch'i?

Worthy men of yore, said the Master.

Did they rue the past?

They sought love and found it; what had they to rue?

Tzu-kung went out, and said, The Master is not for him.

15. The Master said, Eating coarse rice and drinking water, with bent
arm for pillow, we may be merry; but ill-gotten wealth and honours are
to me a wandering cloud.

16. The Master said, Given a few more years, making fifty for learning
the Yi,[68] I might be freed from gross faults.

[Footnote 67: See Book V, § 22.]

[Footnote 68: An abstruse, ancient classic, usually called the Book of
Changes.]

17. The Master liked to talk of poetry, history, and the upkeep of
courtesy. Of all these he liked to talk.

18. The Duke of She asked Tzu-lu about Confucius.

Tzu-lu did not answer.

The Master said, Why didst thou not say, He is a man that forgets to
eat in his eagerness, whose sorrows are forgotten in gladness, who
knows not that age draws near?

19. The Master said, I was not born to wisdom: I loved the past, and
sought it earnestly there.

20. The Master never talked of goblins, strength, disorder, or
spirits.

21. The Master said, Walking three together I am sure of teachers. I
pick out the good and follow it; I see the bad and shun it.

22. The Master said, Heaven begat the mind in me; what can Huan
T'ui[69] do to me?

23. The Master said, My two-three boys, do ye think I hide things? I
hide nothing from you. I am a man that keeps none of his doings from
his two-three boys.

24. The Master taught four things: art, conduct, faithfulness and
truth.

25. The Master said, A holy man I shall not live to see; enough could
I find a gentleman! A good man I shall not live to see; enough could I
find a steadfast one! But when nothing poses as something, cloud as
substance and want as riches, it is hard indeed to be steadfast!

26. The Master angled, but he did not fish with a net; he shot, but
not at birds sitting.

27. The Master said, There may be men that do things without knowing
why. I do not. To hear much, pick out the good and follow it; to see
much and think it over; this comes next to wisdom.

28. To talk to the Hu village was hard. When a lad was seen by the
Master, the disciples doubted.

The Master said, I allow his coming, not what he does later. Why be so
harsh? If a man cleans himself to come in, I admit his cleanness, but
do not warrant his past.

[Footnote 69: In 495 B.C., during Confucius's wanderings, Huan T'ui
sent a band of men to kill him; but why he did so is not known.]

29. The Master said, Is love so far a thing? I long for love, and lo!
love is come.

30. A judge of Ch'en asked whether Duke Chao[70] knew good form.

Confucius answered, He knew good form.

After Confucius had left, the judge beckoned Wu-ma Ch'i[71] to him,
and said, I had heard that gentlemen are of no party, but do they,
too, take sides? This lord married a Wu, whose name was the same as
his, and called her Miss Tzu of Wu: if he knew good form, who does not
know good form?

When Wu-ma Ch'i told the Master this he said, How lucky I am! If I go
wrong, men are sure to know it!

31. When anyone sang to the Master, and sang well, he made him sing it
again and joined in.

32. The Master said, I have no more reading than others; to live as a
gentleman is not yet mine.

33. The Master said, How dare I lay claim to holiness or love? A man
of endless craving, who never tires of teaching, I might be called,
but that is all.

That is just what we disciples cannot learn, said Kung-hsi Hua.

34. When the Master was very ill, Tzu-lu asked leave to pray.

Is it done? said the Master.

[Footnote 70: Duke Chao of Lu (+ 510 B.C.) was the duke that first
employed Confucius. It is against Chinese custom for a man to marry a
girl whose surname is the same as his.]

[Footnote 71: A disciple of Confucius.]

It is, answered Tzu-lu. The Memorials say, Pray to the spirits above
and to the Earth below.

The Master said, Long-lasting has my prayer been.

35. The Master said, Waste makes men unruly, thrift makes them mean;
but they are better mean than unruly.

36. The Master said, A gentleman is calm and spacious; the small man
is always fretting.

37. The Master's manner was warm yet dignified. He was stern, but not
fierce; humble, yet easy.




BOOK VIII


1. The Master said, T'ai-po[72] may be said to have carried nobility
furthest. Thrice he refused all below heaven. Men were at a loss how
to praise him.

2. The Master said, Without good form attentions grow into fussiness,
heed becomes fearfulness, daring becomes unruliness, frankness becomes
rudeness. When gentlemen are true to kinsfolk, love will thrive among
the people; if they do not forsake old friends, the people will not
steal.

3. When Tseng-tzu lay sick he called his disciples and said, Uncover
my feet, uncover my arms. The poem says,

    As if a deep gulf
      Were yawning below,
    As crossing thin ice,
      Take heed how ye go.

My little children, I have known how to keep myself unhurt until now
and hereafter.[73]

4. When Tseng-tzu was sick Meng Ching[74] came to ask after him.

[Footnote 72: T'ai-po was the eldest son of the King of Chou. The
father wished his third son to succeed him, so that the throne might
pass later to his grandson, afterwards known as King Wen. To enable
this plan to be carried out T'ai-po and his second brother went into
exile.]

[Footnote 73: The Chinese say: 'The body is born whole by the mother;
it should be returned whole by the son.']

[Footnote 74: Chief of the Meng clan, minister of Lu.]

Tseng-tzu said, When a bird is dying his notes are sad; when man is
dying his words are good. Three branches of the Way are dear to a
gentleman: To banish from his bearing violence and disdain; to sort
his face to the truth, and to banish from his speech what is low or
unseemly. The ritual of chalice and platter[75] has servitors to see
to it.

5. Tseng-tzu said, When we can, to ask those that cannot; when we are
more, to ask those that are less; having, to seem wanting; real, to
seem shadow; when gainsaid, never answering back; I had a friend[76]
once that could do thus.

6. Tseng-tzu said, A man to whom an orphan, a few feet high, or the
fate of an hundred towns, may be entrusted, and whom no crisis can
corrupt, is he not a gentleman, a gentleman indeed?

7. Tseng-tzu said, The knight had need be strong and bold; for his
burden is heavy, the way is far. His burden is love, is it not a heavy
one? No halt before death, is that not far?

8. The Master said, Poetry rouses us, we stand upon courtesy, music is
our crown.

9. The Master said, The people may be made to follow, we cannot make
them understand.

10. The Master said, Love of daring and hatred of poverty lead to
crime; a man without love, if he is sorely harassed, turns to crime.

11. The Master said, All the comely gifts of the Duke of Chou,[77]
coupled with pride and meanness, would not be worth a glance.

[Footnote 75: For sacrifice.]

[Footnote 76: Probably Yen Yüan.]

[Footnote 77: See Book VII, § 5.]

12. The Master said, A man to whom three years of learning have borne
no fruit would be hard to find.

13. The Master said, A man of simple faith, who loves learning, who
guards and betters his way unto death, will not enter a tottering
kingdom, nor stay in a lawless land. When all below heaven follows the
Way, he is seen; when it loses the Way, he is unseen. While his land
keeps the Way, he is ashamed to be poor and lowly; but when his land
has lost the Way, wealth and honours shame him.

14. The Master said, When out of place, discuss not policy.

15. The Master said, In the first days of the music-master Chih how
the hubbub[78] of the Kuan-chü rose sea beyond sea! How it filled the
ear!

16. The Master said, Of men that are zealous, but not straight; dull,
but not simple; helpless, but not truthful, I will know nothing.

17. The Master said, Learn as though the time were short, like one
that fears to lose.

18. The Master said, How wonderful were Shun[2] and Yü[2]! To have all
below heaven was nothing to them!

19. The Master said, How great a lord was Yao[79]! Wonderful! Heaven
alone is great; Yao alone was patterned on it. Vast, boundless! Men's
words failed them. The wonder of the work done by him! The flame of
his art and precepts!

[Footnote 78: The last part of the music, when all the instruments
were played together.]

[Footnote 79: See Introduction.]

20. Shun had five ministers, and there was order below heaven.

King Wu[80] said, I have ten uncommon ministers.

Confucius said, 'The dearth of talent,' is not that the truth? When
Yü[81] followed T'ang[82] the times were rich in talent; yet there
were but nine men in all, and one woman. In greatness of soul we may
say that Chou[83] was highest: he had two-thirds of all below heaven
and bent it to the service of Yin.

21. The Master said, I see no flaw in Yü. He ate and drank little, yet
he was lavish in piety to the ghosts and spirits. His clothes were
bad, but in his cap and gown he was fair indeed. His palace buildings
were poor, yet he gave his whole strength to dykes and ditches. No
kind of flaw can I see in Yü.

[Footnote 80: See Introduction.]

[Footnote 81: Shun.]

[Footnote 82: Yao.]

[Footnote 83: King Wen, Duke of Chou.]




BOOK IX


1. The Master seldom spake of gain, or love, or the Bidding.

2. A man of the village of Ta-hsiang said, The great Confucius, with
his vast learning, has made no name in anything.

When the Master heard this, he said to his disciples, What shall I
take up? Shall I take up driving, or shall I take up shooting? I shall
take up driving.

3. The Master said, A linen cap is good form; now silk is worn. It is
cheap, so I follow the many. To bow below is good form; now it is done
above. This is arrogance, so, breaking with the many, I still bow
below.

4. From four things the Master was quite free: by-ends and 'must' and
'shall' and 'I.'

5. When he was afraid in K'uang,[84] the Master said, Since the death
of King Wen, is not the seat of culture here? If Heaven had meant to
destroy our culture, a later mortal would have had no part in it.
Until Heaven condemns our culture, what can the men of K'uang do to
me?

6. A high minister said to Tzu-kung, The Master must be a holy man, he
can do so many things!

[Footnote 84: During the Master's wanderings. K'uang is said to have
been a small state near Lu which had been oppressed by Yang Huo.
Confucius resembled him, and the men of K'uang set upon him, mistaking
him for their enemy. The commentators say that the Master was not
afraid, only 'roused to a sense of danger.' I cannot find that the
text says so.]

Tzu-kung said, Heaven has, indeed, given him so much that he is almost
holy, and he can do many things, too.

When the Master heard this, he said, Does the minister know me?
Because I was poor when young, I can do many paltry things. But does
doing many things make a gentleman? No, not doing many does.

Lao said, The Master would say, As I had no post I learned the crafts.

7. The Master said, Have I in truth wisdom? I have no wisdom. But when
a common fellow emptily asks me anything, I tap it on this side and
that, and sift it to the bottom.

8. The Master said, The phoenix comes not, the River gives forth no
sign: all is over with me!

9. When the Master saw folk clad in mourning, or in cap and gown, or a
blind man, he always rose--even for the young,--or, if he was passing
them, he quickened his step.

10. Yen Yüan heaved a sigh, and said, As I look up it grows higher,
deeper as I dig! I catch sight of it ahead, and on a sudden it is
behind me! The Master leads men on, deftly bit by bit. He widens me
with culture, he binds me with courtesy. If I wished to stop I could
not until my strength were spent. What seems the mark stands near; but
though I long to reach it, I find no way.

11. When the Master was very ill, Tzu-lu made the disciples act as
ministers.

During a better spell the Master said, Yu has long been feigning.
This show of ministers, when I have no ministers, whom will it take
in? Will Heaven be taken in? And is it not better to die in the arms
of my two-three boys than to die in the arms of ministers? And, if I
miss a big burial, shall I die by the roadside?

12. Tzu-kung said, If I had here a fair piece of jade, should I hide
it away in a case, or seek a good price and sell it?

Sell it, sell it! said the Master. I tarry for my price.

13. The Master wished to dwell among the nine tribes.[85]

[Footnote 85: In the east of Shantung.]

One said, They are low; how could ye?

The Master said, Wherever a gentleman lives, will there be anything
low?

14. The Master said. After I came back from Wei to Lu the music was
set straight and each song found its place.

15. The Master said, To serve dukes and ministers abroad and father
and brothers at home; in matters of mourning not to dare to be slack;
and to be no thrall to wine: to which of these have I won?

16. As he stood by a stream, the Master said, Hasting away like this,
day and night, without stop!

17. The Master said, I have seen no one that loves mind as he loves
looks.

18. The Master said, In making a mound, if I stop when one more basket
would finish it, I stop. When flattening ground, if, after
overturning one basket, I go on, I go ahead.

19. The Master said, Never listless when spoken to, such was Hui.[86]

20. Speaking of Yen Yüan, the Master said, The pity of it! I saw him
go on, but I never saw him stop!

21. The Master said, Some sprouts do not blossom, some blossoms bear
no fruit!

22. The Master said, Awe is due to youth. May not to-morrow be bright
as to-day? To men of forty or fifty, who are still unknown, no awe is
due.

23. The Master said, Who would not give ear to a downright word? But
to mend is better. Who would not be pleased by a guiding word? But to
think it out is better. With such as are pleased but do not think out,
or who listen but do not mend, I can do nothing.

24. The Master said, Put faithfulness and truth first; have no friends
unlike thyself; be not ashamed to mend thy faults.

25. The Master said, Three armies may be robbed of their leader, no
wretch can be robbed of his will.

26. The Master said, Yu[87] is the man to stand, clad in a worn-out
quilted gown, unashamed, amid robes of fox and badger!

    Without hatred or greed,
    What but good does he do?

But when Tzu-lu was everlastingly humming these words, the Master
said, This is the way towards it, but how much short of goodness
itself!

[Footnote 86: Yen Yüan.]

[Footnote 87: Tzu-lu.]

27. The Master said, Erst the cold days show how fir and cypress are
last to fade.

28. The Master said, Wisdom has no doubts; love does not fret; the
bold have no fears.

29. The Master said, With some we can learn together, but we cannot go
their way; we can go the same way with others, though our standpoint
is not the same; and with some, though our standpoint is the same our
weights and scales are not.

30.

    The blossoms of the plum tree
      Are dancing in play;
    My thoughts are with thee,
      In thy home far away.

The Master said, Her thoughts were not with him, or how could he be
far away?




BOOK X


1. Among his own country folk Confucius wore a homely look, like one
that has no word to say.

In the ancestral temple and at court his speech was full, but
cautious.

2. At court he talked frankly to men of low rank, winningly to men of
high rank. When the king was there, he looked intent and solemn.

3. When the king bade him receive guests, his face seemed to change
and his legs to bend. He bowed left and right to those beside him,
straightened his robes in front and behind, and swept forward, with
arms spread like wings. When the guest had left, he brought back word,
saying, The guest is no longer looking.

4. As he went in at the palace gate he stooped, as though it were too
low for him. He did not stand in the middle of the gate, or step on
the threshold.

When he passed the throne, his face seemed to change and his legs to
bend: he spake with bated breath. As he went up the hall to audience,
he lifted his robes, bowed his back, and masked his breathing till it
seemed to stop. As he came down, he relaxed his face below the first
step and looked pleased. From the foot of the steps he swept forward
with arms spread like wings; and when he was back in his seat, he
looked intent as before.

5. When he carried the sceptre, his back bent, as under too heavy a
burden; he lifted it no higher than in bowing and no lower than in
making a gift. His face changed, as it will with fear, and he dragged
his feet, as though they were fettered.

When he offered his present his manner was formal; but at the private
audience he was cheerful.

6. The gentleman was never decked in violet or mauve; even at home he
would not wear red or purple.

In hot weather he wore an unlined linen gown, but always over other
clothes.

With lamb-skin he wore black, with fawn, white, and with fox-skin,
yellow. At home he wore a long fur gown, with the right sleeve short.

His nightgown was always half as long again as his body.

In the house he wore thick fur, of fox or badger.

When he was not in mourning there was nothing missing from his girdle.

Except for sacrificial dress, he was sparing of stuff.

He did not wear lamb's fur, or a black cap, on a mourning visit.

At the new moon he always put on court dress and went to court.

7. On his days of abstinence he always wore linen clothes of a pale
colour; and he changed his food and moved from his wonted seat.

8. He did not dislike well-cleaned rice or hash chopped small. He did
not eat sour or mouldy rice, bad fish, or tainted flesh. He did not
eat anything that had a bad colour or that smelt bad, or food that
was badly cooked or out of season. Food that was badly cut or served
with the wrong sauce he did not eat. However much flesh there might
be, it could not conquer his taste for rice. To wine alone he set no
limit, but he did not drink enough to muddle him. He did not drink
bought wine, or eat ready-dried market meat. He never went without
ginger at a meal. He did not eat much.

After a sacrifice at the palace he did not keep the flesh over-night.
He never kept sacrificial flesh more than three days. If it had been
kept longer it was not eaten.

He did not talk at meals, nor speak when he was in bed.

Even at a meal of coarse rice, or herb broth, or gourds, he made his
offering with all reverence.

9. If his mat was not straight, he would not sit down.

10. When the villagers were drinking wine, as those that walked with a
staff left, he left too.

At the village exorcisms he put on court dress and stood on the east
steps.

11. When sending a man with enquiries to another land, he bowed twice
to him and saw him out.

When K'ang gave him some drugs, he bowed, accepted them, and said, I
have never taken them; I dare not taste them.

12. On coming back from court after his stables had been burnt, the
Master said, Is anyone hurt? He did not ask about the horses.

13. When the king sent him cooked meat, he put his mat straight, and
tasted it first; when he sent him raw flesh, he had it cooked, and
offered it to the spirits; when he sent him a live beast, he kept it
alive.

When he ate in attendance on the king, the king made the offering, he
tasted things first.

When he was sick and the king came to see him, he lay with his head to
the east, with his court dress over him and his girdle across it.

When he was called by the king's bidding, he walked, without waiting
for his carriage.

14. On going into the Great Temple he asked about everything.

15. When a friend died, who had no home to go to, he said, It is for
me to bury him.

When friends sent him anything, even a carriage and horses, he never
bowed, unless the gift was sacrificial flesh.

16. He did not sleep like a corpse. At home he unbent.

Even if he knew him well, his face changed when he saw a mourner. Even
when he was in undress, if he saw anyone in full dress, or a blind
man, he looked grave.

To men in deep mourning and to the census-bearers he bowed over the
cross-bar.

Before choice meats he rose with changed look. At sharp thunder, or a
fierce wind, his look changed.

17. When mounting his carriage he stood straight and grasped the cord.
When he was in it, he did not look round, or speak fast, or point.

18. Seeing a man's face, she rose, flew round and settled. The Master
said, Hen pheasant on the ridge, it is the season, it is the season.

Tzu-lu went towards her: she sniffed thrice and rose.[88]

[Footnote 88: This passage cannot belong here. It is corrupt and
unintelligible.]




BOOK XI


1. The Master said, Savages! the men that first went into courtesy and
music! Gentlemen! those that went into them later! My use is to follow
the first lead in both.

2. The Master said, Not one of my followers in Ch'en or Ts'ai comes
any more to my door! Yen Yüan, Min Tzu-ch'ien, Jan Po-niu and
Chung-kung were men of noble life; Tsai Wo and Tzu-kung were the
talkers; Jan Yu and Chi-lu were statesmen; Tzu-yu and Tzu-hsia, men of
arts and learning.

3. The Master said, I get no help from Hui.[89] No word I say but
delights him!

4. The Master said, How good a son is Min Tzu-ch'ien! No one finds
fault with anything that his father, or his mother, or his brethren
say of him.

5. Nan Jung would thrice repeat _The Sceptre White_.[90] Confucius
gave him his brother's daughter for wife.

6. Chi K'ang asked which disciples loved learning. Confucius answered,
There was Yen Hui[91] loved learning. Alas! his mission was short, he
died. Now there is no one.

[Footnote 89: Yen Yüan.]

[Footnote 90: The verse runs--

    A flaw can be ground
      From a sceptre white;
    A slip of the tongue
      No man can right.
]

[Footnote 91: Yen Yüan.]

7. When Yen Yüan died, Yen Lu[92] asked for the Master's carriage to
furnish an outer coffin.

The Master said, Brains or no brains, each of us speaks of his son.
When Li[93] died he had an inner but not an outer coffin: I would not
go on foot to furnish an outer coffin. As I follow in the wake of the
ministers I cannot go on foot.

8. When Yen Yüan died the Master said, Woe is me! Heaven has undone
me! Heaven has undone me!

9. When Yen Yüan died the Master gave way to grief.

His followers said, Sir, ye are giving way.

The Master said, Am I giving way? If I did not give way for this man,
for whom should I give way to grief?

10. When Yen Yüan died the disciples wished to bury him in pomp.

The Master said, This must not be.

The disciples buried him in pomp.

The Master said, Hui treated me as his father. I have failed to treat
him as a son. No, not I; but ye, my two-three boys.

11. Chi-lu[94] asked what is due to the ghosts of the dead?

The Master said, When we cannot do our duty to the living, how can we
do it to the dead?

He dared to ask about death.

We know not life, said the Master, how can we know death?

[Footnote 92: The father of Yen Yüan.]

[Footnote 93: The Master's son.]

[Footnote 94: Tzu-lu.]

12. Seeing the disciple Min standing at his side with winning looks,
Tzu-lu with warlike front, Jan Yu and Tzu-kung frank and free, the
Master's heart was glad.

A man like Yu,[95] he said, dies before his day.

13. The men of Lu were building the Long Treasury.

Min Tzu-ch'ien said, Would not the old one do? Why must it be rebuilt?

The Master said, That man does not talk, but when he speaks he hits
the mark.

14. The Master said, What has the lute of Yu[96] to do, twanging at my
door?

But when the disciples looked down on Tzu-lu, the Master said, Yu has
come up into hall, but he has not yet entered the inner rooms.

15. Tzu-kung asked, Which is the better, Shih[97] or Shang[98]?

The Master said, Shih goes too far, Shang not far enough.

Then is Shih the better? said Tzu-kung.

Too far, said the Master, is no nearer than not far enough.

16. The Chi was richer than the Duke of Chou; yet Ch'iu[99] became his
tax-gatherer and made him still richer.

[Footnote 95: Tzu-lu. This prophecy came true. Tzu-lu and Tzu-kao were
officers of Wei when troubles arose. Tzu-lu hastened to the help of
his master. He met Tzu-kao withdrawing from the danger, and was
advised to do the same. But Tzu-lu would not desert the man whose pay
he drew. He plunged into the fight and was killed.]

[Footnote 96: Tzu-lu.]

[Footnote 97: The disciple Tzu-chang.]

[Footnote 98: The disciple Tzu-hsia.]

[Footnote 99: The disciple Jan Yu.]

He is no disciple of mine, said the Master. My little children, ye may
beat your drums and make war on him.

17. Ch'ai[100] is simple, Shen[101] is dull, Shih[102] is smooth,
Yu[103] is coarse.

18. The Master said, Hui[104] is almost faultless, and he is often
empty. Tz'u[105] will not bow to the Bidding, and he heaps up riches;
but his views are often sound.

19. Tzu-chang asked, What is the way of a good man?

The Master said, He does not tread the beaten track; and yet he does
not enter the inner rooms.

20. The Master said, Commend a man for plain speaking: he may prove a
gentleman, or else but seeming honest.

21. Tzu-lu said, Shall I do all I am taught?

The Master said, Whilst thy father and elder brothers live, how canst
thou do all thou art taught?

Jan Yu asked, Shall I do all I am taught?

The Master said, Do all thou art taught.

Kung-hsi Hua said, Yu[106] asked, Shall I do all I am taught? and ye
said, Sir, Whilst thy father and elder brothers live. Ch'iu[107]
asked, Shall I do all I am taught? and ye said, Sir, Do all thou art
taught. I am in doubt, and dare to ask you, Sir.

[Footnote 100: The disciple Kao Ch'ai]

[Footnote 101: The disciple Tseng-tzu.]

[Footnote 102: The disciple Tzu-chang.]

[Footnote 103: The disciple Tzu-lu.]

[Footnote 104: The disciple Yen Yüan.]

[Footnote 105: The disciple Tzu-kung.]

[Footnote 106: Tzu-lu.]

[Footnote 107: Jan Yu.]

The Master said, Ch'iu is bashful, so I egged him on; Yu is twice a
man, so I held him back.

22. When the Master was in fear in K'uang, Yen Yüan fell behind.

The Master said, I held thee for dead.

He answered, Whilst my Master lives how should I dare to die?

23. Chi Tzu-jan[108] asked whether Chung Yu[2] or Jan Ch'iu[3] could
be called a great minister.

The Master said, I thought ye would ask me a riddle, Sir, and ye ask
about Yu[109] and Ch'iu.[110] He that holds to the Way in serving his
lord and leaves when he cannot do so, we call a great minister. Now Yu
and Ch'iu I should call tools.

Who are just followers then?

Nor would they follow, said the Master, if told to kill their lord or
father.

24. Tzu-lu made Tzu-kao governor of Pi.

The Master said, Thou art undoing a man's son.

Tzu-lu said, What with the people and the spirits of earth and corn,
must a man read books to become learned?

The Master said, This is why I hate a glib tongue.

25. The Master said to Tzu-lu, Tseng Hsi,[111] Jan Yu and Kung-hsi Hua
as they sat beside him, I may be a day older than you, but forget
that. Ye are wont to say, I am unknown. Well, if ye were known, what
would ye do?

[Footnote 108: The younger brother of Chi Huan, the head of the Chi
clan.]

[Footnote 109: Tzu-lu. He and Jan Yu had taken office under the Chi.]

[Footnote 110: Jan Yu.]

[Footnote 111: A disciple: the father of Tseng-tzu.]

Tzu-lu answered lightly. Give me a land of a thousand chariots,
crushed between great neighbours, overrun by soldiers and searched by
famine, and within three years I could put courage into it and high
purpose.

The Master smiled.

What wouldst thou do, Ch'iu[112]? he said.

He answered, Give me a land of sixty or seventy, or fifty or sixty
square miles, and within three years I could give the people plenty.
As for courtesy and music, they would wait the coming of a gentleman.

And what wouldst thou do, Ch'ih[113]?

He answered, I do not speak of what I can do, but of what I should
like to learn. At services in the Ancestral Temple, or at the Grand
Audience, I should like to fill a small part.

And what wouldst thou do, Tien[114]?

Tien stopped playing, pushed his still sounding lute aside, rose and
answered, My choice would be unlike those of the other three.

What harm in that? said the Master. Each but spake his mind.

In the last days of spring, all clad for the springtime, with five or
six young men and six or seven lads, I would bathe in the Yi, be
fanned by the wind in the Rain God's glade, and go back home singing.

The Master said with a sigh, I side with Tien.

Tseng Hsi stayed after the other three had left, and said, What did ye
think, Sir, of what the three disciples said?

[Footnote 112: Jan Yu.]

[Footnote 113: Kung-hsi Hua.]

[Footnote 114: Tseng Hsi.]

Each but spake his mind, said the Master.

Why did ye smile at Yu,[115] Sir?

Lands are swayed by courtesy, but what he said was not modest. That
was why I smiled. Yet did not Ch'iu speak of a state? Where would
sixty or seventy, or fifty or sixty, square miles be found that are
not a state? And did not Ch'ih too speak of a state? Who but great
vassals are there in the Ancestral Temple, or at the Grand Audience?
But if Ch'ih were to take a small part, who could fill a big one?

[Footnote 115: Tzu-lu.]




BOOK XII


1. Yen Yüan asked, What is love?

The Master said, Love is to conquer self and turn to courtesy. If we
could conquer self and turn to courtesy for one day, all below heaven
would turn to love. Does love flow from within, or does it flow from
others?

Yen Yüan said, May I ask what are its signs?

The Master said, To be always courteous of eye and courteous of ear;
to be always courteous in word and courteous in deed.

Yen Yüan said, Though I am not clever, I hope to live by these words.

2. Chung-kung asked, What is love?

The Master said, Without the door to behave as though a great guest
were come; to treat the people as though we tendered the great
sacrifice; not to do unto others what we would not they should do unto
us; to breed no wrongs in the state and breed no wrongs in the home.

Chung-kung said, Though I am not clever, I hope to live by these
words.

3. Ssu-ma Niu[116] asked, What is love?

The Master said, Love is slow to speak.

To be slow to speak! Can that be called love?

The Master said, Can that which is hard to do be lightly spoken?

[Footnote 116: A disciple.]

4. Ssu-ma Niu asked, What is a gentleman?

The Master said, A gentleman knows neither sorrow nor fear.

No sorrow and no fear! Can that be called a gentleman?

The Master said. He searches his heart: it is blameless; so why should
he sorrow, what should he fear?

5. Ssu-ma Niu cried sadly, All men have brothers, I alone have none!

Tzu-hsia said, I have heard that life and death are allotted, that
wealth and honours are in Heaven's hand. A gentleman is careful and
does not trip; he is humble towards others and courteous. All within
the four seas are brethren; how can a gentleman lament that he has
none?

6. Tzu-chang asked, What is insight?

The Master said, Not to be moved by lap and wash of slander, or by
plaints that pierce to the quick, may be called insight. Yea, whom lap
and wash of slander, or plaints that pierce to the quick cannot move
may be called far-sighted.

7. Tzu-kung asked, What is kingcraft?

The Master said, Food enough, troops enough, and the trust of the
people.

Tzu-kung said, If it had to be done, which could best be spared of the
three?

Troops, said the Master.

And if we had to, which could better be spared of the other two?

Food, said the Master. From of old all men die, but without trust a
people cannot stand.

8. Chi Tzu-ch'eng[117] said, It is the stuff alone that makes a
gentleman; what can art do for him?

Alas! my lord, said Tzu-kung, how ye speak of a gentleman! No team
overtakes the tongue! The art is no less than the stuff, the stuff is
no less than the art. Without the fur, a tiger or a leopard's hide is
no better than the hide of a dog or a goat.

9. Duke Ai said to Yu Jo,[118] In this year of dearth I have not
enough for my wants; what should be done?

Ye might tithe the people, answered Yu Jo.

A fifth is not enough, said the Duke, how could I do with a tenth?

When all his folk have enough, answered Yu Jo, shall the lord alone
not have enough? When none of his folk have enough, shall the lord
alone have enough?

10. Tzu-chang asked how to raise the mind and scatter delusions.

The Master said, Put faithfulness and truth first, and follow the
right; the mind will be raised. We wish life to what we love and death
to what we hate. To wish it both life and death is a delusion.

    Whether prompted by wealth, or not,
    Yet ye made a distinction.

[Footnote 117: Minister of Wei.]

[Footnote 118: A disciple of Confucius.]

11. Ching,[119] Duke of Ch'i, asked Confucius, What is kingcraft?

Confucius answered. For the lord to be lord and the liege, liege, the
father to be father and the son, son.

True indeed! said the Duke. If the lord were no lord and the liege no
liege, the father no father and the son no son, though the grain were
there, could I get anything to eat?

12. The Master said, To stint a quarrel with half a word Yu[120] is
the man.

Tzu-lu never slept over a promise.

13. The Master said, At hearing lawsuits I am no better than others.
What is needed is to stop lawsuits.

14. Tzu-chang asked, What is kingcraft?

The Master said, To be tireless of thought and faithful in doing.

15. The Master said, Breadth of reading and the ties of courtesy will
keep us, too, from false paths.

16. The Master said, A gentleman shapes the good in man, he does not
shape the bad in him. The small man does the contrary.

17. Chi K'ang[121] asked Confucius how to rule.

Confucius answered, To rule is to set straight. If ye give a straight
lead, Sir, who will dare not go straight?

[Footnote 119: Confucius was in Ch'i in 517 B.C. The duke was
over-shadowed by his ministers and thought of setting aside his eldest
son.]

[Footnote 120: Tzu-lu.]

[Footnote 121: On the death of Chi Huan, his brother Chi K'ang set
aside Chi Huan's small son and made himself head of the clan.]

18. Chi K'ang being troubled by robbers asked Confucius about it.

Confucius answered, If ye did not wish it, Sir, though ye rewarded him
no man would steal.

19. Chi K'ang, speaking of kingcraft to Confucius, said, To help those
that follow the Way, should we kill the men that will not?

Confucius answered, Sir, what need has a ruler to kill? If ye wished
for goodness, Sir, the people would be good. The gentleman's mind is
the wind, and grass are the minds of small men: as the wind blows, so
must the grass bend.

20. Tzu-chang asked, What must a knight be, for him to be called
eminent?

The Master said, What dost thou mean by eminence?

Tzu-chang answered, To be famous in the state and famous in his home.

That is fame, not eminence, said the Master. The eminent man is plain
and straight, and loves right. He weighs words and scans looks; he
takes pains to come down to men. And he shall be eminent in the state
and eminent in his house. The famous man wears a mask of love, but his
deeds belie it. Self-confident and free from doubts, fame will be his
in the state and fame be his in his home.

21. Whilst walking with the Master in the Rain God's glade Fan Ch'ih
said to him, May I ask how to raise the mind, amend evil and scatter
errors?

Well asked! said the Master. Rank thy work above success, will not
the mind be raised? Fight the bad in thee, not the bad in other men,
will not evil be mended? One angry morning to forget both self and
kin, is that no error?

22. Fan Ch'ih asked, What is love?

The Master said, To love men.

He asked, What is wisdom?

The Master said, To know men.

Fan Ch'ih did not understand.

The Master said, Lift up the straight, put by the crooked, and crooked
men will grow straight.

Fan Ch'ih withdrew, and seeing Tzu-hsia, said to him, The Master saw
me and I asked him what wisdom is. He answered, Lift up the straight,
put by the crooked, and crooked men will grow straight. What did he
mean?

How rich a saying! said Tzu-hsia. When Shun[122] had all below heaven
he chose Kao-yao from the many, lifted him up, and the men without
love fled. When T'ang[123] had all below heaven, he chose Yi-yin[124]
from the many, lifted him up, and the men without love fled.

[Footnote 122: An emperor of the golden age.]

[Footnote 123: The founder of the Shang, or Yin, dynasty.]

[Footnote 124: T'ang's chief minister. Yi-yin said, Whomsoever I
serve, is he not my lord? Whomsoever I rule, are they not my people?
He came in when there was order, and came in too when there were
tumults. He said, When Heaven begat the people, the man that first
understood was sent to waken those slow to understand, and the man
that first woke was sent to waken those slow to wake. I am he that
woke first among Heaven's people. With the help of the Way, I shall
wake the people! For man or wife, of all the people below heaven, to
have missed the blessings of Yao and Shun was the same, he thought, as
if he himself had pushed him into the ditch. The burden he shouldered
was the weight of all below heaven. (Mencius, Book X, chapter 1.)]

23. Tzu-kung asked about friends.

The Master said, Talk faithfully to them, and guide them well. If this
is no good, stop. Do not bring shame upon thee.

24. Tseng-tzu said, A gentleman gathers friends by culture, and stays
love with friendship.




BOOK XIII


1. Tzu-lu asked how to rule.

The Master said, Go before; work hard.

When asked to say more, he said, Never flag.

2. When he was steward of the Chi, Chung-kung asked how to rule.

The Master said, Let officers act first; overlook small faults, lift
up brains and worth.

Chung-kung said, How shall I get to know brains and worth to lift them
up?

Lift up those thou dost know, said the Master; and those thou dost not
know, will other men pass by?

3. Tzu-lu said, The lord of Wei[125] waits for you, Sir, to govern.
How shall ye begin?

Surely, said the Master, by putting names right.

Indeed, said Tzu-lu, that is far-fetched, Sir. Why put them right?

What a savage Yu[126] is! said the Master. A gentleman is tongue-tied
when he does not understand. If names are not right, words do not fit.
If words do not fit, affairs go wrong. If affairs go wrong, neither
courtesy nor music thrive. If courtesy and music do not thrive, law
and justice fail. And if law and justice fail them, the people can
move neither hand nor foot. So a gentleman must be ready to put names
into speech and words into deed. A gentleman is nowise careless of his
words.

[Footnote 125: See note to Book VII, § 14. Tzu-lu was his officer.]

[Footnote 126: Tzu-lu.]

4. Fan Ch'ih asked to be taught husbandry.

The Master said. An old husbandman knows more than I do.

He asked to be taught gardening.

The Master said. An old gardener knows more than I do.

After Fan Ch'ih had gone, the Master said, How small a man! If those
above love courtesy, no one will dare to slight them; if they love
right, no one will dare to disobey; if they love truth, no one will
dare to hide the heart. Then, from the four corners of the earth, folk
will gather with their children on their backs; and what need will
there be for husbandry?

5. The Master said, Though a man have conned three hundred poems, if
he stands helpless when put to govern, if he cannot answer for himself
when he is sent to the four corners of the earth, many as they are,
what have they done for him?

6. The Master said, The man of upright life is obeyed before he
speaks; commands even go unheeded when the life is crooked.

7. The Master said, The governments of Lu and Wei are brothers.

8. Speaking of Ching, of the ducal house of Wei, the Master said, He
was wise in his private life. When he had begun to save, he said, This
seems enough. When he grew better off, he said, This seems plenty.
When he had grown rich, he said. This seems splendour.

9. When Jan Yu was driving him to Wei, the Master said. What numbers!

Jan Yu said, Since numbers are here, what next is needed?

Wealth, said the Master.

And what comes next after wealth?

Teaching, said the Master.

10. The Master said, If I were employed for a twelve-month, much could
be done. In three years all would be ended.

11. The Master said, If good men were to govern a land for an hundred
years, cruelty would be conquered and putting to death done away with.
How true are these words!

12. The Master said, Even if a king were to govern, a lifetime would
pass before love dawned!

13. The Master said, What is governing to a man that can rule himself?
If he cannot rule himself, how shall he rule others?

14. As the disciple Jan[127] came back from court, the Master said to
him. Why so late?

I had business of state, he answered.

Household business, said the Master. If it had been business of state,
though I am out of office, I should have heard of it.

15. Duke Ting asked, Is there any one saying that can bless a kingdom?

[Footnote 127: Jan Yu. He was in the service of the Chi, not of the
Duke of Lu.]

Confucius answered, That is more than words can do. But men have a
saying, To be lord is hard and to be minister is not easy. And if one
knew how hard it is to be lord, might not this one saying almost bless
a kingdom?

And is there any one saying that can wreck a kingdom?

That is more than words can do, Confucius answered. But men have a
saying, My only delight in being lord is that no one withstands what I
say. Now if what he says is good, and no one withstands him, is not
that good too? But if it is not good, and no one withstands him, might
not this one saying almost wreck a kingdom?

16. The Duke of She asked, What is kingcraft?

The Master answered, For those near us to be happy and those far off
to come.

17. When he was governor of Chü-fu, Tzu-hsia asked how to rule.

The Master said, Be not eager for haste; look not for small gains.
Nothing done in haste is thorough, and looking for small gains big
things are left undone.

18. The Duke of She told Confucius, Among the upright men of my clan
if the father steals a sheep his son bears witness.

Confucius answered, Our clan's uprightness is unlike that. The father
screens his son and the son screens his father. There is uprightness
in this.

19. Fan Ch'ih asked, What is love?

The Master said, To be humble at home, earnest at work, and faithful
to all. Even among wild tribes none of this must be dropped.

20. Tzu-kung asked, What is it that we call knighthood?

The Master said, To be called a knight, a man must be shamefast in all
that he does, if he is sent to the four corners of the earth he must
not disgrace his lord's commands.

May I ask who would come next?

He that his clansmen call a good son and his neighbours call modest.

And who would come next?

A man that clings to his word and sticks to his course, a flinty
little fellow, would perhaps come next.

And how are the crown servants of to-day?

What! The weights and measures men! said the Master. Are they worth
reckoning?

21. The Master said, As I cannot get men of the middle way I have to
fall back on zealous and austere men. Zealous men push ahead and take
things up, and there are things that austere men will not do.

22. The Master said, The men of the south have a saying, 'Unless he is
stable a man will make neither a wizard nor a leech.' This is true.
'His instability of mind may disgrace him.'

The Master said, Neglect of the omens, that is all.

23. The Master said, Gentlemen unite, but are not the same. Small men
are all the same, but each for himself.

24. Tzu-kung said, If the whole countryside loved a man, how would
that be?

It would not do, said the Master.

And how would it be, if the whole countryside hated him?

It would not do, said the Master. It would be better if all the good
men of the countryside loved him and all the bad men hated him.

25. The Master said, A gentleman is easy to serve and hard to please.
If we go from the Way to please him, he is not pleased; but his
commands are measured to the man. A small man is hard to serve and
easy to please. Though we go from the Way to please him, he is
pleased; but he expects everything of his men.

26. The Master said, A gentleman is high-minded, not proud; the small
man is proud, but not high-minded.

27. The Master said, Strength and courage, simplicity and modesty are
akin to love.

28. Tzu-lu asked, When can a man be called a knight?

The Master said, To be earnest, encouraging and kind may be called
knighthood: earnest and encouraging with his friends, and kind to his
brothers.

29. The Master said, If a good man taught the people for seven years,
they would be fit to bear arms too.

30. The Master said, To take untaught men to war is called throwing
them away.




BOOK XIV


1. Hsien[128] asked, What is shame?

The Master said, To draw pay when the land keeps the Way and to draw
pay when it has lost the Way, is shame.

2. To eschew strife and bragging, spite and greed, would that be love?

The Master said, That may be hard to do; but I do not know that it is
love.

3. The Master said, A knight that is fond of ease does not amount to a
knight.

4. The Master said, Whilst the land keeps the Way, be fearless of
speech and fearless in deed; when the land has lost the Way, be
fearless in deed but soft of speech.

5. The Master said, A man of mind can always talk, but talkers are not
always men of mind. Love is always bold, though boldness is found
without love.

6. Nan-kung Kuo said to Confucius, Yi[129] shot well, Ao pushed a boat
over land: each died before his time. Yü and Chi toiled at their
crops, and had all below heaven.

The Master did not answer. But when Nan-kung Kuo had gone, he said,
What a gentleman he is! How he honours mind!

[Footnote 128: The disciple Yüan Ssu.]

[Footnote 129: Yi was killed by his best pupil, who said to himself,
In all the world no one but Yi shoots better than I do. So he killed
him.]

7. The Master said, Alas! there have been gentlemen without love! But
there has never been a small man that was not wanting in love.

8. The Master said, Can he love thee that never tasks thee? Can he be
faithful that never chides?

9. The Master said, The decrees were drafted by P'i Shen, criticised
by Shih-shu, polished by the Foreign Minister Tzu-yü, and given the
final touches by Tzu-ch'an of Tung-li.

10. When he was asked what he thought of Tzu-ch'an, the Master said, A
kind-hearted man.

Asked what he thought of Tzu-hsi, the Master said, Of him! What I
think of him!

Asked what he thought of Kuan Chung,[130] the Master said, He was the
man that drove the Po from the town of Pien with its three hundred
households to end his days on coarse rice, without his muttering a
word.

[Footnote 130: See note to Book III, § 22.]

11. The Master said, Not to grumble at being poor is hard, not to be
proud of wealth is easy.

12. The Master said, Meng Kung-ch'o is more than fit to be steward of
Chao or Wei, but he could not be minister of T'eng or Hsieh.

13. Tzu-lu asked what would make a full-grown man.

The Master said, The wisdom of Tsang Wu-chung, Kung-ch'o's lack of
greed, Chuang of Pien's boldness and the skill of Jan Ch'iu, graced by
courtesy and music, might make a full-grown man.

But now, he said, who asks the like of a full-grown man? He that in
sight of gain thinks of right, who when danger looms stakes his life,
who, though the bond be old, does not forget what he has been saying
all his life, might make a full-grown man.

14. Speaking of Kung-shu Wen, the Master said to Kung-ming Chia, Is it
true that thy master does not speak, nor laugh, nor take a gift?

Kung-ming Chia answered, That is saying too much. My master only
speaks when the time comes, so no one tires of his speaking; he only
laughs when he is merry, so no one tires of his laughter; he only
takes when it is right to take, so no one tires of his taking.

It may be so, said the Master; but is it?

15. The Master said, When he held Fang and asked Lu to appoint an
heir, though Tsang Wu-chung said he was not forcing his lord, I do not
believe it.

16. The Master said, Duke Wen of Chin was deep, but dishonest; Duke
Huan of Ch'i was honest, but shallow.

17. Tzu-lu said, When Duke Huan slew the young duke Chiu, and Shao Hu
died with him, but Kuan Chung did not, was not this want of love?[131]

[Footnote 131: Chiu and Huan were brothers, sons of the Duke of Ch'i.
When their father died, their uncle seized the throne. To preserve the
rightful heir, Shao Hu and Kuan Chung fled with Chiu to Lu, whilst
Huan escaped to another state. Later on the usurper was murdered, and
Huan returned to Ch'i and secured the throne. He then required the
Duke of Lu to kill his brother and deliver up to him Shao Hu and Kuan
Chung. This was done. But on the way to Ch'i Shao Hu killed himself.
Kuan Chung, on the other hand, took service under Duke Huan, became
his chief minister, and raised the state to greatness. (See note to
Book III, § 22.)]

The Master said, Duke Huan gathered the great vassals round him, not
by chariots of war, but through the might of Kuan Chung. What can love
do more? What can love do more?

18. Tzu-kung said, When Duke Huan slew the young duke Chiu, and Kuan
Chung could not face death and even became his minister, surely he
showed want of love?

The Master said, By Kuan Chung helping Duke Huan to put down the great
vassals and make all below heaven one, men have fared the better from
that day to this. But for Kuan Chung our hair would hang down our
backs and our coats would button to the left; or should he, like the
bumpkin and his lass, their troth to keep, have drowned in a ditch,
unknown to anyone?

19. The minister Hsien, who had been steward to Kung-shu Wen, went to
audience of the Duke together with Wen.

When the Master heard of it, he said, He is rightly called Wen
(well-bred).

20. The Master spake of Ling Duke of Wei's contempt for the Way.

K'ang[132] said, If this be so, how does he escape ruin?

Confucius answered, With Chung-shu Yü in charge of the guests, the
reader T'o in charge of the Ancestral Temple, and Wang-sun Chia in
charge of the troops, how should he come to ruin?

21. The Master said, When words are unblushing, they are hard to make
good.

[Footnote 132: Chi K'ang.]

22. Ch'en Ch'eng murdered Duke Chien.[133]

Confucius bathed, and went to court and told Duke Ai, saying, Ch'en
Heng has murdered his lord: pray, punish him.

The Duke said, Tell the three chiefs.

Confucius said, As I follow in the wake of the ministers, I dared not
leave this untold; but the lord says, Tell the three chiefs.

He told the three chiefs. It did no good.

Confucius said, As I follow in the wake of the ministers, I dared not
leave this untold.

23. Tzu-lu asked how to serve a lord.

The Master said, Never cheat him; stand up to him.

24. The Master said, A gentleman's life leads upwards; the small man's
life leads down.

25. The Master said, The men of old learned for their own sake; to-day
men learn for show.

26. Ch'ü Po-yü sent a man to Confucius.

As they sat together, Confucius asked him, What does your master do?

He answered, My master wishes to make his faults fewer, but cannot.

When the messenger had left, the Master said, A messenger, a messenger
indeed!

27. The Master said, When not in office discuss not policy.

[Footnote 133: 481 B.C., two years before the death of Confucius, who
was not at the time in office. Chien was Duke of Ch'i, a state
bordering on Lu. The three chiefs were the heads of the three great
clans that were all-powerful in Lu.]

28. Tseng-tzu said, Even in his thoughts, a gentleman does not outstep
his place.

29. The Master said, A gentleman is shamefast of speech: his deeds go
further.

30. The Master said, In the way of the gentleman there are three
things that I cannot achieve. Love is never troubled; wisdom has no
doubts; courage is without fear.

That is what ye say, Sir, said Tzu-kung.

31. Tzu-kung would liken this man to that.

The Master said, What talents Tz'u has! Now I have no time for this.

32. The Master said, Sorrow not at being unknown; sorrow for thine own
shortcomings.

33. The Master said, Not to expect to be cheated, nor to look for
falsehood, and yet to see them coming, shows worth in a man.

34. Wei-sheng Mou said to Confucius, How dost thou still find roosts
to roost on, Ch'iu, unless by wagging a glib tongue?

Confucius answered, I dare not wag a glib tongue; but I hate
stubbornness.

35. The Master said, A steed is not praised for his strength, but
praised for his mettle.

36. One said, To mete out good for evil, how were that?

And how would ye meet good? said the Master. Meet evil with justice;
meet good with good.

37. The Master said, Alas! no man knows me! Tzu-kung said, Why do ye
say, Sir, that no man knows you?

The Master said, Never murmuring against Heaven, nor finding fault
with men; learning from the lowest, cleaving the heights. I am known
but to one, but to Heaven.

38. Liao, the duke's uncle, spake ill of Tzu-lu to Chi-sun.[134]

Tzu-fu Ching-po told this to Confucius, saying, My master's mind is
surely being led astray by the duke's uncle, but I have still the
strength to expose his body in the market-place.

The Master said, If the Way is to be kept, that is the Bidding, and if
the Way is to be lost, this is the Bidding. What can the duke's uncle
do against the Bidding?

39. The Master said, Men of worth flee the world; the next best flee
the land. Then come those that go at a look, then those that go at
words.

40. The Master said, Seven men did so.

41. Tzu-lu spent a night at Shih-men.

The gate-keeper asked him, Whence comest thou?

From Confucius, answered Tzu-lu.

The man that knows it is no good and yet must still be doing? said the
gate-keeper.

42. When the Master was chiming his sounding stones in Wei, a
basket-bearer said, as he passed the door, The heart is full that
chimes those stones! But then he said, For shame! What a tinkling
sound! If no one knows thee, have done!

    Wade the deep places,
    Lift thy robe through the shallows!

[Footnote 134: The head of the Chi clan, in whose service Tzu-lu
was.]

The Master said, Where there's a will, that is nowise hard.

43. Tzu-chang said, What does the Book mean by saying that
Kao-tsung[135] in his mourning shed did not speak for three years?

Why pick out Kao-tsung? said the Master. The men of old were all thus.
For three years after their lord had died, the hundred officers did
each his duty and hearkened to the chief minister.

44. The Master said, When those above love courtesy, the people are
easy to lead.

45. Tzu-lu asked, What makes a gentleman?

The Master said, To be bent on becoming better.

Is that all? said Tzu-lu.

By becoming better to bring peace to men.

And is that all?

By becoming better to bring peace to all men, said the Master. Even
Yao and Shun were still struggling to become better, and so bring
peace to all men.

46. Yüan Jang awaited the Master squatting.

Unruly when young, unmentioned as man, undying when old, spells
good-for-nothing! said the Master, and he hit him on the leg with his
staff.

47. When a lad from the village of Ch'üeh was made messenger, someone
asked, saying, Is it because he is doing well?

The Master said, I have seen him sitting in a man's seat, and seen him
walking abreast of his elders. He does not try to do well: he wishes
to be quickly grown up.

[Footnote 135: An emperor of the Yin dynasty.]




BOOK XV


1. Ling, Duke of Wei, asked Confucius about the line of battle.

Confucius answered. Of the ritual of dish and platter[136] I have
heard somewhat: I have not learnt warfare.

He left the next day.

In Ch'en grain ran out. His followers were too ill to rise. Tzu-lu
showed that he was put out.

Has a gentleman to face want too? he said.

Gentlemen have indeed to face want, said the Master. The small man,
when he is in want, runs to excess.

2. The Master said, Tz'u,[137] dost thou not take me for a man that
has learnt much and thought it over?

Yes, he answered: is it not so?

No, said the Master. I string all into one.

3. The Master said, Yu,[138] how few men know great-heartedness!

[Footnote 136: For sacrifice.]

[Footnote 137: Tzu-kung.]

[Footnote 138: Tzu-lu: probably said to him on the occasion mentioned
in § I.]

4. The Master said, To rule doing nothing, was what Shun did. For what
is there to do? Self-respect and to set the face to rule, is all.

5. Tzu-chang asked how to get on.

The Master said, Be faithful and true of word, plain and lowly in thy
walk; thou wilt get on even in tribal lands. If thy words be not
faithful and true, thy walk not plain and lowly, wilt thou get on
even in thine own town? Standing, see these words ranged before thee;
driving, see them written upon the yoke. Then thou wilt get on.

Tzu-chang wrote them on his girdle.

6. The Master said, Straight indeed was the historian Yü! Like an
arrow whilst the land kept the Way; and like an arrow when it lost the
Way! What a gentleman was Ch'ü Po-yü! Whilst the land kept the Way he
took office, and when the land had lost the Way he rolled himself up
in thought.

7. The Master said, Not to speak to him that has ears to hear is to
spill the man. To speak to a man without ears to hear is to spill thy
words. Wisdom spills neither man nor words.

8. The Master said, A high will, or a loving heart, will not seek life
at cost of love. To fulfil love they will kill the body.

9. Tzu-kung asked how to attain to love.

The Master said, A workman bent on good work must first sharpen his
tools. In the land that is thy home, serve those that are worthy among
the great and make friends with loving knights.

10. Yen Yüan asked how to rule a kingdom.

The Master said, Follow the Hsia seasons, drive in the chariot of Yin,
wear the head-dress of Chou, take for music the Shao and its dance.
Banish the strains of Cheng and flee men that are glib; for the
strains of Cheng are wanton and glib speakers are dangerous.

11. The Master said. Without thought for far off things, there shall
be trouble near at hand.

12. The Master said, All is ended! I have seen no one that loves mind
as he loves looks!

13. The Master said, Did not Tsang Wen filch his post? He knew the
worth of Liu-hsia Hui,[139] and did not stand by him.

14. The Master said, By asking much of self and little of other men
ill feeling is banished.

15. The Master said, Unless a man say, Would this do? Would that do? I
can do nothing for him.

16. The Master said, When all day long there is no talk of right, and
little wiles find favour, the company is in hard case.

17. The Master said, Right is the stuff of which a gentleman is made.
Done with courtesy, spoken with humility, rounded with truth, right
makes a gentleman.

18. The Master said, His shortcomings trouble a gentleman; to be
unknown does not trouble him.

19. The Master said, A gentleman fears that his name shall be no more
heard when life is done.

[Footnote 139: Another of these _seigneurs du temps jadis_ that is
more to us than a dim shadow, for he still lives in the pages of
Mencius, who tells us that, He was not ashamed of a foul lord, and did
not refuse a small post. On coming in he did not hide his worth, but
held his own way. Neglected and idle, he did not grumble; straitened
and poor, he did not mope. When brought together with country folk he
was quite at his ease and could not bear to leave them. Thou art thou,
he said, and I am I: standing beside me with thy coat off, or thy body
naked, how canst thou defile me? (Book X, chapter 1). He stopped if a
hand was raised to stop him, for he did not care whether he went or no
(Book III, chapter 9).]

20. The Master said, A gentleman asks of himself, the small man asks
of others.

21. The Master said, A gentleman is firm, not quarrelsome; a friend,
not a partisan.

22. The Master said, A gentleman does not raise a man for his words,
nor spurn the speech for the man.

23. Tzu-kung said, Is there one word by which we may walk till life
ends?

The Master said, Fellow-feeling, perhaps. Do not do unto others what
thou wouldst not have done to thee.

24. The Master said, Of the men that I meet, whom do I cry down, whom
do I overpraise? Or, if I overpraise them, it is after testing them.
It was owing to this people that the three lines of kings went the
straight way.

25. The Master said, I have still known historians that would leave a
gap in their text, and men that would lend a horse to another to ride.
Now it is so no more.

26. The Master said, Cunning words confound the mind; petty impatience
confounds great projects.

27. The Master said, The hatred of the many must be looked into; the
love of the many must be looked into.

28. The Master said, The man can exalt the Way: it is not the Way that
exalts the man.

29. The Master said, The fault is to cleave to a fault.

30. The Master said, I have spent whole days without food and whole
nights without sleep, thinking, and gained nothing by it. Learning is
better.

31. The Master said, A gentleman thinks of the Way; he does not think
of food. Sow, and famine may follow; learn, and pay may come; but a
gentleman grieves for the Way; to be poor does not grieve him.

32. The Master said, What wisdom has got will be lost again, unless
love hold it fast. Wisdom to get and love to hold fast, without
dignity of bearing, will not be honoured among men. Wisdom to get,
love to hold fast and dignity of bearing, without courteous ways are
not enough.

33. The Master said, A gentleman has no small knowledge, but he can
carry out big things: the small man can carry out nothing big, but he
may be knowing in small things.

34. The Master said, Love is more to the people than fire and water. I
have seen men come to their death by fire and water: I have seen no
man that love brought to his death.

35. The Master said, When love is at stake yield not to an army.

36. The Master said, A gentleman is consistent, not changeless.

37. The Master said, A servant of the king honours his work, and puts
food after it.

38. The Master said, Learning knows no rank.

39. The Master said, Mingle not in projects with a man whose way is
not thine.

40. The Master said, The whole end of speech is to be understood.

41. When he saw the music-master Mien, the Master said, as they came
to the steps, Here are the steps. On coming to the mat, he said, Here
is the mat. When all were seated, the Master told him, He and he are
here.

After the music-master had gone, Tzu-chang said, Is this the way to
speak to a music-master?

The Master said, Surely it is the way to help a music-master.[140]

[Footnote 140: The man being blind, as so many musicians are in the
East.]




BOOK XVI


1. The Chi was about to make war on Chuan-yü.[141]

When Confucius saw Jan Yu and Chi-lu,[142] they said to him, The Chi
is going to deal with Chuan-yü.

Confucius said, After all, Ch'iu,[143] art thou not in the wrong? The
kings of old made Chuan-yü lord of Tung Meng.[144] Moreover, as
Chuan-yü is inside our borders it is the liege of the spirits of earth
and corn of our land; so how can ye make war upon it?

Jan Yu said, Our master wishes it. Tzu-lu and I, his two ministers, do
not, either of us, wish it.

Confucius said, Ch'iu, Chou Jen used to say, 'He that can put forth
his strength takes his place in the line; he that cannot stands back.'
Who would take to help him a man that is no stay in danger and no
support in falling? Moreover, what thou sayest is wrong. If a tiger or
a buffalo escapes from his pen, if tortoiseshell or jade is broken in
its case, who is to blame?

Jan Yu said, But Chuan-yü is now strong, and it is near to Pi[145]; if
it is not taken now, in days to come it will bring sorrow on our sons
and grandsons.

[Footnote 141: A small feudatory state of Lu.]

[Footnote 142: Tzu-lu. He and Jan Yu were in the service of the Chi.]

[Footnote 143: Jan Yu.]

[Footnote 144: A mountain in Chuan-yü. Since the Emperor had given the
ruler of Chuan-yü the right to sacrifice to its mountains, that state
had some measure of independence, though it was feudatory to Lu, and
within its borders.]

[Footnote 145: A town belonging to the Chi.]

Ch'iu, said Confucius, instead of saying 'I want it,' a gentleman
hates to plead that he needs must. I have heard that fewness of men
does not vex a king or a chief, but unlikeness of lot vexes him.
Poverty does not vex him, but want of peace vexes him. For if wealth
were even, no one would be poor. In harmony is number; peace prevents
a fall. Thus, if far off tribes will not submit, bring them in by
encouraging mind and art, and when they come in give them peace. But
now, when far off tribes will not submit, ye two, helpers of your
lord, cannot bring them in. The kingdom is split and falling, and ye
cannot save it. Yet inside our land ye plot to move spear and shield!
The sorrows of Chi's grandsons will not rise in Chuan-yü, I fear: they
will rise within the palace wall.

2. Confucius said, When the Way is kept below heaven, courtesy, music
and punitive wars flow from the Son of heaven. When the Way is lost
below heaven, courtesy, music and punitive wars flow from the great
vassals. When they flow from the great vassals they will rarely last
for ten generations. When they flow from the great ministers they will
rarely last for five generations. When underlings sway the country's
fate they will rarely last for three generations. When the Way is kept
below heaven power does not lie with the great ministers. When the Way
is kept below heaven common folk do not argue.

3. Confucius said, For five generations its income has passed from the
ducal house;[146] for four generations power has lain with the great
ministers: and humbled, therefore, are the sons and grandsons of the
three Huan.

[Footnote 146: Of Lu.]

4. Confucius said, There are three friends that help us, and three
that do us harm. The friends that help us are a straight friend, an
outspoken friend, and a friend that has heard much. The friends that
harm us are plausible friends, friends that like to flatter, and
friends with a glib tongue.

5. Confucius said, There are three delights that do good, and three
that do us harm. Those that do good are delight in dissecting good
form and music, delight in speaking of the good in men, and delight in
having many worthy friends. Those that do harm are proud delights,
delight in idle roving, and delight in the joys of the feast.

6. Confucius said. Men that wait upon lords fall into three mistakes.
To speak before the time has come is rashness. Not to speak when the
time has come is secrecy. To speak heedless of looks is blindness.

7. Confucius said, A gentleman has three things to guard against.

In the days of thy youth, ere thy strength is steady, beware of lust.
When manhood is reached, in the fulness of strength, beware of strife.
In old age, when thy strength is broken, beware of greed.

8. Confucius said, A gentleman holds three things in awe. He is in
awe of the Bidding of Heaven; he is in awe of great men; and he is
awed by the words of the holy.

The small man knows not the Bidding of Heaven, and holds it not in
awe. He is saucy towards the great; he makes game of holy men's words.

9. Confucius said, The best men are born wise. Next come those that
grow wise by learning; then those that learn from toil. Those that do
not learn from toil are the lowest of the people.

10. Confucius said, A gentleman has nine aims. To see clearly; to
understand what he hears; to be warm in manner, dignified in bearing,
faithful of speech, keen at work; to ask when in doubt; in anger to
think of difficulties; and in sight of gain to think of right.

11. Confucius said, In sight of good to be filled with longing; to
look on evil as scalding to the touch: I have seen such men, I have
heard such words.

To live apart and search thy will; to achieve thy Way, by doing right:
I have heard these words, but I have seen no such men.

12. Ching, Duke of Ch'i, had a thousand teams of horses; but the
people, on his death day, found no good in him to praise. Po-yi[147]
and Shu-ch'i[148] starved at the foot of Shou-yang, and to this day
the people still praise them.

Is not this the clue to that?

[Footnote 147: See note to Book V, § 22.]

[Footnote 148: See note to Book V, § 22.]

13. Ch'en K'ang[149] asked Po-yü,[150] Apart from us, have ye heard
anything, Sir?

He answered, No: once as my father stood alone and I sped across the
hall, he said to me, Art thou learning poetry? I answered, No. He that
does not learn poetry, he said, has no hold on words. I withdrew and
learned poetry.

Another day, when he again stood alone and I sped across the hall, he
said to me, Art thou learning courtesy? I answered, No. He that does
not learn courtesy, he said, has no foothold. I withdrew and learned
courtesy. These two things I have heard.

Ch'en K'ang withdrew, and cried gladly, I asked one thing, and I get
three! I hear of poetry; I hear of courtesy; and I hear too that a
gentleman stands aloof from his son.

14. A king speaks of his wife as 'my wife.' She calls herself
'handmaid.' Her subjects speak of her as 'our lord's wife,' but when
they speak to foreigners, they say 'our little queen.' Foreigners
speak of her, too, as 'the lord's wife.'

[Footnote 149: The disciple Tzu-ch'in.]

[Footnote 150: The son of Confucius.]




BOOK XVII


1. Yang Huo[151] wished to see Confucius. Confucius did not go to see
him. He sent Confucius a sucking pig. Confucius chose a time when he
was out, and went to thank him. They met on the road.

He said to Confucius, Come, let us speak together. To cherish a gem,
and undo the kingdom, can that be called love?

It cannot, said Confucius.

To love office, and miss the hour again and again, can that be called
wisdom?

It cannot, said Confucius.

The days and months go by; the years do not wait for us.

True, said Confucius; I must take office.

2. The Master said, Men are near to each other by nature; the lives
they lead sunder them.

3. The Master said, Only the wisest and stupidest of men never change.

4. As the Master came to Wu-ch'eng[152] he heard sounds of lute and
song.

Why use an ox-knife to kill a fowl? said the Master, with a pleased
smile.

Tzu-yu answered, Master, once I heard you say, A gentleman that has
learnt the Way loves men; small folk that have learnt the Way are easy
to rule.

[Footnote 151: The all-powerful, unscrupulous minister of the Chi.]

[Footnote 152: A very small town, of which the disciple Tzu-yu was
governor.]

My two-three boys, said the Master, what Yen[153] says is true. I
spake before in play.

5. Kung-shan Fu-jao[154] held Pi in rebellion. He called the Master,
who wished to go.

Tzu-lu said in displeasure. This cannot be! why must ye go to
Kung-shan?

The Master said, He calls me, and would that be all? Could I not make
an Eastern Chou[155] of him that uses me?

6. Tzu-chang asked Confucius what is love.

Confucius said, Love is to mete out five things to all below heaven.

May I ask what they are?

Modesty and bounty, said Confucius, truth, earnestness and kindness.
Modesty escapes insult: bounty wins the many; truth gains men's trust;
earnestness brings success; and kindness is enough to make men work.

7. Pi Hsi called the Master, who wished to go.

Tzu-lu said, Master, I heard you say once, To men whose own life is
evil, no gentleman will go. Pi Hsi holds Chung-mou in rebellion; how
could ye go to him, Sir?

Yes, I said so, answered the Master. But is not a thing called hard
that cannot be ground thin; white, if steeping will not turn it black?
And am I a gourd? Can I hang without eating?

[Footnote 153: Tzu-yu.]

[Footnote 154: Steward of the Chi, and a confederate of Yang Huo.]

[Footnote 155: A kingdom in the east to match Chou in the west, the
home of Kings Wen and Wu.]

8. The Master said, Hast thou heard the six words, Yu,[156] and the
six they sink into?

He answered. No.

Sit down, and I shall tell thee. The thirst for love, without love of
learning, sinks into simpleness. Love of knowledge, without love of
learning, sinks into vanity. Love of truth, without love of learning,
sinks into cruelty. Love of straightness, without love of learning,
sinks into rudeness. Love of daring, without love of learning, sinks
into turbulence. Love of strength, without love of learning, sinks
into oddity.

9. The Master said, My little children, why do ye not learn poetry?
Poetry would ripen you; teach you insight, friendliness and
forbearance; show you how to serve your father at home; and teach your
lord abroad; and it would teach you the names of many birds and
beasts, plants and trees.

10. The Master said to Po-yü,[157] Hast thou done the Chou-nan and
Shao-nan?[158] He that has not done the Chou-nan and Shao-nan is like
a man standing with his face to the wall.

11. The Master said, 'Courtesy, courtesy,' is the cry; but are jade
and silk the whole of courtesy? 'Music, music,' is the cry; but are
bells and drums the whole of music?

12. The Master said, Fierce looks and weakness within are like the
small man, like the thief that breaks through or clambers over a wall.

[Footnote 156: Tzu-lu.]

[Footnote 157: His son.]

[Footnote 158: The first two books of _The Book of Poetry_.]

13. The Master said, The plain townsman is the bane of mind.

14. The Master said, To tell unto the dust all that we hear upon the
way is to lay waste the mind.

15. The Master said, How can we serve the king with a low fellow, who
is itching to get what he wants and trembling to lose what he has?
This trembling to lose what he has may lead him anywhere.

16. The Master said, Men of old had three failings, which have,
perhaps, died out to-day. Ambitious men of old were not nice; now they
are unprincipled. Stern men of old were hard; now they are
quarrelsome. Ignorant men of old were straight; now they are false.
That is all.

17. The Master said, Smooth words and fawning looks are seldom found
with love.

18. The Master said, I hate the ousting of scarlet by purple. I hate
the strains of Cheng, confounders of sweet music. I hate a sharp
tongue, the ruin of kingdom and home.

19. The Master said, I wish no word were spoken!

Tzu-kung said, Sir, if ye said no word, what could your little
children write?

The Master said, What are the words of Heaven? The four seasons pass,
the hundred things bear life. What are the words of Heaven?

20. Ju Pei wished to see Confucius. Confucius pleaded sickness; but,
as the messenger left his door, he took a lute and sang, so the
messenger should hear.

21. Tsai Wo[159] asked about mourning for three years. He thought that
one was enough.

If for three years gentlemen forsake courtesy, courtesy must suffer.
If for three years they forsake music, music must decay. The old grain
passes, the new grain sprouts, the round of woods for the fire-drill
is ended in one year.

The Master said, Feeding on rice, clad in brocade, couldst thou be at
rest?

I could, he answered.

Then do what gives thee rest. But a gentleman, when he is mourning,
has no taste for sweets and no ear for music; he cannot rest in his
home. So he gives these up. Now, they give thee rest; then keep them.

After Tsai Wo had gone, the Master said, Yü's[160] want of love! At
the age of three a child first leaves the arms of his father and
mother, and mourning lasts for three years everywhere below heaven.
But did Yü have for three years the love of his father and mother?

22. The Master said, It is hard indeed when a man eats his fill all
day, and has nothing to task the mind! Could he not play at chequers?
Even that were better.

23. Tzu-lu said, Do gentlemen honour daring?

They put right higher, said the Master. With daring and no sense of
right gentlemen turn rebels and small men turn robbers.

24. Tzu-kung said, Do gentlemen hate too?

[Footnote 159: A disciple.]

[Footnote 160: Tsai Wo.]

They do, said the Master. They hate the sounding of evil deeds; they
hate men of low estate that slander those over them; they hate daring
without courtesy; they hate men that are stout and fearless, but
blind.

And Tz'u,[161] he said, dost thou hate too?

I hate those that take spying for wisdom, who take want of manners for
courage, and take tale-telling for honesty.

25. The Master said, Only maids and serving-lads are hard to train. If
we draw near to them, they get unruly; if we hold them off, they grow
spiteful.

26. The Master said, When a man of forty is hated, he will be so to
the end.

[Footnote 161: Tzu-kung.]




BOOK XVIII


1. The lord of Wei[162] left, the lord of Chi[163] was made a slave,
Pi-kan[164] spake out, and died.

Confucius said, Three of the Yin had love.

2. Whilst Liu-hsia Hui[165] was Chief Knight[166] he was dismissed
thrice.

Men said. Is it not yet time to leave. Sir?

He answered, If I serve men the straight way, where can I go without
being dismissed thrice? If I am to serve men the crooked way, why
should I leave the land of my father and mother?

3. Speaking of how to treat Confucius, Ching, Duke of Ch'i, said, I
cannot treat him as I do the Chi. I put him between Chi and Meng.

I am old, he said; I cannot use him.

Confucius left.

4. The men of Ch'i[167] sent a gift of music girls. Chi Huan accepted
them, and for three days no court was held.

Confucius left.

[Footnote 162: Kinsmen of the tyrant Chou Hsin, who brought the house
of Yin to an end.]

[Footnote 163: Kinsmen of the tyrant Chou Hsin, who brought the house
of Yin to an end.]

[Footnote 164: Kinsmen of the tyrant Chou Hsin, who brought the house
of Yin to an end.]

[Footnote 165: See note to Book XV, § 13.]

[Footnote 166: Or Criminal Judge.]

[Footnote 167: To Lu, 497 B.C. The turning-point in Confucius's
career. He left office and his native land, and wandered abroad for
twelve long years.]

5. Chieh-yü, the mad-head of Ch'u, as he passed Confucius, sang,

    Phoenix, bright phoenix,
      Thy glory is ended!
    Think of to-morrow;
      The past can't be mended.
    Up and away!
    The Court is today
      With danger attended.

Confucius alighted, for he wished to speak with him: but he hurried
away, and he could not speak with him.

6. Ch'ang-chü and Chieh-ni were working in the fields. As Confucius
passed them, he sent Tzu-lu to ask for the ford.

Ch'ang-chü said, Who is that holding the reins?

He is K'ung Ch'iu, said Tzu-lu.

Is he K'ung Ch'iu of Lu?

Yes, said Tzu-lu.

He knows the ford, said Ch'ang-chü.

Tzu-lu asked Chieh-ni.

Who are ye, Sir? he answered.

I am Chung Yu.

The disciple of K'ung Ch'iu of Lu?

Yes, he answered.

All below heaven is seething and boiling, said Chieh-ni, who can
change it? How much better would it be to follow a knight that flees
the world than to follow a knight that flees persons!

And he went on hoeing without stop.

Tzu-lu went and told the Master, whose face fell.

Can I herd with birds and beasts? he said. Whom but these men can I
take as fellows? And if the Way were kept by all below heaven, I
should not need to change them.

7. Tzu-lu, who was following behind, met an old man carrying a basket
on his staff.

Tzu-lu asked him, Have ye seen the Master, Sir?

The old man answered, Thy four limbs are idle, thou canst not sort the
five seeds: who is thy Master?

And he planted his staff, and weeded.

Tzu-lu stood and bowed.

He kept Tzu-lu for the night, killed a fowl, made millet, gave them
him to eat, and presented his two sons.

Tzu-lu left the next day, and told the Master.

The Master said, He is in hiding.

He sent Tzu-lu back to see him; but when he arrived he had gone.

Tzu-lu said, Not to take office is not right. If the ties of old and
young cannot be thrown off, how can he throw off the liege's duty to
his lord? He wishes to keep his life clean, but he is unsettling the
bonds between men. To discharge that duty a gentleman takes office,
though he knows beforehand that the Way will not be kept.

8. Po-yi, Shu-ch'i, Yü-chung, Yi-yi, Chu-chang, Liu-hsia Hui and
Shao-lien were men that hid from the world.

The Master said, Po-yi[168] and Shu-ch'i[169] did not bend the will or
shame the body.

[Footnote 168: See note to Book V, § 22.]

[Footnote 169: See note to Book V, § 22.]

We must say that Liu-hsia Hui[170] and Shao-lien bent the will and
shamed the body. Their words hit man's duty, their deeds hit our
hopes. This we can say and no more.

We may say that Yü-chung and Yi-yi lived hidden, but were free of
speech. Their lives were clean, their retreat was well weighed.

But I am unlike all of them: there is nothing I must, or must not, do.

9. Chih, the Great Music-master, went to Ch'i; Kan, the conductor at
the second meal, went to Ch'u; Liao, the conductor at the third meal,
went to Ts'ai; Chüeh, the conductor at the fourth meal, went to Ch'in.
The drum master Fang-shu crossed the River; the tambourine master Wu
crossed the Han; Yang the second bandmaster and Hsiang, who played the
sounding stones, crossed the sea.

10. The Duke of Chou[171] said to the Duke of Lu,[172] A gentleman
does not forsake kinsmen, nor offend his great lieges by not using
them. He will not cast off an old friend unless he have big cause; he
does not ask everything of anyone.

11. Chou had eight knights: Po-ta and Po-kuo, Chung-tu and Chung-hu,
Shu-yeh and Shu-hsia, Chi-sui and Chi-kua.

[Footnote 170: See note to Book XV, § 13.]

[Footnote 171: See note to Book VII, § 5.]

[Footnote 172: His son.]




BOOK XIX


1. Tzu-chang said, The knight that stakes his life when he sees
danger, who in sight of gain thinks of right, and whose thoughts are
reverent at worship, and sad when he is in mourning, will do.

2. Tzu-hsia said, Goodness, clutched too narrowly; a belief in the Way
which is not honest; can they be said to be, or said not to be?

3. The disciples of Tzu-hsia asked Tzu-chang whom we should choose as
our companions.

Tzu-chang said. What does Tzu-hsia say?

They answered, Tzu-hsia says, If the men be well for thee, go with
them; if they be not well, push them off.

Tzu-chang said. This is not the same as what I had heard. A gentleman
honours worth and bears with the many. He applauds goodness and pities
weakness. If I were a man of great worth, what could I not bear with
in others? If I am without worth, men will push me off: why should I
push other men off?

4. Tzu-hsia said, Though there must be things worth seeing along small
ways, a gentleman does not follow them, for fear of being left at last
in the mire.

5. Tzu-hsia said, He that each day remembers his failings and each
month forgets nothing won may be said to love learning indeed!

6. Tzu-hsia said, By wide learning and singleness of will, by keen
questions and home thinking we reach love.

7. Tzu-hsia said, To master the hundred trades, apprentices work in a
shop; by learning, a gentleman finds his way.

8. Tzu-hsia said, The small man must always gloss his faults.

9. Tzu-hsia said, A gentleman changes thrice. Looking up to him he
seems stern; as we draw near, he warms; but his speech, when we hear
it, is sharp.

10. Tzu-hsia said, Until they trust him, a gentleman lays no burdens
on his people. If they do not trust him, they will think it cruel.
Until they trust him, he does not chide them. Unless they trust him,
it will seem fault-finding.

11. Tzu-hsia said, If we keep within the bounds of honour, we can step
to and fro through propriety.

12. Tzu-yu said, The disciples, the little sons of Tzu-hsia, can
sprinkle and sweep, attend and answer, come in and go out; but what
can come of twigs without roots?

When Tzu-hsia heard this, he said, Yen Yu[173] is wrong. If we teach
one thing in the way of a gentleman first, shall we tire before
reaching the next? Thus plants and trees differ in size. Should the
way of a gentleman bewilder him? To learn it, first and last, none but
the holy are fit.

[Footnote 173: Tzu-yu.]

13. Tzu-hsia said, A servant of the crown should give his spare
strength to learning. With his spare strength a scholar should serve
the crown.

14. Tzu-yu said, Mourning should stretch to grief, and stop there.

15. Tzu-yu said, Our friend Chang[174] can do hard things, but love is
not yet his.

16. Tseng-tzu said, Chang is so spacious, so lordly, that at his side
it is hard to do what love bids.

17. Tseng-tzu said, I have heard the Master say, Man never shows what
is in him unless it be in mourning those dear to him.

18. Tseng-tzu said, I have heard the Master say, In all else we may be
as good a son as Meng Chuang, but in not changing his father's
ministers, or his father's rule, he is hard to match.

19. The Meng[175] made Yang Fu[176] Chief Knight,[177] who spake to
Tseng-tzu about it.

Tseng-tzu said, Those above have lost their way, the people have long
been astray. When thou dost get at the truth, be moved to pity, not
puffed with joy.

20. Tzu-kung said, Chou[178] was not so very wicked! Thus a gentleman
hates to live in a hollow, down into which runs all that is foul below
heaven.

21. Tzu-kung said, A gentleman's faults are like the eating of sun or
moon.[179] All men see them, and when he mends all men look up to him.

[Footnote 174: Tzu-chang.]

[Footnote 175: The chief of the Meng clan, powerful in Lu.]

[Footnote 176: A disciple of Tseng-tzu.]

[Footnote 177: Or criminal judge.]

[Footnote 178: The tyrant that ended the Yin dynasty.]

[Footnote 179: An eclipse.]

22. Kung-sun Ch'ao of Wei asked Tzu-kung, From whom did Chung-ni[180]
learn?

Tzu-kung said, The Way of Wen and Wu[181] has not fallen into ruin. It
lives in men: the big in big men, the small in small men. In none of
them is the Way of Wen and Wu missing. How should the Master not learn
it? What need had he for a set teacher?

23. In talk with the great men of the court Shu-sun Wu-shu[182] said,
Tzu-kung is worthier than Chung-ni.

Tzu-fu Ching-po told this to Tzu-kung.

Tzu-kung said, This is like the palace wall. My wall reaches to the
shoulder: peeping over you see the good home within. The Master's wall
is several fathoms high: no one can see the beauty of the Ancestral
Temple and the wealth of its hundred officers, unless he gets in by
the gate. And if only a few men find the gate, may not my lord have
spoken the truth?

24. Shu-sun Wu-shu cried down Chung-ni.

Tzu-kung said, It is labour lost. Chung-ni cannot be cried down. The
greatness of other men is a hummock, over which we can still leap.
Chung-ni is the sun or moon, which no one can overleap. Though the man
were willing to kill himself, how could he hurt the sun or moon? That
he does not know his own measure would only be seen the better!

25. Ch'en Tzu-ch'in[183] said to Tzu-kung, Ye humble yourself, Sir. In
what is Chung-ni your better?

[Footnote 180: Confucius.]

[Footnote 181: See Introduction.]

[Footnote 182: Head of the Meng clan.]

[Footnote 183: A disciple of Tzu-kung.]

Tzu-kung said, By one word a gentleman shows wisdom, by one word want
of wisdom. Words must not be lightly spoken. No one can come up to the
Master, as heaven is not to be climbed by steps. If the Master had
power in a kingdom, or a clan, the saying would come true, 'What he
sets up stands; he shows the way and men go it, he brings peace and
they come, he stirs them and they are at one. Honoured in life, he is
mourned when dead!' Who can come up to him?




BOOK XX[184]


1. Yao said, Hail to thee, Shun! The count that Heaven is telling
falls on thee. Keep true hold of the centre. If there be stress or
want within the four seas, the gift of Heaven will pass for ever.

Shun laid the same commands on Yü.

_T'ang_ said, I, Thy little child Li, dare to offer this black steer,
and dare to proclaim before Thee, Almighty Lord, that I dare not
forgive sin, nor keep down Thy ministers. Search them, O Lord, in
Thine heart. If Our life be sinful, visit it not upon the ten thousand
homesteads. If the ten thousand homesteads sin, the sin is on Our
head.

Chou bestowed great gifts, and good men grew rich.

'Loving hearts are better than near kinsmen. All the people blame no
one but me.'[185]

He saw to weights and measures, revised the laws, and brought back
broken officers. Order reigned everywhere. He revived ruined kingdoms
and restored fiefs that had fallen in. All hearts below heaven turned
to him. The people's food, burials and worship weighed most with him.
His bounty gained the many, his truth won the people's trust, his
earnestness brought success, his justice made men glad.

[Footnote 184: This chapter shows the principles on which China was
governed in old times. Yao and Shun were the legendary founders of the
Chinese Empire, Yü, T'ang, and Chou were the first emperors of the
houses of Hsia, Shang and Chou, which had ruled China up till the time
of Confucius.]

[Footnote 185: Said by King Wu (Chou). The people blamed him for not
dethroning at once the tyrant Chou Hsin.]

2. Tzu-chang asked Confucius, How should men be governed?

The Master said, To govern men we must honour five fair things and
spurn four evil things.

Tzu-chang said, What are the five fair things?

The Master said, A gentleman is kind, but not wasteful; he burdens,
but he does not embitter; he is covetous, but not greedy; high-minded,
but not proud; stern, but not fierce.

Tzu-chang said, What is meant by kindness without waste?

The Master said, To further what furthers the people, is not that
kindness without waste? If burdens be sorted to strength, who will
grumble? To covet love and get love, is that greed? Few or many, small
or great, all is one to a gentleman: he dares not slight any man. Is
not this to be high-minded, but not proud? A gentleman straightens his
robe and cap, and settles his look. He is severe, and men look up to
him with awe. Is not this to be stern, but not fierce?

Tzu-chang said, What are the four evil things?

The Master said, To leave untaught and then kill is cruelty; not to
give warning and to expect things to be done is tyranny; to give
careless orders and be strict when the day comes is robbery; to be
stingy in rewarding men is littleness.

3. The Master said, He that does not know the Bidding cannot be a
gentleman. Not to know good form is to have no foothold. Not to know
words is to know nothing of men.




INDEX


_The Index has been reprinted with few changes from the first edition,
whilst the book itself has been revised. There are therefore slight
differences here and there between the two._

(Aspirated and unaspirated letters have been treated as different
letters. The aspirated letter follows immediately the unaspirated;
e.g. _t'a_ comes after _tung_.)


_Ai_, Duke of Lu, name Chiang, reigned 494-68 B.C.;
  ii. 19, asks how to make his people loyal;
  iii. 21, asks Tsai Wo about the shrines to guardian spirits;
  vi. 2, asks which disciples are fond of learning;
  xii. 9, asks what to do in this year of dearth;
  xiv. 22, does not avenge the murder of Duke of Ch'i.

_Ao_,
  xiv. 6, a man of the Hsia dynasty famous for his strength.


_Chang_, xix. 15, 16 = Tzu-chang, whom see.

_Chao_, vi. 14, Prince of Sung, his beauty.

_Chao_, Duke of Lu, reigned 541-10 B.C.;
  vii. 30 (and note), the Master deems him well bred.

_Chao_, one of the great families that governed the state of Chin;
  xiv. 12, Meng Kung-ch'o, fit to be steward of.

_Chao-nan_, xvii. 10, the first book of the _Book of Poetry_, a
    collection of old Chinese songs.

_Cheng_, a state of ancient China;
  xv. 10, its wanton music;
  xvii. 18, its strains confound sweet music.

_Chi_, or _Chi-sun_, one of the three great houses of Lu,
    who had grasped all power in the state. The others were Meng-sun
    and Shu-sun. They were all descended from Duke Huan by a concubine.

_Chi_, the Chi, head of the Chi clan, first Chi Huan and then Chi K'ang;
  iii. 1, had eight rows of dancers in his hall;
  iii. 6, worshipped on Mount T'ai;
  vi. 7, wishes to make Min Tzu-ch'ien governor of Pi;
  xi. 16, richer than the Duke of Chou;
  xiii. 2, Chung-kung is his steward;
  xvi. 1, is about to chastise Chuan-yü;
  xviii. 3, Ching, Duke of Ch'i, would set him above Confucius.

_Chi_,
  xiv. 6 = Hou Chi, director of husbandry under the Emperor Yao, and
    ancestor of the Chou dynasty.

_Chi_, iii. 9, a small state.

_Chi_, xviii. 1, another small state. Lord of Chi: an uncle of the
    tyrant Chou, last of the Yin dynasty. He was imprisoned for chiding
    the emperor, and to escape death feigned madness.

_Chi Huan_, head of the Chi clan + 491 B.C.;
  xviii. 4, accepts singing girls from Ch'i.

_Chi-kua_, xviii. 11, an officer of Chou.

_Chi K'ang_, of the great house of Chi of Lu, succeeded Chi Huan as
   chief, 491 B.C. (_see_ note to xii. 17);
  ii. 20, told how to make the people respectful, faithful, and willing;
  vi. 6, asks whether certain disciples were fit for power;
  x. 11, presents the Master with medicine;
  xi. 6, asks which disciples were fond of learning;
  xii. 17, asks how to rule;
  xii. 18, is vexed by robbers;
  xii. 19, asks whether we should kill the bad;
  xiv. 20, asks how Duke Ling escapes ruin.

_Chi-lu_, another name for Tzu-lu.

_Chi-sui_, xviii. 11, an officer of Chou.

_Chi-sun_, xiv. 38, or Chi (which see), probably Chi Huan, the head
    of the house.

_Chi Tzu-ch'eng_, xii. 8, a lord of Wei, says, A gentleman is all nature.

_Chi Tzu-jan_, younger brother of Chi Huan;
  xi. 23, asks whether Yu and Ch'iu are statesmen.

_Chi Wen_, v. 19, a lord of Lu, thought thrice before acting.

_Chieh-ni_, xviii. 6, says the world is a seething torrent.

_Chieh-yü_, xviii. 5, a famous man of Ch'u, who, disapproving of his
    king's conduct, supported himself by husbandry, and feigned madness in
    order to escape being forced into the king's service.

_Chien_, xiv. 22, Duke of Ch'i, murdered by Ch'en Ch'eng 481 B.C.

_Chih_, music-master of Lu;
  viii. 15, how grand was the ending of the Kuan-chü in his day;
  xviii. 9, went to Ch'i.

_Chin_, xiv. 16, an ancient state. Duke Wen of Chin was deep but
    dishonest.

_Ching_, Duke of Ch'i. Confucius was in Ch'i in 517 B.C.;
  xii. 11, asks what is kingcraft;
  xvi. 12, had a thousand teams of horses, but no man praised him;
  xviii. 3, would set Confucius between the Chi and the Meng.

_Ching_, xiii. 8, of ducal house of Wei, was wise in his private life.

_Chiu_, brother of Duke Huan of Ch'i;
  xiv. 17, 18, slain by his brother.

_Chou_, the reigning dynasty in Confucius's time, ii. 23, iii. 14,
    iii. 21, xv. 10, xviii. 11.

_Chou_, viii. 20 = King Wen.

_Chou_, xx. 1 = King Wu.

_Chou_, the Duke of, _see_ note to vii. 5;
  vii. 5, Confucius sees him no more in his dreams;
  viii. 11, his gifts, if coupled with pride and meanness, would not
    be worth a glance;
  xi. 16, the Chi richer than he;
  xviii. 10, his instructions to his son.

_Chou_, or _Chou Hsin_ (reigned 1154-22 B.C.), the
    last emperor of the house of Yin, an infamous tyrant, finally
    overthrown by King Wu, when he perished in his burning palace;
  xix. 20, his wickedness was not so great.

_Chou Jen_, an ancient worthy;
  xvi. 1, said, He that can put forth his strength....

_Chu-chang_, xviii. 8, a man who fled the world.

_Chuan-yü_, a small state in Lu, tributary to Lu;
  xvi. 1, the Chi proposes to chastise it.

_Chuang of Pien_, xiv. 13, his boldness.

_Chung-hu_, xviii. 11, an officer of Chou.

_Chung-kung_, a disciple of Confucius: name Jan Yung, style
    Chung-kung, born 523 B.C.;
  v. 4, said to have a glib tongue;
  vi. 1, might fill the seat of a prince: his views on laxity;
  vi. 4, likened to the red calf of a brindled cow;
  xi. 2, was of noble life;
  xii. 2, asks what is love;
  xiii. 2, when steward of the Chi asks how to rule.

_Chung-mou_, a town in Chin, belonging to the Chao family;
  xvii. 7, held by Pi Hsi in rebellion.

_Chung-ni_, xix. 22, 23 = Confucius.

_Chung-shu Yü_, minister of Wei, son of K'ung-wen;
  xiv. 20, in charge of the guests.

_Chung-tu_, xviii. 11, an officer of Chou.

_Chung Yu_: _see_ Tzu-lu.

_Chü-fu_, xiii. 17, a town in Lu, Tzu-hsia governor of it.

_Chüeh_, xviii. 9, bandmaster of Lu, went to Ch'in.

_Ch'ai_, a disciple of Confucius, name Kao Ch'ai, style Tzu-kao;
  xi. 17, is simple;
  xi. 24, made governor of Pi.

_Ch'ang-chü_, xviii. 6, says Confucius knows the ford.

_Ch'en_, a state in China;
  v. 21, xi. 2, xv. 1.

_Ch'en_, judge of;
  vii. 30, asks whether Duke Chao was well bred.

_Ch'en Ch'eng_, posthumous title of Ch'en Heng, minister of Ch'i;
  xiv. 22, murders Duke Chien of Ch'i.

_Ch'en K'ang_, xvi. 13 = Tzu-ch'in, whom see.

_Ch'en Tzu-ch'in_ = Tzu-ch'in, whom see.

_Ch'en Wen_, a lord of Ch'i;
  v. 18, forsook his land when Ts'ui murdered the king.

_Ch'i_, a state in ancient China, vii. 13, xviii. 3, xviii. 9;
  v. 18, its king slain by Ts'ui;
  vi. 3, Tzu-hua sent there;
  vi. 22, by a single revolution might equal Lu;
  xiv. 16, Duke Huan of, was honest but shallow;
  xvi. 12, Duke Ching of, had a thousand teams of horses;
  xviii. 4, the men of, send singing girls to Chi Huan.

_Ch'i-tiao K'ai_, a disciple of Confucius, style Tzu-jo;
  v. 5, wants confidence to take office.

_Ch'ih_, the name of Kung-hsi Hua, whom see.

_Ch'in_, a state in western China, xviii. 9.

_Ch'iu_, the name of Jan Yu, whom see;
  xiv. 34, the name of Confucius.

_Ch'u_, an ancient state, xviii. 5, 9.

_Ch'ü Po-yü_, minister of Wei, a friend of Confucius, who stayed
    with him when in Wei;
  xiv. 26, sends an envoy to Confucius;
  xv. 6, what a gentleman he was!

_Ch'üeh_, a village;
  xiv. 47, a lad from, made messenger by Confucius.


_Fan Ch'ih_, a disciple of Confucius, name Fan Hsü, style Tzu-ch'ih;
  ii. 5, asks meaning of obedience to parents;
  vi. 20, asks what is wisdom, and love;
  xii. 21, asks how to raise the mind;
  xii. 22, asks what is love, and wisdom;
  xiii. 4, asks to be taught husbandry;
  xiii. 19, asks what is love.

_Fang_, xiv. 15, a town of Lu, a fief in the hands of Tsang Wu-chung.

_Fang-shu_, xviii. 9, drum-master of Lu, crossed the river.


_Han_, xviii. 9, the river that enters the Yangtze at Hankow.

_Hsia_ = China, also the name of a dynasty, ii. 23, iii. 9, 21, xv. 10.

_Hsiang_, xviii. 9, who played the sounding stones, crossed the sea.

_Hsieh_, xiv. 12, a small state: Meng Kung-ch'o not fit to be minister of.

_Hsien_, xiv. 1: _see_ Yüan Ssu.

_Hsien_, xiv. 19, steward to Kung-shu Wen; goes to court with him.

_Hu_, vii. 28, a village: it was ill talking to the people of.

_Huan_, the three;
  xvi. 3, the three sons of Duke Huan of Lu, from whom the families of
    Meng, Shu, and Chi were descended, as also the powerless reigning
    duke of Lu.

_Huan_, Duke of Ch'i: _see_ note to xiv. 17;
  xiv. 16, was honest but shallow;
  xiv. 17, 18, slays the young duke Chiu.

_Huan T'ui_, vii. 22, an officer of Sung, cannot harm the Master, if
    Heaven protect him.

_Hui_: _see_ Yen Yüan.

_Jan Ch'iu_: _see_ Jan Yu.

_Jan Po-niu_, a disciple of Confucius, name Jan Keng, style Po-niu,
    born 544 B.C.;
  xi. 2, was of noble life.

_Jan Yu_, a disciple of Confucius, name Jan Ch'in, style Tzu-yu,
    born 520 B.C.;
  iii. 6, cannot stop the Chi worshipping on Mount T'ai;
  v. 7, the Master cannot say that he has love;
  vi. 3, gives Tzu-hua's mother grain;
  vi. 6, has ability and so is fit to govern;
  vi. 10, lacks strength to follow Confucius;
  vii. 14, asks whether the Master is for the King of Wei;
  xi. 2, was a statesman;
  xi. 12, was fresh and frank;
  xi. 16, is tax-gatherer to the Chi;
  xi. 21, asks whether he shall do all that he is taught;
  xi. 23, is a tool, not a statesman;
  xi. 25, wishes for charge of sixty, or seventy, square miles;
  xiii. 9, drives the Master towards Wei;
  xiii. 14, says business of state detained him at court;
  xiv. 13, his skill;
  xvi. 1, is minister to the Chi, when he proposes to attack Chuan-yü.

_Ju Pei_, an officer of Lu, who had been taught by Confucius;
  xvii. 20, wishes to see Confucius, who pleads sickness.


_Kan_, xviii. 9, music-master of Lu, went to Ch'u.

_Kao-tsung_, the Emperor Wu Ting of the house of Yin, reigned
    1324-1265 B.C.;
  xiv. 43, on the death of his predecessor did not speak for three years.

_Kao-yao_, xii. 22, made criminal judge by Shun and evil vanished.

_Kuan Chung_, personal name Yi-wu, chief minister to Duke Huan of
    Ch'i, + 645 B.C.: _see_ notes to iii. 22, xiv. 17;
  iii. 22, Confucius calls him shallow;
  xiv. 10, he thrust the Po from the town of Pien;
  xiv. 17, would not die with the young duke Chiu;
  xiv. 18, should he have drowned in a ditch?

_Kung-ch'o_ xiv. 13: _see_ Meng Kung-ch'o.

_Kung-hsi Hua_, a disciple of Confucius, name Kung-hsi Ch'ih, style
    Tzu-hua, born in Lu, 510 B.C. He was entrusted with the management
    of the Master's funeral;
  v. 7, the Master cannot say whether he has love;
  vi. 3, sent to Ch'i; Confucius is asked to give his mother grain;
  vii. 33, says the disciples cannot learn the Master's endless craving;
  xi. 21, is puzzled by the Master's different answers;
  xi. 25, would like to play an humble part in Ancestral Temple.

_Kung-ming Chia_ a man of Wei;
  xiv. 14, says Kung-shu Wen speaks when it is time to speak.

_Kung-shan Fu-jao_, xvii. 5, a confederate of Yang Huo, held Pi
    in rebellion.

_Kung-shu_, the name of a great family in Wei.

_Kung-shu Wen_, of the above family, a minister of Wei;
  xiv. 14, said not to speak, or laugh, or take a gift;
  xiv. 19, goes to court with his ex-steward.

_Kung-sun Ch'ao_, xix. 22, asks, 'Where did Confucius get his learning?'

_Kung-yeh Ch'ang_, a disciple of Confucius;
  v. 1, married to Confucius's daughter, though he had been in prison.

_K'ang_, x. 11: _see_ Chi K'ang.

_K'uang_, ix. 5;
  xi. 22, a place where the Master was affrighted.

_K'ung Ch'iu_, xviii. 6, Confucius's name in Chinese. His style
    was Chung-ni.

_K'ung-wen_, the posthumous title of K'ung Yü, a lord of Wei;
  v. 14, why he was styled cultured.


_Lao_, a disciple of Confucius, name Ch'in Lao, style Tzu-k'ai;
  ix. 6, quotes the Master's saying that he learned a trade.

_Li_, xi. 7, Confucius's son: _see_ Po-yü.

_Li_, xx. 1 = T'ang, whom see.

_Liao_, the duke's uncle; xiv. 38, a man of Lu, slanders Tzu-lu.

_Liao_, xviii. 9, bandmaster of Lu, went to Ts'ai.

_Lin Fang_, iii. 4, a man of Lu, asks what gives life to ceremony;
  iii. 6, he and Mount T'ai.

_Ling_, Duke of Wei, the husband of Nan-tzu (vi. 26), reigned 533-492 B.C.;
  xiv. 20, his wickedness;
  xv. 1, asks about the line of battle.

_Liu-hsia Hui_, flourished about 600 B.C.: _see_ note to xv. 13;
  xv. 13, Tsang Wen would not stand by him;
  xviii. 2, was thrice dismissed when judge;
  xviii. 8, bent his will and shamed the body.

_Lu_, the native state of Confucius, iii. 23, v. 2,  vi. 22, ix. 14,
    xi. 13, iii. 7, xiv. 15.

_Lu_, Duke of, xviii. 10, the son of the Duke of Chou.


_Meng_, or _Meng-sun_, one of the three great families that were
    all-powerful in Lu.

_Meng_, xviii. 3, the head of the Meng clan, Meng Yi.

_Meng_, the, xix. 19, makes Yang Fu criminal judge.

_Meng Chih-fan_, vi. 13, a lord of Lu, never bragged.

_Meng Ching_, son of Meng Wu, a lord of Lu;
  viii. 4, comes to ask after the dying Tseng-tzu.

_Meng Chuang_, xix. 18, head of the Meng clan, his piety.

_Meng Kung-ch'o_ head of the Meng clan, minister of Lu;
  xiv. 12, not fit to be minister of T'eng or Hsieh;
  xiv. 13, his greedlessness.

_Meng Wu_, posthumous name of Meng Hsi, a lord of Lu, son of Meng Yi;
  ii. 6, told that his parents are concerned for his health;
  v. 7, asks whether certain disciples have love.

_Meng Yi_, the posthumous name of Ho-chi, head of the Meng-sun, or
    Chung-sun, clan in Lu: a contemporary of Confucius;
  ii. 5, asks the duty of a son;
  xviii. 3, Ching, Duke of Ch'i, would set him below Confucius.

_Mien_, xv. 41, a blind music-master of Lu, comes to see Confucius.

_Min Tzu-ch'ien_, a disciple of Confucius, name Min Sun, style Tzu-ch'ien;
  vi. 7, would rather cross the Wen than be governor of Pi;
  xi. 2, was of noble life;
  xi. 4, how good a son he was!
  xi. 12, his winning strength;
  xi. 13, does not talk, but what he says hits the mark.


_Nan Jung_, a disciple of Confucius;
  v. 1, given Confucius's niece as wife;
  xi. 5, would thrice repeat _The Sceptre White_.

_Nan-kung Kuo_, a disciple of Confucius, style Tzu-jung, perhaps the
    same man as Nan Jung;
  xiv. 6, how he prizes worth.

_Nan-tzu_, wife of Ling, Duke of Wei, a dissolute woman;
  vi. 26, Confucius sees her.

_Ning Wu_, posthumous title of Ning Yü, a lord of Wei;
  v. 20, such simplicity as his is beyond our reach.


_Pi_, a town of Lu, belonging to the Chi;
  vi. 7, Min Tzu-ch'ien refuses the governorship of;
  xi. 24, Tzu-kao made governor of;
  xvi. 1, Chuan-yü is strong and close to Pi;
  xvii. 5, held in rebellion by Kung-shan Fu-jao.

_Pi Hsi_, governor of Chung-mou in Chin for the family of Chao;
  xvii. 7, summons Confucius.

_Pi-kan_, uncle of the tyrant Chou (reigned 1154-22 B.C.), last of
    the house of Yin;
  xviii. 1, died for his reproofs.

_Pien_, xiv. 10, a town in Lu given to Kuan Chung.

_Po_, the, xiv. 10, a lord of Ch'i. Duke Huan takes from him the town of
    Pien and gives it to Kuan Chung.

_Po-kuo_, xviii. 11, an officer of Chou.

_Po-niu_, a disciple of Confucius, name Jan Keng, style Po-niu, born
    544 B.C.;
  vi. 8, why should he die of such an illness?

_Po-ta_, xviii. 11, an officer of Chou.

_Po-yi_, elder brother of Shu-ch'i, lived in twelfth century B.C.;
  _see_ note to v. 22;
  v. 22, never recalled past wickedness;
  vii. 14, did not rue the past;
  xvi. 12, men still sound his praises;
  xviii. 8, would not bend the will.

_Po-yü_, Confucius's son;
  xi. 7, buried without an outer coffin;
  xvi. 13, told by his father to study poetry and courtesy;
  xvii. 10, asked whether he had done the Chou-nan.

_P'eng_, vii. 1, a man of the Shang dynasty: Confucius likens
    himself to him.

_P'i Shen_, xiv. 9, a lord of Cheng, who drafted the decrees.


_Shang_, the name of Tzu-hsia, whom see.

_Shao_, the music of the time of Shun;
  iii. 25, its beauty;
  vii. 13, after hearing it the Master knew not the taste of meat
    for three months;
  xv. 10, choose for music the Shao and its dance.

_Shao Hu_, a man of Ch'i: _see_ note to xiv. 17;
  xiv. 17, died with the young duke Chiu.

_Shao-lien_, a man supposed to have belonged to the savage tribes
    of eastern China;
  xviii. 8, he shamed the body.

_Shao-nan_, xvii. 10, the second book of the _Book of Poetry_.

_She_, a district in Ch'u.

_She_, Duke of, vii. 18, asks Tzu-lu about Confucius, and is not answered;
  xiii. 16, asks about government;
  xiii. 18, says in his home an upright son bears witness against
    his father.

_Shen_, the name of Tseng-tzu, whom see.

_Shen Ch'ang_, a disciple of Confucius, style Tzu-chou;
  v. 10, is passionate, cannot be firm.

_Shih_, xi. 15 = Tzu-chang, whom see.

_Shih-men_, a pass on the frontier of Ch'i;
  xiv. 41, Tzu-lu spends a night there.

_Shih-shu_, xiv. 9, a lord of Cheng, criticised the decrees.

_Shou-yang_, xvi. 12, a mountain: Po-yi and Shu-Ch'i died at its foot.

_Shu-ch'i_, younger brother of Po-yi, whom see.

_Shu-hsia_, xviii. 11, an officer of Chou.

_Shu-sun Wu-shu_, chief of the Shu-sun, Meng-sun, or Meng family, one
    of the three great houses of Lu, who controlled the state;
  xix. 23, says Tzu-kung is greater than Confucius;
  xix. 24, decries Confucius.

_Shu-yeh_, xviii. 11, an officer of Chou.

_Shun_, an emperor, successor of Yao (reigned 2255-05 B.C.);
  vi. 28, still yearned to treat all with bounty;
  viii. 18, it was sublime how he swayed the world and made light of it;
  viii. 20, had five ministers, and order reigned;
  xii. 22, raised Kao-yao, and evil vanished;
  xiv. 45, still struggled to bring peace to all men;
  xv. 4, ruled doing nothing;
  xx. 1, his instructions from Yao on coming to the throne.

_Ssu-ma Niu_, a disciple of Confucius, name Ssu-ma Keng, style Tzu-niu,
    a brother of Huan T'ui;
  xii. 3, asks what is love;
  xii. 4, asks what is a gentleman;
  xii. 5, his sorrow at having no brothers.

_Sung_, a state, iii. 9, vi. 14.


_Ta-hsiang_, ix. 2, a village: a man from, says Confucius has made no name.

_Tan-t'ai Mieh-ming_, a disciple of Confucius, style Tzu-yü;
  vi. 12, would not take a short cut.

_Tien_, xi. 25 = Tseng Hsi, whom see.

_Ting_, Duke, ruler of Lu, whilst Confucius was in office, reigned
    509-495 B.C.;
  iii. 19, asks how kings should treat ministers;
  xiii. 15, asks whether any one saying can bless a kingdom.

_Tsai Wo_, a disciple of Confucius, name Tsai Yü, style Tzu-wo,
    died 480 B.C.;
  iii. 21, explains what trees were planted round the shrines of
    guardian spirits;
  v. 9, slept in the daytime;
  vi. 24, asks whether a man who loves would go down a well;
  xi. 2, was a talker;
  xvii. 21, thought one year's mourning enough.

_Tsai Yü_: see Tsai Wo.

_Tsang Wen_, a minister of Lu;
  v. 17, lodged his tortoise in a sculptured house;
  xv. 13, filched his post.

_Tsang Wu-chung_, a minister of Lu, in the time of Confucius's father;
  xiv. 13, his wisdom;
  xiv. 15, forces his king's hand.

_Tseng Hsi_, a disciple of Confucius, name Tseng Tien, style Hsi, the
    father of Tseng-tzu;
  xi. 25, the Master sides with him in his wish.

_Tseng-tzu_ (the Master, or philosopher Tseng), a disciple of Confucius,
    name Tseng Shen, style Tzu-yü, born in Lu, 505 B.C., died 437 B.C.;
  i. 4, questions himself thrice daily;
  i. 9, tells how to revive the good in men;
  iv. 15, says Master's teaching hangs on faithfulness and fellow-feeling;
  viii. 3, when sick tells his disciples to uncover his feet and arms;
  viii. 4, says when man must die his words are good;
  viii. 5, when we can, to ask those that cannot;
  viii. 6, says a man is a gentleman if no crisis can corrupt him;
  viii. 7, says a knight had need be strong and bold;
  xi. 17, is dull;
  xii. 24, says a gentleman gathers friends by culture;
  xiv. 28, says a gentleman is bent on keeping his place;
  xix. 16, says Tzu-chang is so magnificent;
  xix. 17, says man shows what is in him in mourning a near one;
  xix. 18, says Meng Chuang in not changing his father's rule is
    hard to rival;
  xix. 19, tells Yang Fu not to be puffed with joy.

_Tso Ch'iu-ming_, v. 24, an ancient, his view of what is shameful.

_Tung Meng_, or _East Meng_, a mountain in Lu, at the foot of which
    lay the small state of Chuan-yü, whose ruler had the right to
    sacrifice to the mountain, xvi. 1.

_Tzu-chang_, a disciple of Confucius, name Chuan-sun Shih, style
    Tzu-chang, born 504 B.C.;
  ii. 18, told how pay comes;
  ii. 23, told how far the future can be known;
  v. 18, asks whether Tzu-wen had love;
  xi. 15, goes too far;
  xi. 17, is smooth;
  xi. 19, asks the way of a good man;
  xii. 6, asks what is insight;
  xii. 10, asks how to raise the mind;
  xii. 14, asks what is kingcraft;
  xii. 20, asks what is eminence;
  xiv. 43, asks what is meant by Kao-tsung not speaking for three years;
  xv. 5, asks how to get on;
  xv. 41, asks, 'Is this the way to treat a music-master?';
  xvii. 6, asks what is love;
  xix. 1, defines a knight;
  xix. 2, says goodness blindly clutched is nought;
  xix. 3, asked about friendship by Tzu-hsia's disciples;
  xix. 15, Tzu-yu thinks him void of love;
  xix. 16, his magnificence;
  xx. 2, asks how men should be governed.

_Tzu-chien_, a disciple of Confucius, name Fu Pu-ch'i, style Tzu-chien;
  v. 2, what a gentleman he is!

_Tzu-ch'an_, chief minister of Cheng in the time of Confucius;
  v. 15, the four things that marked him a gentleman;
  xiv. 9, gave the final touches to the decrees;
  xiv. 10,  a kind-hearted man.

_Tzu-ch'in_, a disciple of Confucius, name Ch'en K'ang, style Tzu-ch'in,
    or Tzu-k'ang, born 512 B.C.;
  i. 10, asks how the Master learns how lands are governed;
  xvi. 13, asks whether Po-yü had heard anything uncommon from his father;
  xix. 25, says the Master is no greater than Tzu-kung.

_Tzu-fu Ching-po_, minister to the Chi;
  xiv. 38, has strength to expose Liao's body in the market-place;
  xix. 23, tells Tzu-kung that Shu-sun thinks him greater than Confucius.

_Tzu-hsi_, xiv. 10, chief minister to the state of Ch'u. He refused to be
    appointed successor to the throne in place of the true heir; but did
    not oppose his master's faults, and prevented him employing Confucius.

_Tzu-hsia_, a disciple of Confucius, name Pu Shang, style Tzu-hsia,
    born 507 B.C.;
  i. 7, says a man who knows how to do his duty is learned;
  ii. 8, told that a son's manner is of importance;
  iii. 8, the Master can talk of poetry to him;
  vi. 11, told to read to become a gentleman;
  xi. 2, was a man of culture;
  xi. 15,  does not go far enough;
  xii. 5, says all within the four seas are brethren;
  xii. 22, says Shun raised Kao-yao, and evil vanished;
  xiii. 17, when governor of Chü-fu asks how to rule;
  xix. 3, says cling to worthy friends;
  xix. 4, says small ways end in mire;
  xix. 5, says he who recalls each day his faults is fond of learning;
  xix. 6, says in wide learning and singleness of aim love is found;
  xix. 7, says through study a gentleman reaches truth;
  xix. 8, says the vulgar gloss their faults;
  xix. 9, says a gentleman alters thrice;
  xix. 10, says a gentleman will not lay on burdens before he is trusted;
  xix. 11, says if we keep within the bounds of honour, we may ignore
    propriety;
  xix. 12, says, Should a gentleman's training bewilder him?;
  xix. 13, says a scholar with his spare strength should serve the crown.

_Tzu-hua_: _see_ Kung-hsi Hua.

_Tzu-kao_, xi. 24: _see_ Ch'ai.

_Tzu-kung_, a disciple of Confucius, name Tuan-mu Tz'u, style Tzu-kung,
    born 520 B.C.;
  i. 10, tells how the Master learns about government;
  i. 15, asks were it well to be poor but no flatterer;
  ii. 13, told that a gentleman sorts words to deeds;
  iii. 17, wishes to do away with sheep offering at new moon;
  v. 3, is a vessel;
  v. 8, cannot aspire to Yen Yüan;
  v. 11, wishes not to do unto others what he would not wish done to him;
  v. 12, not allowed to hear the Master on life or the Way of Heaven;
  v. 14, asks why K'ung-wen was styled cultured;
  vi. 6, is intelligent, and so fit to govern;
  vi. 28, asks whether to treat the people with bounty were love;
  vii. 14, will ask the Master whether he is for the King of Wei;
  ix. 6, says the Master is many sided;
  ix. 12, asks whether a beautiful stone should be hidden away;
  xi. 2, was a talker;
  xi. 12, was fresh and frank;
  xi. 15, asks whether Shih or Shang is the better man;
  xi. 18, hoards up substance;
  xii. 7, asks what is kingcraft;
  xii. 8, says no team overtakes the tongue;
  xii. 23, asks about friends;
  xiii. 20, asks what is a good crown servant;
  xiii. 24, asks were it right for a man to be liked by all;
  xiv. 18, thinks Kuan Chung showed want of love;
  xiv. 31, would compare one man with another;
  xiv. 37, asks what the Master means by no man knowing him;
  xv. 2, thinks the Master a man who learns much;
  xv. 9, asks how to attain to love;
  xv. 23, asks whether one word can cover the duty of man;
  xvii. 19, says were Master silent, what could disciples tell;
  xvii. 24, asks whether a gentleman hates;
  xix. 20, says the wickedness of Chou was not so great;
  xix. 21, says a prince's faults are like the darkening of sun or moon;
  xix. 22, says the lore of Wen and Wu lives in men;
  xix. 23, Shu-sun thinks him greater than Confucius;
  xix. 24, says the Master cannot be cried down;
  xix. 25, says none can come up to the Master.

_Tzu-lu_, a disciple of Confucius, name Chung Yu, style Tzu-lu, or
    Chi-lu, born 543 B.C., died 484 B.C.;
  ii. 17, told what is understanding;
  v. 6, the Master would take him with him to scour the seas;
  v. 7, the Master cannot say that he has love;
  v. 13, before he could carry a thing out, dreaded to hear more;
  v. 25, tells his wishes;
  vi. 6, is firm, and so could govern;
  vi. 26, displeased at Master seeing Nan-tzu;
  vii. 10, asks the Master whom he would like to help him command an army;
  vii. 18, does not answer the Duke of She's question about Master;
  vii. 34, asks leave to pray when the Master is ill;
  ix. 11, makes disciples act as ministers;
  ix. 26, would stand unabashed in a tattered cloak;
  x. 18, gets on scent with Master;
  xi. 2, was a statesman;
  xi. 11, asks about death;
  xi. 12, will die before his time;
  xi. 14, what has his lute to do twanging at Master's door?
  xi. 17, is coarse;
  xi. 21, asks shall he carry out all that he learns;
  xi. 23, is a tool, not a statesman;
  xi. 24, the Master hates his glib tongue;
  xi. 25, wishes for charge of a state crushed by great neighbours;
  xii. 12, never slept over a promise;
  xiii. 1, asks how to rule;
  xiii. 3, says King of Wei looks to the Master to govern;
  xiii. 28, asks when can a man be called a knight;
  xiv. 13, asks what were a full-grown man;
  xiv. 17, says Kuan Chung showed want of love;
  xiv. 23, asks how to serve the king;
  xiv. 38, slandered by Liao;
  xiv. 41, spends a night at Shih-men;
  xiv. 45, asks what is a gentleman;
  xv. 1, cannot hide his vexation;
  xv. 3, told how few know great-heartedness;
  xvi. 1, is minister to the Chi, when he proposes to attack Chuan-yü;
  xvii. 5, asks how could the Master join Kung-shan;
  xvii. 7, asks how could the Master join Pi Hsi;
  xvii. 8, asked has he heard the six words and the six they sink into;
  xvii. 23, asks does a gentleman honour courage;
  xviii. 6, asks Ch'ang-chü where the ford is;
  xviii. 7, meets an old man bearing a basket.

_Tzu-sang Po-tzu_, vi. 1, a man of Lu, is lax.

_Tzu-wen_, v. 18, chief minister of Ch'u, his characteristics.

_Tzu-yu_, a disciple of Confucius, name Yen Yen, style Tzu-yu,
    born 510 B.C.;
  ii. 7, told that feeding parents is not the whole duty of a son;
  iv. 26, says nagging at princes brings disgrace;
  vi. 12, when governor of Wu-ch'eng has Tan-t'ai Mieh-ming;
  xi. 2, was a man of culture;
  xvii. 4, encourages music in Wu-ch'eng;
  xix. 12, says Tzu-hsia's disciples can sprinkle the floor;
  xix. 14, says mourning should only stretch to grief;
  xix. 15, says Tzu-chang is void of love.

_Tzu-yü_, xiv. 9, a lord of Cheng, polished the decrees.

_T'ai_, a mountain, iii. 6.

_T'ai-po_, eldest son of King T'ai of Chou. His brother was the father
    of King Wen, whose son King Wu dethroned Chou Hsin and founded the
    Chou dynasty, that was reigning in China in Confucius's time:
    _see_ note to viii. 1;
  viii. 1, thrice he declined the throne.

_T'ang_, viii. 20, the dynastic title of the Emperor Yao.

_T'ang_, the founder of the Shang dynasty, reigned 1766-53 B.C.;
  xii. 22, raised Yi-yin, and evil vanished;
  xx. 1, his form of prayer.

_T'eng_, xiv. 12, a small state: Meng Kung-ch'o not fit to be minister of.

_T'o_, an officer of Wei holding a post in the temple;
  vi. 14, his glibness;
  xiv. 20, in charge of Ancestral Temple.

_Ts'ai_, a state, xi. 2, xviii. 9.

_Ts'ui_, v. 18, a lord of Ch'i, murdered his lord, 547 B.C.

_Tz'u_: _see_ Tzu-kung.


_Wang-sun Chia_, a minister of Wei;
  iii. 13, thinks it best to court the kitchen god;
  xiv. 20, in charge of the troops.

_Wei_, one of the three great families that governed the state of Chin;
  xiv. 12, Meng Kung-ch'o fit to be steward of.

_Wei_, xviii. 1, a small state in western China.

_Wei_, another state in China, ix. 14, xiii. 7, 8, 9, xiv. 42, xix. 22.

_Wei_, King of: _see_ note to vii. 14;
  vii. 14, Confucius not on his side;
  xiii. 3, looks to Confucius to govern.

_Wei_, the lord of, xviii. 1, an elder brother by a concubine of the
    tyrant Chou Hsin (reigned 1154-22 B.C.), last of the Yin dynasty.
    He fled from court, since he could not improve his brother.

_Wei-sheng Kao_, v. 23, begs vinegar from another to give to beggar.

_Wei-sheng Mou_, xiv. 34, an old man who had fled the world, asks how
    Confucius finds roosts to roost on.

_Wen_, Duke of Chin, reigned 636-28 B.C., the leading man in China
    in his day,
  xiv. 16, was deep but dishonest.

_Wen_, King, Duke of Chou, born 1231 B.C., died 1135 B.C., the father of
    King Wu, founder of the Chou line of emperors;
  viii. 20, holding two-thirds of world submitted all to Yin;
  ix. 5, since his death Confucius is the home of culture;
  xix. 22, his Way lives in men.

_Wu_, iii. 25, the music of King Wu, less noble than that of Shun.

_Wu_, xviii. 9, tambourine master of Lu, crossed the Han.

_Wu_, King, the founder of the Chou dynasty, reigned 1122-15 B.C.;
  viii. 20, had ten able ministers;
  xix. 22, his Way lives in men;
  xx. 1, his principles of government.

_Wu-ch'eng_, a small town of Lu;
  vi. 12, Tzu-yu governor of it;
  xvii. 4, as the Master draws near he hears lute and song.

_Wu-ma Ch'i_, a disciple of Confucius, name Wu-ma Shih, style
    Tzu-ch'i, vii. 30.


_Yang_, xviii. 9, assistant bandmaster of Lu, crossed the sea.

_Yang Fu_, xix. 19, a disciple of Tseng-tzu, made judge.

_Yang Huo_, chief minister of the Chi, with whom he was long all-powerful;
  on one occasion he imprisoned his master;
  in 501 B.C. he was forced to leave Lu;
  xvii. 1, wishes to see Confucius;
  xviii. 4, accepts music girls.

_Yao_, the first Emperor of China (2357-2255 B.C.);
  vi. 28, still yearned to treat all with bounty;
  viii. 19, his greatness was like Heaven;
  viii. 20, the wealth in talent of his last days;
  xiv. 45, struggled to grow better and make all happy;
  xx. 1, his commands to Shun.

_Yen_, xvii. 4, = Tzu-yu.

_Yen Lu_, xi. 7, father of Yen Yüan, asks for Master's carriage
    to provide an outer coffin.

_Yen P'ing_, v. 16, was versed in friendship.

_Yen Yu_, xix. 12 = Tzu-yu.

_Yen Yüan_ (514-483 B.C.), the favourite disciple of Confucius,
    name Yen Hui, style Tzu-yüan;
  ii. 9, is no dullard;
  v. 8, Tzu-kung cannot compare with him;
  v. 25, tells his wishes to the Master;
  vi. 2, made no mistake twice;
  vi. 5, for three months together did not sin against love;
  vi. 9, his mirth under hardship;
  vii. 10, could both fill a post and live happy without;
  ix. 10, says, As I gaze it grows higher;
  ix. 19, was never listless when spoken to;
  ix. 20, had never been seen to stop;
  xi. 2, was of noble life;
  xi. 3, the Master got no help from him;
  xi. 6, was fond of learning;
  xi. 7, dies: his father asks for the Master's carriage;
  xi. 8, dies: the Master says, I am undone;
  xi. 9, dies: the Master overcome by grief;
  xi. 10, the disciples bury him in state;
  xi. 18, is almost faultless;
  xi. 22, would not brave death whilst his Master lives;
  xii. 1, asks what is love;
  xv. 10, asks how to rule a kingdom.

_Yi_, xiv. 6, a famous archer of the Hsia dynasty, who slew the
    emperor and usurped his throne, but was afterwards killed in
    his turn.

_Yi_, iii. 24, a small town on the borders of Wei: the warden says
    Confucius is a warning bell.

_Yi-yi_, xviii. 8, lived in hiding, but gave the rein to his tongue.

_Yi-yin_, xii. 22 (and _note_), made minister, and evil vanished.

_Yin_ dynasty (2205-1766 B.C.), also called Shang, ii. 23, iii. 9, 21,
    viii. 20, xv. 10, xviii. 1.

_Yu_, the name of Tzu-lu, whom see.

_Yu Jo_, a disciple of Confucius, style Tzu-jo, sometimes called
    Yu-tzu, the philosopher Yu, born 520 B.C.;
  i. 2, says that to be a good son is the root of love;
  i. 12, says courtesy consists in ease;
  i. 13, says if promises hug the right, word can be kept;
  xii. 9, tells Duke Ai to tithe the people.

_Yu-tzu_: _see_ Yu Jo.

_Yung_, v. 4: _see_ Chung-kung.

_Yü_, viii. 20, the dynastic title of Shun, whom see.

_Yü_, xv. 6, a minister of Wei, his straightness.

_Yü_, xvii. 21 = Tsai Wo.

_Yü_, an ancient emperor (reigned 2205-2197 B.C.), founder of the Hsia
    dynasty, chosen by Shun as his successor;
  viii. 18, he swayed the world and made light of it;
  viii. 21, no flaw in him;
  xiv. 6, toiled at his crops and won the world;
  xx. 1, his instructions on coming to the throne.

_Yü-chung_, the younger brother of T'ai-po. He accompanied him in his
    flight to the wild tribes of Wu (the country round Shanghai), in
    order to let the third brother come to the throne, and succeeded
    T'ai-po as ruler of that people;
  xviii. 8, lived in hiding, but gave the rein to his tongue.

_Yüan Jang_, an old, eccentric acquaintance of Confucius;
  xiv. 46, awaits the Master squatting.

_Yüan Ssu_, a disciple of Confucius, name Yüan Hsien, style Tzu-ssu,
    born 516 B.C.;
  vi. 3, refuses his pay as governor;
  xiv. 1, asks what is shame.

       *       *       *       *       *