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over with an enjoyable homily on the duty of keeping a watch upon the lips. Confucius turned to his disciples and said, ‘Observe it, my children. These words are true, and commend themselves to our feelings [3].’

About music he made inquiries at Ch’ang Hung, to whom the following remarks are attributed:— ‘I have observed about Chung-ni many marks of a sage. He has river eyes and a dragon forehead,- - the very characteristics of Hwang-ti. His arms are long, his back is like a tortoise, and he is nine feet six inches in height,— the very semblance of T’ang the Completer. When he speaks, he praises the ancient kings. He moves along the path of humility and courtesy. He has heard of every subject, and retains with a strong memory. His knowledge of things seems inexhaustible.— Have we not in him the rising of a sage [4]?’

I have given these notices of Confucius at the court of Chau, more as being the only ones I could find, than because I put much faith in them. He did not remain there long, but returned the same year to Lu, and continued his work of teaching. His fame was greatly increased; disciples came to him from different parts, till their number amounted to three thousand. Several of those who have come down to us as the most distinguished among his followers, however, were yet unborn, and the statement just given may be considered as an exaggeration. We are not to conceive of the disciples as forming a community, and living together. Parties

 

1 2 3 See the �a�y, ���G, art. �[�P.

4 Quoted by Chiang Yung from the ‘Narratives of the School.’

 

of them may have done so. We shall find Confucius hereafter always moving amid a company of admiring pupils; but the greater number must have had their proper avocations and ways of living, and would only resort to the Master, when they wished specially to ask his counsel or to learn of him.

5. In the year succeeding the return to Lu, that State fell into great confusion. There were three Families in it, all connected irregularly with the ducal House, which had long kept the rulers in a condition of dependency. They appear frequently in the Analects as the Chi clan, the Shu, and the Mang; and while Confucius freely spoke of their

[Sidebar] He withdraws to Chi and returns to Lu the following year. B.C. 515, 516.

usurpations [1], he was a sort of dependent of the Chi family, and appears in frequent communication with members of all the three. In the year B.C. 517, the duke Chao came to open hostilities with them, and being worsted, fled into Ch’i, the State adjoining Lu on the north. Thither Confucius also repaired, that he might avoid the prevailing disorder of his native State. Ch’i was then under the government of a ruler (in rank a marquis, but historically called duke) , afterwards styled Ching [2], who ‘had a thousand teams, each of four horses, but on the day of his death the people did not praise him for a single virtue [3].’ His chief minister, however, was Yen Ying [4], a man of considerable ability and worth. At his court the music of the ancient sage-emperor, Shun, originally brought to Ch’i from the State of Ch’an [5], was still preserved.

According to the ‘Narratives of the School,’ an incident occurred on the way to Ch’i, which I may transfer to these pages as a good specimen of the way in which Confucius turned occurring matters to account, in his intercourse with his disciples. As he was passing by the side of the Tai mountain, there was a woman weeping and wailing by a grave. Confucius bent forward in his carriage, and after listening to her for some time, sent Tsze-lu to ask the cause of her grief. ‘You weep, as if you had experienced sorrow upon sorrow,’ said Tsze-lu. The woman replied, ‘It is so. My husband’s father was killed here by a tiger, and my husband also; and now my son has met the same fate.’ Confucius asked her why she did not remove from the place, and on her answering,’ There is here no oppressive government,’ he turned to his disciples, and said, ‘My

 

1 See Analects, III. i. ii, et al.

2 ����.

3 Ana. XVI. xii.

4 ����. This is the same who was afterwards styled ������.

5 ��.

 

children, remember this. Oppressive government is fiercer than a tiger [1].’

As soon as he crossed the border from Lu, we are told he discovered from the gait and manners of a boy, whom he saw carrying a pitcher, the influence of the sages’ music, and told the driver of his carriage to hurry on to the capital [2]. Arrived there, he heard the strain, and was so ravished with it, that for three months he did not know the taste of flesh. ‘I did not think,’ he said, ‘that music could have been made so excellent as this [3].’ The duke Ching was pleased with the conferences which he had with him [4], and proposed to assign to him the town of Lin-ch’iu, from the revenues of which he might derive a sufficient support; but Confucius refused the gift, and said to his disciples, ‘A superior man will only receive reward for services which he has done. I have given advice to the duke Ching, but he has not yet obeyed it, and now he would endow me with this place! Very far is he from understanding me [5]!’

On one occasion the duke asked about government, and received the characteristic reply, ‘There is government when the ruler is ruler, and the minister is minister; when the father is father, and the son is son [6].’ I say that the reply is characteristic. Once, when Tsze-lu asked him what he would consider the first thing to be done if entrusted with the government of a State, Confucius answered, ‘What is necessary is to rectify names [7].’ The disciple thought the reply wide of the mark, but it was substantially the same with what he said to the marquis Ching. There is a sufficient foundation in nature for government in the several relations of society, and if those be maintained and developed according to their relative significancy, it is sure to obtain. This was a first principle in the political ethics of Confucius.

Another day the duke got to a similar inquiry the reply that the art of government lay in an economical use of the revenues; and being pleased, he resumed his purpose of retaining the philosopher in his State, and proposed to assign to him the fields of Ni-ch’i. His

 

1 See the �a�y, ���|, art. ������. I have translated, however, from the Li Chi, II. Sect. II. iii. 10, where the same incident is given, with some variations, and without saying when or where it occurred.

2 See the ���b, ���Q�E, p. 13.

3 Ana. VII. xiii.

4 Some of these are related in the ‘Narratives of the School;’— about the burning of the ancestral shrine of the sovereign ��, and a one-footed bird which appeared hopping and flapping its wings in Ch’i. They are plainly fabulous, though quoted in proof of Confucius’s sage wisdom. This reference to them is more than enough.

5 �a�y, ���G, ����.

6 Ana. XII. xi.

7 Ana. XIII. iii.

 

chief minister Yen Ying dissuaded him from the purpose, saying, ‘Those scholars are impracticable, and cannot be imitated. They are haughty and conceited of their own views, so that they will not be content in inferior positions. They set a high value on all funeral ceremonies, give way to their grief, and will waste their property on great burials, so that they would only be injurious to the common manners. This Mr. K’ung has a thousand peculiarities. It would take generations to exhaust all that he knows about the ceremonies of going up and going down. This is not the time to examine into his rules of propriety. If you, prince, wish to employ him to change the customs of Ch’i, you will not be making the people your primary consideration [1].’

I had rather believe that these were not the words of Yen Ying, but they must represent pretty correctly the sentiments of many of the statesmen of the time about Confucius. The duke of Ch’i got tired ere long of having such a monitor about him, and observed. ‘I cannot treat him as I would the chief of the Chi family. I will treat him in a way between that accorded to the chief of the Chi, and that given to the chief of the Mang family.’ Finally he said, ‘I am old; I cannot use his doctrines [2].’ These observations were made directly to Confucius, or came to his hearing [3]. It was not consistent with his self-respect to remain longer in Ch’i, and he returned to Lu [4].

6. Returned to Lu, he remained for the long period of about fifteen years without being engaged in any official employment. It

[Sidebar] He remains without office in Lu, B.C. 516-501.

was a time indeed of great disorder. The duke Chao continued a refugee in Ch’i, the government being in the hands of the great Families, up to his death in B.C. 510, on which event the rightful heir was set aside, and another member of the ducal House, known to us by the title of Ting [5], substituted in his place. The ruling authority of the principality became thus still more enfeebled than it had been before, and, on the other hand, the chiefs of the Chi, the Shu, and the Mang, could hardly keep their ground against their own officers. Of those latter, the two most conspicuous were Yang Hu [6], called also Yang Ho [7], and

 

1 See the �v�O, ���l�@�a, p. 2.

2 Ana. XVIII. iii

3 Sze-ma Ch’ien makes the first observation to have been addressed directly to Confucius.

4 According to the above account Confucius was only once, and for a portion of two years, in Ch’i. For the refutation of contrary accounts, see Chiang Yung’s Life of the Sage.

5 �w��.

6 ����.

7 ���f.

 

Kung-shan Fu-zao [1]. At one time Chi Hwan, the most powerful of the chiefs, was kept a prisoner by Yang Hu, and was obliged to make terms with him in order to obtain his liberation. Confucius would give his countenance to none, as he disapproved of all, and he studiously kept aloof from them. Of how he comported himself among them we have a specimen in the incident related in the Analects, XVII. i.— ‘Yang Ho wished to see Confucius, but Confucius would not go to see him. On this, he sent a present of a pig to Confucius, who, having chosen a time when Ho was not at home, went to pay his respects for the gift. He met him, however, on the way. “Come, let me speak with you,” said the officer. “Can he be called benevolent, who keeps his jewel in his bosom, and leaves his country to confusion?” Confucius replied, “No.” “Can he be called wise, who is anxious to be engaged in public employment, and yet is constantly losing the opportunity of being so?” Confucius again said, “No.” The other added, “The days and months are passing away; the years do not wait for us.” Confucius said, “Right; I will go into office.”’ Chinese writers are eloquent in their praises of the sage for the combination of propriety, complaisance and firmness, which they see in his behavior in this matter. To myself there seems nothing remarkable in it but a somewhat questionable dexterity. But it was well for the fame of Confucius that his time was not occupied during those years with official services. He turned them to

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