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BOOK III.

TANG WAN KUNG. PART I.

CHAPTER I. 1. When the duke Wan of Tang was Crown-prince, having to go to Ts'oo, he went by way of Sung, and visited Mencius.

2. Mencius discoursed to him how the nature of man is good, and, when speaking, always made laudatory reference to Yaou and Shun.

3. When the Crown-prince was returning from Ts'oo. he again visited Mencius. Mencius said to him, "Prince, do you doubt my words? The path is one, and only

one.

4. "Shing Kan said to the duke king of Ts'e, 'They were men. I am a man. Why should I stand in awe of them?' Yen Yuen said, 'What kind of man was Shun? What kind of man am I? He who exerts himself will also become such as he was.' Kung-ming E said, 'King Wan is my teacher. How should the duke of Chow deceive me by those words?'

5. "Now, Tang, taking its length with its breadth, will amount, I suppose, to fifty le. It is small, but still sufficient to make a good kingdom. It is said in the Book of History, 'If medicine do not raise a commotion in the patient, his disease will not be cured by it.""

II. 1. When the duke Ting of Tang died, the Crown-prince said to Yen Yew, "Formerly, Mencius spoke with me in Sung, and in my mind I have never forgotten his words. Now, alas! this great duty to my father devolves upon me; I wish to send you to ask the advice of Mencius, and then to proceed to its va rious services."

they should be buried according to prop should be sacrificed to according to may be called filial piety. The cerem served by the princes I have not learn heard these points:-that the three y the garment of coarse cloth with its lo and the eating of congee, were equally three dynasties, and binding on all, fro to the mass of the people."

3. Yen Yew reported the execution sion, and the prince determined that t mourning should be observed. His age the body of the officers, did not wish th so, and said, "The former princes of Lo which we honour, have, none of them practice, neither have any of our own fo served it. For you to act contrary to not proper. Moreover, the History say servances of mourning and sacrifice, an followed,' meaning that they received t a proper source to hand them down."

4. The prince said again to Yen Y have not given myself to the pursuit have found my pleasure in horsemans exercise, and now I don't come up to tl aged relatives and the officers. I am a up be able to discharge my duty in the gr I have entered on; do you again cons me." On this, Yen Yew went again to sulted Mencius. Mencius said, "It is

not seek a remedy in others, but only in himself. Confucius said, 'When a prince dies, his successor entrusts the administration to the prime minister. He sips the congee. His face is of a deep black. He approaches the place of mourning, and weeps. Of all the officers and inferior ministers there is not one who will presume not to join in the lamentation, he setting them this example. What the superior man loves, his inferiors will be found to love exceedingly. The relation between superiors and inferiors is like that between the wind and grass. The grass must bend, when the wind blows upon it.' The business depends on the prince."

5. Yen Yew returned with this answer to his commission, and the prince said, "It is so. The matter does indeed depend on me." So for five months he dwelt in the shed, without issuing an order or a caution. All the officers and his relatives said, "He may be said to understand the ceremonies." When the time of interment arrived, from all quarters of the state, they came to witness it. Those who had come from other states to condole with him, were greatly pleased with the deep dejection of his countenance, and the mournfulness of his wailing and weeping.

III. 1. The duke Wan of Tang asked Mencius about the proper way of governing a kingdom.

2. Mencius said, "The business of the people may not be remissly attended to. It is said in the Book of Poetry,

In the day-light go and gather the grass,

And at night twist your ropes;

Then get up quickly on the roofs;

Soon must we begin sowing again the grain.'

3. "The way of the people is this. If they have a certain livelihood, they will have a fixed heart. If they have not a certain livelihood, they have not a fixed heart. And if they have not a fixed heart, there is

nothing which they will not do in the way of self-abandonment, of moral deflection, of depravity, and of wild license. When they have thus been involved in crime, to follow them up and punish them:-this is to entrap the people. How can such a thing as entrapping the people be done under the rule of a benevolent man?

4. "Therefore, a ruler who is endowed with talents and virtue will be gravely complaisant and economical, showing a respectful politeness to his ministers, and taking from the people only in accordance with regulated limits.

5. "Yang Hoo said, 'He who seeks to be rich will not be benevolent. He who wishes to be benevolent will not be rich.'

6. "The sovereign of the Hea dynasty enacted the fifty mow allotment, and the payment of a tax. The founder of the Yin enacted the seventy mow allotment, and the system of mutual aid. The founder of the Chow enacted the hundred mow allotment, and the share system. In reality, what was paid in all these was a tithe. The share system means mutual division. The aid system means mutual dependence.

7. "Lung said, 'For regulating the lands, there is no better system than that of mutual aid, and none which is not better than that of taxing. By the tax system, the regular amount was fixed by taking the average of several years. In good years, when the grain lies about in abundance, much might be taken without its being oppressive, and the actual exaction would be small. But in bad years, the produce being not sufficient te repay the manuring of the fields, this system still requires the taking of the full amount. When the parent of the people causes the people to wear looks of distress, and, after the whole year's toil, yet not to be able to nourish their parents, so that they proceed to borrowing to increase their means, till the old people

and children are found lying in the ditches and waterchannels-where, in such a case, is his parental relation to the people?'

8. "As to the system of hereditary salaries, that is already observed in Tang.'

9. "It is said in the Book of Poetry,

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May the rain come down on our public field,
And then upon our private fields!'

It is only in the system of mutual aid that there is a public field, and from this passage we perceive that even in the Chow dynasty this system has been recognized.

10. "Establish tseang, seu, heo, and heaou,—all those educational institutions,-for the instruction of the people. The name tseang indicates nourishing as its object; heaou indicates teaching; and seu indicates archery; By the Hea dynasty, the name heaou was used; by the Yin, that of seu; and by the Chow, that of ts'eang. As to the heo, they belonged to the three dynasties, and by that name. The object of them all is to illustrate the human relations. When those are thus illustrated by superiors, kindly feeling will prevail among the inferior people below.

11. "Should a real sovereign arise, he will certainly come and take an example from you; and thus you will be the teacher of the true sovereign. 12. "It is said in the Book of Poetry,

'Although Chow was an old country,

It received a new destiny.'

That is said with reference to king Wan. Do you practise those things with vigour, and you also will by them make new your kingdom."

13. The duke afterwards sent Peih Chen to consult Mencius about the nine-squares system of dividing the land. Mencius said to him," Since your prince, wishing to put in practice a benevolent government, has made choice of you and put you into this employment, you

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