CHINA AND THE MANCHUSFROM THE EARLIEST TIMES TO THE BEGINNING OF THE MING DYNASTY A.D 1368BY
HERBERT H. GOWEN
“IN THE BEGINNING”
The subject of Chinese origins is, to say the least, a
thorny one, and the discussion of it in any detail would take us out of
the uncertain mists of legend into the yet more uncertain mists of theory and
conjecture. Some maintain that the Chinese entered their present
abode from the north-west; others that, so far as anything shows to the
contrary, they have occupied their present abodes from time immemorial.
The latest authority on the subject writes: “Whether the Chinese were
seated in their later homes from time immemorial, as their own historians
assume, or whether they arrived there from abroad, as some foreign
scholars have pretended, cannot be proved to the satisfaction of
historical critics. Indeed, anthropological arguments seem to contradict
the idea of any connection with Babylonians, Egyptians, Assyrians or Indians.” Nevertheless, it is not unreasonable to suppose that in the
great shifting of peoples caused by the influx of Semitic tribes into the
Euphrates Valley about B. C. 4000, the Turanian civilization, known as Sumerian, may have so far pushed eastwards as to
have influenced the peopling of the present north-west provinces of China.
It is quite possible to conceive of the arrival there of whole
populations who had acquired the old civilization, or of the transmission
of the elements of Sumerian culture through individual fugitives. At any
rate, the distinguishing traits of the Chinese, their industry, their
agricultural skill, their arts, methods of divination,
primitive ideographs, and general peace-loving disposition are not unlike
traits which reveal themselves among the pre-Semitic dwellers in the
Euphrates Valley. A careful analysis of the oldest ideograms reveals that
the matriarchate prevailed, that divination by means of the tortoise shell
was in common use, that the male child was valued for his capacity
for field work, that the north was regarded as the land upon which they
had turned their backs, the south the jungle inhabited by wild
beasts, while the east appeared to them as a forest through which the
rising sun cast its rays. Many signs suggest a pastoral stage. The
radical for “sheep” (yong) appears in the word
“beautiful” which is literally “big sheep”; “righteousness” is “sheep” and
the first personal pronoun; “to judge rightly” is literally “to talk
sheep.” The symbol for “house,” preserved in so many of the modern characters,
perpetuates the sloping roof of the old Central Asian tent with the turned up edges still to be seen in pagodas and
temples. The pastoral stage must have passed quickly, so far as
the Chinese proper are concerned, for the occupation is one for which the
Chinese of many generations have had a distinct aversion.
In any attempt that we make to reproduce in
imagination the China of old time it must be remembered that it included but a
small portion of the present eighteen provinces. The earliest China
probably extended little beyond the present provinces of Shan-si, Shen-si and Kan-suh. It was not until the time of the Tsin Dynasty (B. C. 250) 4hat the whole of the present
China came under one government.
The legendary history of China extends over many
millions of years. In the chronicles of the Han Dynasty it is said that “from the creation to the capture of the lin in the days of Confucius (B. C. 481) a period elapsed of 2,267,000
and odd years.” Of course, as Mayers remarks,
“no actual weight is attached even by Chinese writers to the statements
handed down by the fabulists of antiquity regarding prehistoric epochs and
dynastic lines.” From the time of the first man, Pan-ku,
who corresponds more or less with the Indian Manu and the Persian Yima, some have reckoned as many as ninety-six millions of years. Pan ku separated heaven and earth, as was done in the Egyptian story of
Nut and Keb. A philosopher of the 11th
Century describes him thus: “Pan ku came into being in
the great Waste; his beginning is unknown. He understood the ways of
Heaven and Earth and comprehended the permutations of the
two principles of Nature. He became the Chief and Prince of the Three
Powers. Hereupon development began from Chaos.” Dr. Williams says: “They (the Chinese artists) picture him holding a
chisel and mallet in his hands, splitting and fashioning vast masses of granite floating confusedly in space. Behind
the openings his powerful hand has made are seen the sun, moon and stars,
monuments of his stupendous labors; at his right
hand, inseparable companions of his toils, but whose generation is left in
obscurity, stand the dragon, the phoenix and the
tortoise, and sometimes the unicorn, divine types and progenitors with
himself of the animal creation. His efforts were continued eighteen
thousand years, and by small degrees he and his work increased; the heavens rose, the earth spread out and thickened, and Pwan ku grew in stature,
six feet away every day, till, his labors done,
he died for the benefit of his handiwork. His head became mountains, his
breath wind and clouds, and his voice thunder; his limbs were changed
into four poles, his veins into rivers, his sinews into the
undulations of the earth’s surface, and his flesh into fields; his beard,
like Berenice’s hair, was turned into stars, his skin and hair into
herbs and trees, and his teeth, bones and marrow into metals, rocks
and precious stones; his dropping sweat increased to rain, and, lastly,
the insects which stuck to his body were transformed into people.”
The Three August Periods. After Pan ku follow three periods which may be described
as follows:
1. The Reign of Heaven, during which the ‘heavens
were actually formed.
2. The Reign of Earth, during which the earth
received its shape.
3. The Reign of Man, during which men and other
terrestrial beings took their proper place in the universe.
In the first of these periods twelve brothers reigned
as the Tien Wang or Heaven Kings, each for a period of 18,000 years, a
monstrous brood with the body of serpents.
In the second period reigned the eleven brothers,
known as the Ti Wang, or Earth Kings, who
discovered the division of day and night, and the division of the year
into months of thirty days. These too were a monstrous progeny
made up of the membra disjecta of dragons, serpents, horses and human beings.
In the third period reigned the nine Jin Wang, or Man Kings, with faces of men and bodies
of dragons or serpents. They divided the world into nine empires, one
for each of the monstrous brothers.
The Ten Periods of Ascent. Ten periods follow, or
nine, if we regard the whole of the preceding epoch as making up the first,
during which human civilization is seen on the ascent. We see men
gradually ceasing to live in caves of the rocks, or nests of the trees. We
see them learning to clothe themselves in the skins of beasts. We have
culture myths, moreover, like that of the Chinese Prometheus, Sui-jin, who discovered the means of producing fire, by
watching a bird pecking at the dry branch of a tree. The invention of
cooking followed, possibly in a way not unlike that described by Charles
Lamb in his famous essay on roast pig. Then came other arts of life, including that of dancing which, we are told, came into
vogue not as an amusement but as an hygienic
exercise. It is perhaps permissible to regard this statement as an
afterthought on the part of some austere philosopher or
moralist. There was learned withal the principle which has had such
continuous illustration throughout all Chinese history, namely, “the
virtue of handing over the throne to a successor, which stands in relation
with the principles of heaven.”
THE FIVE RULERS
The so-called period of the Five Rulers may be
regarded as marking the transition from the legendary to the
historical period. There are, however, several dissimilar systems of
chronology for it. Some Chinese authorities reckon from the age of the Nest
Builders, others from various others of those legendary divisions of time
which have just been mentioned. The best method of reckoning, in all
probability, is to start from the culture hero, Fu-hsi,
and to make up the five by the inclusion of Fu-hsi’s two
semi-mythical successors, Shen-nung and Hwang-ti, and the two Emperors par excellence of the
Shu-King, Yao and Shun.
The greatest of all the traditional benefactors of the
legendary era of Chinese history is Fu-hsi, who by
many is reckoned as a genuine historical character. Definite
statements are made about him, although definiteness of statement is
by no means invariably a proof of historicity. He is said to have been
born, miraculously, near Singan-fu, the ancient
capital of China, and in the same neighborhood,
in the province of Shensi, his grave is still pointed out and reverenced. His
date is also given definitely enough as B. C.
2852. Yet the Chinese accounts describe him as possessing a body which
terminated in the scaly folds of a serpent, and as having six dragons (the
predecessors of the Six Governing Boards) as his counsellors. He is
represented in art with the horny protuberances which in the case of
Oriental law-givers generally (even in the case
of Moses, according to Michelangelo) are regarded as the symbols of
intellectual power. Among the many useful inventions ascribed to Fu-hsi by a grateful posterity, are the following:
1. Marriage, together with the ceremonies with which
marriage was contracted.
2. Musical Instruments, especially the thirty-five
stringed lute.
3. The Eight Trigrams, and arrangement of the
whole and the broken line in a series of eight permutations, each the
symbol of some element in nature, on which was based in later times
the whole complex system of Chinese divination as contained in the Yi-King.
4. Writing, the use of ideograms instead of the
more primitive system of knot notation, known in ancient Peru as quipu.
This invention is, however, ascribed also to Sui-jin and to several others.
5. The use of the Six Domestic Animals, namely,
the horse, the dog, the ox, the sheep, the pig and the fowl.
6. The use of the Mulberry Leaf for the feeding of silk worms.
To Fu-hsi are also ascribed
the weaving of nets and snares for the catching of fish, the worship of the
Supreme Being, whom they called Shong-ti, and
whatever of other fruits or indications of civilization there were for which
the Chinese desired to claim a very remote past.
Shen-nung. B. C. 2737-2705.
The successor of Fu-hsi, who
selected him when dying, was Shen-nung, generally
known as the “Divine Husbandman.” He is depicted with the body of a
man and the head of an ox, doubtless in allusion to his interest in
agriculture. It is related that he was the son of a princess,
and was miraculously born near the river Kiang. “He first
fashioned timber into ploughs, and taught the
people the art of husbandry. He discovered the curative virtues of plants, and instituted the practice of holding markets
for the exchange of commodities.” Moreover he contests
with Fu-hsi interest in the development of music, as
the traditional inventor of the K’in, or five
stringed lute.
Hwang-ti. B. C. 2704-2595.
Hwang-ti, the “Yellow
Emperor,” succeeded Shen-nung, according to one
story, by usurpation. He is said to have introduced the use of wheeled vehicles
and to have invented ships, armor and pottery. In his reign a manifestation was vouchsafed of the two
fabulous beasts, the Griffin and the Ki Lin, a highly valued indication of
Heaven’s pleasure in a wise and benevolent rule. The limits of
China are said to have been extended during this reign eastwards to
Shan-tung and southward to the Yang-tsze-kiang
valley. Hwang-ti died at the age of 111 years.
The Chinese historian, Sze Ma Tsien, known as
the “Herodotus of China,” commences his history at this point. Some
modern writers, without very tangible evidence, have seen an
introduction of foreign elements of civilization into China about this
time. The mention of the hostile Hun-yu,
generally identified with the Hiung-nu, the
ancestors of the Huns, suggests danger and pressure from the tribes to the
north. Internally, some further advances are described, including the
use of milfoil (Achillea millefolium) for purposes of divination.4 The
legendary minister, Tsang Kie, who is spoken of as
the first state historian, is one of the many to whom has been
assigned the invention of writing. From watching the impressions made by
the footprints of birds he is said to have developed a system of
ideographs which combined the use of the trigrams of Fu-hsi. His fellow minister, Tsu-sung,
is reported to have achieved much the same result from studying the
constellations in the heavens. An important place also in the traditions
of this reign is occupied by the Emperor’s wife,
Liu Tsu, better known as “the Lady of Si-ling,” whose
skill in the management of silk-worms endeared her to posterity. She was
afterwards deified as Yuan-fi and is worshiped on a certain day in the 9th
month. In the Wei-ki she is referred to in the following verse:
“Si-ling-shi, the Empress of
Hwang-ti, began to rear silkworms:
At this period Hwang ti invented the art of making clothing.”
The immediate successors of Hwang-ti need not be mentioned. Chinese history, but for names, is a blank till we
come to the two “Model Emperors” of the Confucian Classics, Yao and
Shun. With the description of these reigns, doubtless idealized by
the literati, begins the record of the Shu-King or “Book of History.”
Yao. B. C. 2357-2258.
Yao, who is said to have been born in the province of
Ho-nan and to have been the son of the Emperor Ti K’u, is described as being “gifted without being proud, and exalted without being insolent. He wore
a yellow cap and a plain silk dress. He drove in a red car drawn by a
white horse.” Says the Shu-King, “he united and transformed the
myriad states; and so the black haired people
were transformed. The result was concord.” His desire, during the long
reign of ninety-eight (some make it only seventy) years, for the welfare
of the people was shown by the placing of a tablet outside the palace
on which anyone night write advice with regard to the
government. A drum near by enabled the man with a
grievance to make known his desires to the king. The most striking proof,
however, of Yao’s laudable desire to serve the people is afforded through
the account given of the choice of Shun as his successor on the throne.
For some years the ravages of a great flood, caused probably, as today, by
the overflowing of the Hwang-ho, had defied the
utmost efforts of the Minister of Works, whose name was Kun. At length the monarch, grieved by the growing
desolation of the realm, requested the people to name someone who would
make himself master of the situation. They recommended “an unmarried man
of the common people named Shun.” Shun was found to be the son of a
blind man; “his father was unprincipled, his mother insincere, and his
younger brother arrogant.” Yet, notwithstanding all these handicaps, he
had been able to live with them in peace and had even brought about
some improvement. Yao concluded to try him and the
experiment was in every way successful. Everything that Shun
attempted prospered. “At the end of the year the place where he lived
became a village, in two years it became a town, and in three years a
capital.” Shun’s association in the Empire was
ratified; he was received by marriage into the royal family, and named by Yao as his heir. But though men looked forward with confident
expectation to the reign of Shun, there was universal sorrow when the good
King Yao was gathered to his fathers. “For three years,” we are told, “no
music was played anywhere.”
Shun. B. C. 2258-2206.
Shun who, as we have seen, was chosen by Yao for his
good qualities, became sovereign in B. C. 2258 instead of Yao’s worthless
son, Tan-chu. He speedily justified the old Emperor’s choice and the
reputation he had already gained during the years of regency. His career,
which is described in that section of the “Shu-King” known as the “Canon
of Shun,” largely follows the outlines of the preceding reign. To the
details already given of his earlier life we may add that he was born in
Ho-nan and that his own mother had died whilst he was still young.
His father remarried and the boy had with his stepmother a “sad, sour
time.” Attempts were even made on his life, but he behaved with such
exemplary patience that he attracted, as we have seen, the attention of
Yao. For his conduct as a young man Shun has been enrolled among the
twenty-four illustrious examples of filial piety. He labored incessantly to support those who abused him, fishing, making pottery
and working in the fields. When he was plowing,
the birds and beasts are said to have come of their own accord to
weed his fields and help to draw the plow. On
ascending the throne his virtues were equally evident, and loyal subjects
helped to bear the burdens of the state. He regulated the Calendar,
standardized weights and measures, and made mitigations of the punishments
hitherto in vogue, altering the size of the whip which was used in
the courts and the thickness of the birch rod which was employed for the
chastisement of school boys. His choice of Yu to
be his successor followed the precedent of Yao’s selection of himself. The
story of this early period may seem thus far to lack excitement, yet
surely it is better to read these records of patriarchal regard for the welfare
of a nation, and of the gradually accumulated fruits of culture, than the
stories of rapine and bloodshed which fill so many pages of the early
history of Greece and Rome. Shun put his own ideal of rulership in a poem
which is included in the “Shu-King.” It runs as follows:
“When the members work joyfully
The head rises grandly;
And the duties of all the offices are fully discharged ;
When the head is intelligent
The members are good,
And all affairs will be happily performed.”
THE HIA DYNASTY
B. C. 2205-1766.
Yu.
The principality of Hia had
been bestowed upon Yu before the death of Shun, and the new King, immediately
upon ascending the throne, made it the name of the new dynasty. Like
his two predecessors, Yu was a “Model Emperor.” “His voice was the standard of
sounds, his body the standard of measures of length.” He is said to
have been a native of the province of Sze-ch’uen.
His exploits, which are chronicled in that section of the “Shu-King” known
as the “Tribute of Yu,” redounded to the advantage of the whole
country. He placed five sorts of instruments at his palace gates so that the
people who sought his presence might acquaint him with the nature of
their business. He divided the country into nine provinces and so arranged
the Imperial domain that it formed the central square of a series of
concentric territories. These were named respectively: 1, the royal
domain; 2, 33 the domain of the nobles; 3, the domain of
peace; 4, the domain of restraint (for barbarians and exiles); 5, the
wild domain. He was a great engineer and labored for
nine years at the work of leading the waters of the Hwang-ho back to their proper channel. During this time he was so absorbed that he took little note of food and
clothing and even thrice passed the door of his own house without looking
in, although he heard from within the wailing of his infant son. He
“made cuttings through the nine mountains, formed the nine lakes,
regulated the course of the nine rivers, fixed the limits of the nine
provinces.” “Among the most marvelous of the
achievements ascribed to the handiwork of Yu,” says Mayers, “is
the opening of a passage for the western waters through the present defile
of Wu Shan.” His ideal is expressed in the saying which has been
attributed to him, “I just think of working incessantly every day.”
Evidently his industry was appreciated, for the Chinese saying
runs, “How grand was the achievement of Yu! How far reaching his
glorious energy! But for Yu we should all have been fishes.” Under this
energetic and earnest monarch China prospered greatly and the dominion was
extended westward to the “moving sand” (the desert of Gobi), whilst
the Miao tribes of aborigines were subdued towards the south. In
connection with the division of the land into the nine provinces the story may
be mentioned that Yu made nine brazen vases or
tripods upon the preservation of which depended the
preservation of the dynasty. Another interesting legend associates Yu with
the first discovery of wine. The first manufacture was due to a man named
I Ti who took some to the daughter of the Emperor. She in turn brought it to Yu who tasted it and
poured the rest upon the ground. He then ordered the discoverer to
be banished from the country and forbade any further knowledge of the
dangerous art.
The Successors of Yu.
Eighteen monarchs reigned during the period assigned
to this dynasty. The era was, however, not without its vicissitudes. T’ai K’ang, who as the
assistant of Yu, is said to have paced the whole land from east to
west, offended the people by his gay mode of living and ruined their
harvests by his hunting expeditions. He was dethroned in B. C. 2160. His
successor, Chung K’ang, is best known through an
eclipse which was chronicled in his reign and which the court astronomers
had failed to predict. Modern astronomers have spent much labor, with no very satisfactory results, in endeavoring to fix the date of this event.
An interregnum is reckoned from B. C. 2218 to 2079 and the dynasty
gradually declined until the end came under the infamous Kie. This tyrant, with the aid of his no less infamous
consort, Mei-hi, a slave who had been presented to him in B. C. 1786
by one of the conquered chiefs as a propitiatory offering, filled full the cup
of abominations. Among other choice amusements of this Chinese Nero was
the creation of a vast lake of wine in which he would compel his subjects,
three thousand at a time, to plunge at the sound of a drum, whilst he
and his queen and courtiers laughed with delight at their brutal
intoxication. The downfall and death of the last of the Hia Kings were brought about through a
revolution headed by Cheng T’ang, the founder of
the dynasty of Shang. The tyrant, Kie Kwei, was captured and sent into banishment.
THE SHANG DYNASTY
B. C. 1766-1122.
Ch’eng T’ang.
The founder of the dynasty of Shang, which is also
called the Yin dynasty, is another favorite of
the Confucian historians. He had, we are told, graven upon his bath
the words, thrice repeated, “Renew thyself every day.” He was careful
in all his hunting expeditions to diminish in all possible ways the sufferings
of the victims such as were necessitated by the royal sport. His especial
title to fame is, however, in his offer to yield himself as a sacrifice in order to bring to an end a severe seven years’
famine which had reduced the country to great extremities of distress.
Putting on the symbols of mourning, he mounted his car and drove to a
certain designated spot at the foot of a mountain. Here he dismounted,
prostrated himself to the earth and made confession of his own sins
and of those of the people. Hardly had he finished his prayer when there
came an abundant rain and the land speedily
recovered its former fertility. The credit for T’ang’s successful reign must be shared with the famous minister, I Yin, who was,
it is said, “almost what Shun had been to Yao, and Yao to Shun.”
A legend declares that he was found as an infant in a hollow mulberry
tree, a story probably due to the name of his birthplace. His enemies
said that he owed his elevation to his skill in cooking, through
which he maintained his influence over his royal master. But, cook or no cook, he remained a trusted councilor until his death in B. C. 1713.
As in the case of the Hia dynasty, vicious kings soon dimmed the glory of the dynasty which had been
won by T’ang, the Completer, and ruined the
results painfully achieved. Wu T’ing tried his
best to stay the plague of wickedness by going back to the people for
his chief official, choosing as minister a poor
artisan whom, under divine inspiration, he had beheld in a dream. Lin-sin (B.
C. 1225-1219) put all responsibility on his ministers and refused
frankly to be bothered with any of the duties or cares of government. Wu-yih (B. C. 1198-1194) openly defied the gods
and blasphemed the spirit of Heaven. “He played chess with it and
told a man to make its moves. When the spirit of Heaven lost, he derided
and insulted it; and making for it a leathern bag, he filled it with blood, hung it up in the air, and shot arrows
at it.” Poetic justice, in this case, came with no halting foot, and the
blasphemous libertine was struck by lightning and died.
Chou-sin. B. C. 1154-1123.
The climax of evil came with the reign of Chou-sin, or
Shu, whose career of infamy runs in many respects parallel with that
of Kie Kwei. The list of
his enormities is summed up in the “Great Declaration” of the Shu-King.
The good advice of the faithful minister and relative, Pi-kan, he requited with the brutal order addressed to
his minions to take out the heart of the courageous councilor. “I
have heard,” said he, “that a man’s heart has seven openings; I would fain
make the experiment upon Pi-kan.” The palace and the
pleasure grounds, known as Luh T’ai or Deer Tower, were the unhallowed scenes of nameless orgies. To
these he was stimulated and encouraged by his mistress, T’a-ki, one of the most sinister names in the history
of China. This lady, who was a daughter of the chief of Su and a prize of war, distinguished herself by the
invention of sundry ingenious instruments of torture. Among these
were the “Heater” and the “Copper Pillar.” The latter was a metal column, well greased, which was laid over a pit of burning
charcoal. The unhappy victims of the royal caprice or mirth were
pressingly invited to walk across this fatal bridge, with a result which
was as pleasurable to the royal libertines as it was disastrous to
themselves.
The Revolt of Wen Wang.
At length the
cruelties of Chou-sin exhausted the patience of the princes and the people.
A revolt broke out headed by Chang, Duke of Chou, known also as Si Peh, “the Chief of the West,” and better still by the
name given to him on canonization, Wen Wang. The tyrant in desperate
straits showed some last flicker of courage. To the assembled troops
he gave the following singular advice: “In today’s business do not take
more than six or seven steps, then stop and dress your ranks. Heroes,
exert yourselves! Do not exceed four, five, six or seven strokes, then
stop and dress your ranks. Exert yourselves, heroes! Put on a terrible
look! Be like tigers, bears, wolves, and dragons in the neighborhood of Sheng.” When this remarkable
army was put to flight in the battle of “the ford of Meng,” Chou-sin
decked himself in all his jewels, mounted the marble tower he had
built for his mistress in the notorious pleasure gardens of Luh T’ai and there, like another Zimri or Sardanapalus, set fire to the palace and cast himself alive into the
flames. In this way Chou-sin put an end at once to his own not very
valuable existence and to the dynasty which had begun so gloriously. The favorite, T’a-ki, who had
had so large a share in precipitating the disaster, was captured and
beheaded. It is said that so great was the influence of the personal
charm of this Chinese Circe to the very last that no one could be found to
deal the fatal stroke, until the aged councilor of Wu Wang, whose name was T’ai Kung, stepped
forward and, covering up his face, made himself the avenger of a
nation’s wrongs. The accumulated treasures of the “Deer Tower” gardens were
distributed by the conqueror to the people from whose spoliation they had
been acquired.
Ki-tsze. Ki-tsze, one of the vainly protesting ministers of the
defeated Chou-sin, deserves to be mentioned, if not as the author of one
of the most important sections of the “Shu-King,” as the real founder
of the civilization of Korea. He was, like Pi-kan,
allied to the Emperor by blood, but, with his two
fellow ministers, Pi-kan and Wei-tsze, was imprisoned by his fatuous kinsman when he refused
to remain silent with regard to the fatal folly which was threatening the
fall of the dynasty. The two fellow-prisoners perished, but Ki-tsze was released from prison on the accession of the
first Chou sovereign. He was promised rank and office under the new
dynasty, but his sturdy loyalty to his first allegiance prevailed and he
preferred expatriation. Korea was the land to which he turned.
The legendary history of this country goes back as far as B. C. 2333,
to the time when the Son of the Creator of Heaven came down to a
mountain in the province of Phyong An. Here he
assumed the name of Tan Gun and reigned on earth a thousand years. But it
is Ki-tsze’s migration to Korea and his conquest
of the land, to which he gave the name of Cho-sen,
“Land of the Morning Calm,” which marks the real beginning of Korean
history. It is believed that he came by sea, landed somewhere south of the Han river, and brought with him all the arts of
civilization. He died B. C. 1083 and the dynasty he founded had the
good fortune to survive until B. C. 193.
THE CHOU DYNASTY
B. C. 1122-249.
I.
FROM WU-WANG TO THE FIVE LEADERS
The Chou Dynasty.
The dynasty of Chou is the longest lived of all the
imperial lines in the history of China and includes the reigns
of thirty-five sovereigns, aggregating a total of nearly nine
centuries. The period as a whole reveals a gradual
weakening of the central authority by reason of the increase of power in the
vassal and confederate states. The number of these at one time was as many
as a hundred and twenty-five and even in the time of Confucius there
were fifty-two. Wars continued for the greater portion of the time,
against the Huns on the northern frontier and against the aboriginal
tribes south of the Yang-tsze-kiang. An
important feature of the epoch is in the gradual enforcement of the
(so-called) Confucian system under a series of able teachers, philosophers and administrators. These include such men as
the sage, Confucius, himself, and his great disciple and interpreter,
Mencius. Towards the end of the Chou dynasty there are some indications of
reaction against this system through the pressure of forces such as were
doubtless reinforced by the infusion of a strong Tatar element from
the north. These forces indeed triumphed for a time in the overthrow
of the Chous and the establishment of the Tsin dynasty, but ultimately the foreign elements were
themselves assimilated to the Confucian ideal.
Wen Wang. B. C. 1231-1135.
The real
founder of this dynasty was the Ch’ang, Duke
of Chou, of whom we have already spoken as heading the revolt against
Chou-sin. He had been hereditary prince of the principality of Ch’i
and was thrown into prison by the tyrant as suspect and dangerous. In
prison he utilized two years and attained fame as the author of a work on
the Sixty-four Hexagrams which had been evolved from the Eight
Trigrams of Fu-hsi. This treatise, together with the
additions made through the filial affection of his son, the great duke of
Chou, constitutes that most bewildering of all the Confucian classics
known as the Yi-King, or Book of Changes. Wen Wang’s literary labors were, however, no barrier to his fitness for
military achievement. Through the intercession of the people who
loved him and because of the promise to get for the Emperor a beautiful concubine and some splendid horses from the west, he was
after two years released from prison and sent west to fight the
frontier tribes. But he soon returned and headed the revolt against
Chou-sin with the result that has already been recorded. He “found
the people hanging head downwards and set them on their feet” and was known
to all future times as Wen Wang, “the Martial.”
Wu Wang. Wu Wang, or Fa, his son, became the first
reigning sovereign of the Chou line, which, as we have seen, received its
name from the Duchy of Chou on the western frontier. He seems to have
been a genuinely great monarch, commencing his rule with generous actions
and a conciliatory attitude towards the conquered. He opened the
prisons which were doubtless filled with the victims of Chou-sin’s tyranny and also the granaries whose contents at this juncture were
badly needed. In the proclamation which he made exposing the misdeeds of
the late dynasty, the following is spoken of as one of the crimes of
Chou-sin: “He has put men into office on the hereditary principle,”—a
striking testimony to the essentially democratic character of the
early Chinese government. Wu Wang established his capital at Singan-fu, a city which had the honor of
being the center of government at several subsequent epochs, and was the natural refuge for the Emperor and
Empress Dowager during the months following the Boxer revolt of 1900.
Wu Wang also reformed the calendar, created schools of various
grades, and made other memorable improvements in methods Qf government and administration.
Chou Kung.
The great glory of the reign of Wu Wang was the
character and statesmanship of the King's brother, Tan, better known as
Chou Kung, “the Duke of Chou.” We may call him the Duke of Chou par
excellence, for he is included by Mencius in the number of the
“Three Great Sages” of China, of whom the other two are Yu, the
patriarch king of the Hia dynasty, and, of
course, Confucius. The philosopher adds the reason for his estimate as
follows: “In former times Yu repressed the vast waters of the inundation and
the empire was reduced to order. Chou Kung’s achievements extended even to the barbarous tribes of the west and north;
he drove away all ferocious animals; and the people enjoyed repose.” He
did even more than his father, Wen Wang, for the perfecting of
the Book of Changes, the “Yi-King,” interpreting the significance of
each line of the hexagram, as his father had interpreted the general
meaning of the whole. As he showed by this voluntary labor his
filial love, so he showed his fraternal love by constituting himself the
pillar of Wu Wang’s throne. He might almost be regarded as the most
potent force in the permanent organization of the Chinese administration
system. His zeal was so great that he received interviewers
even whilst he was having his bath, rushing out holding his wet hair in
his hand rather than keep them waiting. His seriousness is illustrated by his
rebuke of the Emperor for bestowing a
certain symbol of power upon another jokingly. “I was only joking,”
said the prince. “Nay,” replied Chou Kung, “a prince never jokes. His
words are written down as history, take shape as ceremonial rites, or are
set to music and sung.” His delicacy of feeling was shown by his prayer
for the recovery of Wu Wang when the monarch was dangerously ill.
Chou Kung’s appeal to the ancestors and his
divination with the tortoises were regarded as the real cause of the
King’s recovery. The same feeling was shown later on the death of Wu Wang and the accession of the child-king, Cheng Wang. Chou
Kung feared it might be supposed that he was himself aiming at
the supreme power, so, although he was appointed regent, he went
voluntarily into exile to escape suspicion of self-seeking. Fortunately
for the realm, he was recalled when certain impending difficulties
and dangers made his presence once again necessary. To the above catalogue
of the great Duke’s achievements we may add that
he was often described as the inventor of the Mariner’s Compass on the
strength of the mention of a wonderful “south-pointing chariot” which
he devised to assist the return of the envoys from Tonkin to their
own home. The reference, however, is of a very doubtful meaning.
The Chou li.
Of more authenticity and even value, as an
achievement, may be credited to Chou Kung the composition of the “Chou
li,” or “Ceremonial of Chou,” a book describing in detail the organization
of the Government at this epoch. Of this work Professor Hirth has written: “As an educator of the nation the
‘Chou li’ has probably not its like among the
literatures of the world, not excepting even the Bible.” Whether in
its present form it can be regarded as the work of Chou Kung is at least
doubtful, but it may certainly be considered as reflecting the spirit
of his administration.
It contains, for the first time, the categorical
division of the people into nine classes, in the following order: landlords,
gardeners, woodmen, livestock-keepers, artisans, merchants,
housewives, servants, and those without fixed professions.
The chief honor is thereby
given to those who cultivate the soil and the status
of the merchant is low, because he is a middleman, not a
producer. The “Chou li” also describes in detail the duties of the
Six Boards which are as follows:
1. The Mandarin of Heaven, with general supervision
over all government, the regulation of the dress, food and all the
activities of the Emperor.
2. The Mandarin of Earth, responsible for the
welfare of the people. Among the numerous responsibilities of this Board
was a fairly comprehensive one with regard to
marriages. It was supposed to see to it that every girl was married by the
time she was twenty and every man by the time he was thirty.
3. The Mandarin of Spring, in charge of
all religious rites, and ceremonies associated with the observance of
the seasons, divinations and astrological investigations.
4. The Mandarin of Summer, the Board of War,
providing detailed instructions for the raising and equipment of troops.
5. The Mandarin of Autumn, the Board of Justice,
regulating all punishments.
6. The Mandarin of Winter, the Board of Public
Works.
These six Boards remained substantially in this order
of importance until the creation of the Wai-wu-pu, or Board of Foreign Affairs in 1900. The Wai-wu-pu now takes precedence of all
but the first.
Cheng Wang and His Successors.
Chou Kung died in the year B. C. 1105 and was
buried, as he deserved, with royal honors and
amid the lamentation of the whole nation. The kings who succeeded Wu
Wang must be passed over with but slight notice. Perhaps we lose little by
the omissions. Cheng Wang selected a new capital, Loh Yang, the present city of Ho-nan-fu, a city which, like Singan-fu, had its vicissitudes. Chao-Wang, B. C.
1052-1002, helps to illustrate the growing importance of popular feeling.
He drew down on himself much ill will because of the heedlessness with
which, when engaged in war or hunting, he trampled down the crops of his
subjects. For this they revenged themselves in the following summary manner:
On the king requiring to cross a certain river, the
people provided him with a boat so constructed as to come apart in
the middle of the stream. The king managed to swim ashore, but he died not
very long after, either as a result of the
wetting or through another similar “accident.”.
Muh Wang, who succeeded Chao-Wang and reigned from B. C.
1001 to 947, deserves mention on account of his travels. With his
charioteer Tsao-Fu and his eight marvelous horses he went “wherever wheelruts ran and the
hoofs of horses had trodden.” The book giving an account of these
adventures only dates, however, from the second or third century B. C., so
that there is considerable room for doubt. One interesting visit was to
the Si-Wang-Mu or “Royal Lady of the West.” The identity of this princess
is one of the mysteries of history and Taoist writers have woven
around the story a mass of marvelous fairy lore,
describing the Queen as inhabiting a magnificent mountain palace, hard by
which was the Lake of Gems and the Peach Tree of Immortality from whose
branches flew azure-winged birds on errands of love. Here she lived
surrounded by troops of genii and by and by a consort was found for her in Tung
Wang Kung, the Eastern King Lord. Others have used their imaginations
in a different direction by recognizing in the Si Wang Mu the Queen of
Sheba! While still others have adopted the prosaic explanation that we
have here simply the name of a tribe. Muh-Wang
visited also “the land of moving sands,” and “the land of
heaped-up feathers,” and came to the land “where the green birds cast
their feathers.” The geography of all this is as much a mystery as the
personality of the Royal Lady of the West, but the pride of Persia
has claimed the honor of a visit in
these peregrinations. It is quite possible that by means of some such
expeditions as these referred to there was introduced into China the particular philosophic and religious element which appears a
little later in the teaching of Lao-tsze.
Inferior names succeed to that of Muh-Wang
and the growing inability of the Emperors to manage their vast, feudal domains becomes increasingly evident. Some of
the statesmen, however, seem to have been men of more dignity and resource
than their masters.
Li Wang. B. C. 878-842.
As an example we may take the
story of the Duke of Shau who was minister under
Li Wang. Li Wang disliked and resented the open criticism of his policy
by the people. As a deterrent he ordered all the suspected slanderers
to be seized and executed. This done, criticism was naturally silent and the exultant Emperor exclaimed to his
minister, “Where are all your gossipers now?” The answer was as follows:
“All you have brought about is a screen which prevents you from learning
the real sentiments of the people; but you should know that it is more
dangerous to shut the people’s mouths than to stop the waters of a river.
To stop the progress of a river means to force it to expand and thus do
more harm than if it had been allowed to take its natural course.
Such is the case with your people. If you want to prevent the damage
threatening from the inundation of a river you have to lead it into a proper bed which will hold all its waters; if you want
to make an impression on the people, let them have perfect liberty of
speech.”
Suan Wang. B. C. 827-782.
Suan Wang furnishes another illustration of the danger
of disregarding the popular will and the maintenance of governmental
traditions. “There was a time-honored custom,” says Hirth, “under the Chou dynasty that the Emperor had to perform the ceremony of working in
person in the ‘Fields of a Thousand Acres’ set aside for the
purpose, a ceremony similar to that of the handling of the plow by the Emperor at the present day. Suan Wang
declined to comply with the practice in spite of the remonstrances of his dukes, with the result that in B. C. 789 his army
was defeated in a battle against certain Tangutan tribes. The name of the battle field, according
to Sze Ma Tsien, was Ts’ien mou, which means ‘a thousand acres,’ but it
would appear that the name wras given to the
locality afterwards in commemoration of the Emperor’s disinclination to listen
to his minister’s remonstrations.” Whether due or not to the Emperor’s crimes, a great drought afflicted the land at this
time, and the “Book of Odes” gives us the following fine account of Suan Wang’s expostulation with Heaven.
“Brightly resplendent in the sky revolved
The milky way. The monarch cried, Alas!
What crime is ours, that Heaven thus sends on us
Death and Disorder, that with blow on blow
Famine attacks us? Surely I have grudged
To God no victims; all our
store is spent
On tokens. Why is it I am not heard?
Rages the drought. The hills are parched, and dry
The streams. The demon of the drought
Destroys like one who scatters fiery flames.
Terrified by the burning heat my heart,
My mourning
heart, seems all
consumed with fire.
The many dukes and ministers of the past
Pay me no heed. O God, from thy great heaven
Send me permission to withdraw myself
Into seclusion. Fearful is the drought.
I hesitate, I dread to go away.
Why has this drought been sent upon my land?
No cause for it know I. Full
early rose
My prayers for a good year; not late was I
In off”ring sacrifice unto the Lords
Of the Four Quarters and the land.
Afar In the high Heaven God listens not. And yet
Surely a reverent man as I have been
To all intelligent spirits should not be
The victim of their overwhelming wrath.”
What with physical calamities within and the
increasing troublesomeness of the Huns
without, the military and civil capacity of the rulers of China at
this time was certainly put severely to the test.
Yu Wang. B. C. 781-771.
Suan Wang was succeeded by Yu Wang who reigned just
ten years. There is a presentiment of coming disaster in the story of this
effeminate ruler and his favorite, Pao Sze. Of
mysterious birth, Pao was ordered slain when an infant, but,
wrapped in a piece of matting, she was rescued from the river, put
out to nurse, and later presented to the king because of her great beauty.
She soon displaced the legitimate wife of Yu Wang and caused the
banishment of the heir-apparent. And now no folly
was too great for Yu Wang to perpetrate in order to amuse his mistress, who, for her part, found it by no means easy to
be amused. Because she liked the swishing sound of rending silk, he
ordered the tearing up of large numbers of pieces of the costliest
fabrics. The king had established outposts at which beacon-fires
could be kindled and drums beaten to give warning of the incursions of the
Huns. The melancholy princess could not be induced to smile until she
was permitted to give the order for the lighting of the beacon in order
that she might enjoy the discomfiture of the feudatory princes when
they responded to the false alarm. At length the enemy arrived in reality;
the cry of “Wolf” was given as usual, but this time in vain; no
troops appeared; the king was taken prisoner and slain, and Pao Sze
herself carried off, together with much booty. She is said to have
committed suicide by strangling herself.
In the sixth year of this reign occurred the eclipse
of the sun which gives us our earliest fixed point in Chinese chronology, viz:—Aug. 29, B. C. 766. The reference to the event is
contained in one of the Odes of the Shi King:.
“At the conjunction of the sun and moon in the 10th
month,
On the first day of the moon, which was sin mau,
The sun was eclipsed, a thing of very evil omen.
Then the moon became small, and now the sun became
small,
Henceforth the lower people will be in very deplorable
case.”
P’ing Wang. B. C. 770-720.
P’ing Wang followed his father, Yu, and reigned for the
most part peacefully. But the Chou dynasty was now past its zenith
and, although destined to brave the storms of time for five centuries
longer, the story was to be one of anarchy, assassination, misrule and trouble. The vassal princess became more
and more powerful and therewith more and more independent. They began to
take possession of entire provinces and to govern them without reference to the
decrees of the Emperors. A good illustration in
point is that kingdom of Lu (part of the modern province of
Shan-tung) of which Confucius has given the continuous history for about
two hundred and fifty years, namely, from B. C. 722 to 481. The history
will be found in that one of the Confucian Classics known as Ch’un Tsiu or the Spring and
Autumn Annals.
II.
FROM THE FIVE LEADERS TO THE TSIN EPOCH. B. C.
685-249.
Huan Wang.
The grandson of Ping Wang, Huan Wang, reigned from B.
C. 719 to 679, but “tried in vain to assert his authority among
the contending states.” The history of the next century, i.e. from B. C. 685 to 591, has been entitled the
period of the Five Leaders because it exhibits the rise in succession to
power of the five States of Ts’i, Sung, Tsin, Ts’in and Ch’u.
The Five Leaders. The five great princes who represent
the successive periods of dominance are as follows:
1. Duke Huan of Ts’i, B. C.
685-643, whose fame is closely bound up with that of his great Prime
Minister, the philosopher Kwan tsze, or Kwan
Chung, noteworthy as the statesman-statistician who obtained a revenue for his
master by the levying of taxes upon salt and iron. The philosophical
work on government and legislation ascribed to Kwan tsze and called by his name is now generally regarded as a forgery of
later times. Kwan tsze deserves mention not only
as an economist but as a typical Chinese friend. The story of Kwan tsze and Pao Shuh corresponds in China to the Greek story of Damon and Pythias. “My
parents,” said Kwan tsze, “gave me birth but Pao Shuh alone knows my feelings.”
Duke Huan was for thirty-nine years the undisputed
leader among the feudal chiefs and a successful warrior against China’s
foreign foes. He was evidently a shrewd judge of merit as
is illustrated in the story of how he raised to the position of one
of his chief counselors the philosopher, Ning Tsi, whom he discovered earning his bread as a
wagoner. The Duke also appeals to us
sympathetically as having sent back to her father a favorite wife who persisted in rocking the boat in which they were one day
amusing themselves on the Lake. In his last illness the great chief
lay neglected whilst his sons quarreled over the
succession. It is a serious indictment against the filial piety of the
time that the body of the dead ruler lay for months unburied
and uncared for and the prestige of the state fell as rapidly as it
had risen.
2. Duke Slang of Sung. B. C. 650-637.
3. Duke Wen of Tsin, B. C.
636-628, who came to the rulership of the State after he had declined to accept
the position on terms which appeared to him dishonorable.
“Fugitive as I am,” he said, “it is not the getting of the
State which is precious in my sight, but the maintenance of my
benevolence and my filial piety.” On his way through a certain district,
he was once reduced to the necessity of begging for food. A churlish
fellow offered him a clod of earth. The future duke, bowed, accepted the
clod with the remark, “It is Heaven’s gift, a gift of the soil, a
good omen,” 1 and took it along with him, as hopefully as Duke William of
Normandy clutched the handful of sand when he slipped upon the sea
beach of England. Duke Wen fought a great battle against the State of Ch’u in B. C. 632 and died four years after his
victory.
4. Duke Mu of Ts’in, B. C.
659-621.
5. Prince Chuang of Ch’u, B.
C. 613-591, who with success became audacious and sent to the Emperor an insolent message asking the size and weight
of the Nine Tripods on which the security of the Empire was said to
depend. The reply of the Emperor, Ting Wang, was not without
its dignity: “When virtue is brilliant, the tripods are heavy; when
the reverse, they are light; Heaven blesses intelligent virtue; on that
its favor rests. Though the virtue of Chou is
decayed, the decree of Heaven is not yet changed. The weight of the
Tripods may not be enquired about.”
Lao-tsze.
The state of anarchy and confusion which, it is
apparent, was prevailing at this time was not without
its relief. Doubtless there were many happy interludes of government
in the various states such as, for instance, the rule of Tsze Ch’an who from B. C. 584 to
571 ruled the Duchy of Cheng so well that “the doors were not locked
at night and lost articles were not picked up from the highways.”
Moreover, as some compensation for the political infelicities of the
age we find in this very period of disruption some of the greatest personalities of Chinese history. Of these, the first in
date is the somewhat shadowy figure of Lao-tsze,
the founder of Taoism. The name Lao-tsze may mean either “Aged Boy,” in allusion to the legend of his having
been born already seventy years old and with white hair, or else “Old
Philosopher.” His personal name was Li (Plum tree) and he was born about B. C. 604 in the State of Ch’u (the
present provinces of Hu-peh and Hu-nan). Almost
nothing is known of his life and some regard the whole story as mythical. He is
said to have held an official position as Keeper of Archives at Loh under the Duke of Chou. The leading idea of his
teaching was that of the mystic and quietist and was so diametrically
opposed to the orthodox Confucianism that it is no wonder foreign origin
has been suspected. There was never any very clear idea in China
as to what the “Way” precisely was. According to Lao-tsze himself, “Those who know do not tell; those who tell do not know.” Confucius
says that he studied the Tao for twenty years and came no nearer to
the understanding of it. The one interview which legend ascribes to the
two philosophers is said to have resulted in mutual perplexity. The
exponent of the Way seemed to Confucius to be “soaring dragon-like
above the clouds to Heaven.” Confucius himself was all for externals,
for rules of propriety and the duties of the “superior man.” Lao-tsze asserted that “the crow does not become black
through being painted nor the pigeon white through bathing.” Lao-tsze “anticipated the Christian doctrine of returning good
for evil, a sentiment which was highly reprobated by the
practical mind of Confucius, who declared that evil should be met by
justice.” The classic of Taoism is known as the Tao Te King, or “Classic of the Way.” It is in all probability the work of
a later age, perhaps of the 2nd Century B. C., but it is generally
regarded as containing many of the sayings of Lao-tsze.
Such are the following:
“Keep behind and you shall be put in front.
Keep out and you shall be put in.”
“Mighty is he who conquers himself.”
“He who is conscious of being strong is content to be
weak.”
“He who is content has enough.”
“To the good I would be good.
To the not-good also I would be good in order to make them good.”
“Recompense injury with kindness.”
“Do nothing and all things will be done.”
“The weak overcomes the strong; the soft overcomes the
hard.”
Lao-tsze passes from the
page of history as mysteriously as he enters. He is said to have journeyed
to the West and is represented in Art as riding on an ox, or in a car
drawn by blue (or black) oxen. Yin Hi, the keeper of the gate at the
frontier pass, warned beforehand in a dream, was the last to see him and
procured from him in writing the philosophy of the Tao.
Lao-tsze’s chief interpreter
was Chwang tsze who lived
two centuries later and endeavored to rescue his
master’s name from oblivion. The period of the Tsin dynasty was that which in one sense was the most favorable to Taoism, though from another point of view it led to so much corruption
that some have even distinguished between Laoism, the
teaching of the sage, and Taoism, the later, and corrupt, system.
During the Tsin dynasty the Emperor was wont to expound Taoism to his courtiers and caused those who yawned to
be executed. Tsin shih Hwang Ti,
the “Burner of the Books,” was an ardent Taoist and sent a famous
expedition to Japan in search of the Elixir Vita. The first
sovereign of the Han dynasty was also much devoted to this faith and
the hierarchy of Taoist Popes dates from about this time. The first Pope
was Chang Tao ling who ascended to heaven at the age of 123 from the Dragon
Tiger Mountain in Kiangs: on which his descendants have ever since
resided. “He had acquired power to walk among the stars, to divide
mountains and seas, to command the wind and the thunder, and to quell
demons.” The later Taoism received from Buddhism the worst of that
system as it imparted to Buddhism the best of its own. It is now little
but a system of magic and charlatanry. The present “Great Wizard” or
Pope is employed to expel evil spirits from the houses of the wealthy. “All
new gods are employed by the Emperor through
him, and on the first day of every month he gives audience to an
invisible host of gods and demigods who come to present their
compliments. This religion was bitterly opposed and persecuted at
certain periods, notably by Kublai Khan in the 13th Century.,
Confucius.
Confucius, “the sage of the family Kung in the State
of Lu,” was a little junior to Lao-tsze and the
representative of the very opposite, and characteristically Chinese, type
of philosophy. Many estimates have been formed of this remarkable
man, but most will agree with the words of Von der Gabelentz:
“If we are to measure the greatness of a historic personage, I can
only see one standard applicable for the purpose: the effectiveness of that
person’s influence according to its dimensions, duration and intensity. If
this standard be applied Confucius was one of the greatest of men. For even at
the present day, after the lapse of more than 2,000 years, the moral,
social, and political life of about one-third of mankind continues to be
under the full influence of his mind.”
Of course Confucius was, to a large extent, successful because
he systematized, practiced and taught what was already accepted as the
Chinese ideal. He himself disclaimed being an originator: he professed
himself a “transmitter.” Here we can only give the main facts of his not
very eventful life. The Kungs of Shan-tung are
probably the oldest nobility on earth, being, in fact, the only hereditary
nobility in China other than royalty, and, strangely enough, the
descendants of the “Sea quelling” Duke, the famous pirate Coxinga. The present Duke of Kung traces his descent
back seventy generations. Confucius, first of the line, was born B. C.
551. His father was a soldier, Shu-liang, a man of great bravery and
strength, who distinguished himself at the siege of Pi-yang by holding
open the portcullis by main force of arms. Shu-liang was
seventy years old, with a family of nine daughters and one crippled
son when he married the mother of Confucius. The birth took place in a
cave of Mt. Ni, whither the woman had gone on pilgrimage. Hence the
child’s name Chung-Ni, which later became Kung-'fu-tsz (Confucius). The father died when Confucius was three years old and he was brought up by his mother till the age of
seven.
He was early distinguished for the gravity and
formality of his deportment, and a familiar story tells of his playing at
“rules of propriety” with his child comrades. At school he soon became
a monitor and remained till the age of seventeen, when he accepted an
under-Mandarinate, the inspectorship of the sale of grains. This office
he filled with such success that a regular agricultural school was
the result. At the age of nineteen he married, but the match turned out
unfortunately, and the wife was divorced after giving birth to a son.
This child was called Zi (carp) in allusion to a present of fish4 received
that day from the Duke of Lo. Probably Confucius was but a
cold father, as he had been a cold husband. A story tells of the
question addressed to Li by a disciple of the sage, “Have you learned any
lessons from your father different from those received by us?” The
young man replied that Confucius had only addressed to him two questions, viz:— “Have you read the Odes?” and “Have
you studied the Rules of Propriety?” From this answer the questioner
deduced that the “superior man” always shows reserve towards his children.
For a time Confucius acted as
Inspector of Fields and Herds, but the death of his mother necessitated a
three years’ period of retirement which the sage consecrated to study,
music and archery. He then became a teacher. “At thirty he stood
firm,” and soon after had three thousand disciples by whom he was deeply
reverenced. According to his own account, he was not patient with stupid
scholars, but expected a pupil, when he himself had lifted one corner of a
subject, to lift up the other three.
Raised to the position of Minister of Crime, he
brought about notable reforms, insomuch that it is told, as of the reign
of King Alfred of England, that jewels could be left upon the
highways and. remain untouched. The Duke and his
people, however, got tired of the moral severity of the sage’s
influence, while Confucius himself, not unreasonably, got tired of the
inconsistencies of the Duke and his court. He felt occasionally
as much out of place as Dante at Verona, a very “stray dog,” as he
expresses it. In the Duke’s progresses he said that it was a case of “Vice
in front and virtue behind.” Hence he retired
in despair, seeking a new sphere for politico-moral experiments or
else confining himself to the instruction of his disciples. He died,
discouraged at his apparent lack of success, at the age
of seventy-two. “The great mountain must crumble, the strong beam must
break, the wise man withers away like a plant.” He was buried
at Ku-fu-hing where his grave is visited by
multitudes of pilgrims.5 Confucius was mourned even by those who had
despised his teaching. His work was carried on by others, especially,
two centuries later, by Mencius. After a brief period of persecution
during the Tsin Dynasty, the influence of
Confucianism experienced a remarkable revival. Confucius was made Duke and
Earl under the Han Dynasty; “Perfect Sage” in the 5th Century A.D.;
King {Wang) under the T’ang Dynasty; Emperor
(Hwang-ti) under the Sungs;
while the Mings and Manchus learned to pay him
reverence under the title, “Perfect Sage, Ancient Teacher.” This is not
the place to describe in detail the principles of his philosophy. The
effect of it is seen in the Chinese people today. The age-long training in the
Five Relations, i.e. the proper relation of Emperor
and Subject, Father and Son, Husband and Wife, Elder Brother and
Younger Brother, Friend and Friend, assimilated even the barbarous
Mongols and Manchus to Chinese ideals. Nevertheless, the weaknesses
of the system are obvious, its externality, its lack of emotional power, its
wrong theory of human nature,6 its narrow theory of life. In spite of all this, China would be grievously lacking in
gratitude did she ever consent to give up her reverence for so pure and
disinterested a teacher of righteousness. His grandson wrote the following
impassioned eulogy which represents not unfairly the deliberate estimate
of all educated China: “His fame overflows the Middle Kingdom and
reaches the barbarians of north and south. Wherever ships and
wagons can go, or the strength of man penetrate; wherever there is
heaven above and earth below; wherever the sun and moon shed their light,
or frosts or dews fall,—all who have blood and breath honor and love him. Wherefore it may be said that he
is the peer of God.”
The Confucian Classics should be mentioned here,
although an adequate account of them could only find place in a history of
Chinese literature or philosophy. Some have suggested that the books
which come under this head are all elaborate forgeries, but the general consensus of scholars is in favor of accepting the genuineness of nine works.
These are divided into the two classes, the Five King
and the Four Shu, which have sometimes been described as respectively the
Old and New Testaments of Chinese sacred literature.
The Five King are as follows:
1. The Shu King, or Book of History, consisting of
fragmentary records of events extending from the time of Yao and Shun, B. C.
2400, down to B. C. 619.
2. The Shi King, or Book of Odes, a collection of 305
poems, sacrificial, lyrical and miscellaneous. Five of
them go back to the time of the Shang Dynasty, B. C. 1800, while the
remaining 300 belong to the times of the Chou.
3. The Yi King, or Book of Changes,
the elaborated interpretation of the Sixty-four Hexagrams ascribed to Wen
Wang and the Duke of Chou. It is a detailed application, by means
of the Hexagrams, of the old Chinese philosophy of Whole and Broken
lines, the Yang and the Yin, the Bright and the Dark,
the Male and the Female, Active and Passive, Odd and Even, Strong and Weak.
4. The Li Ki, or Book of Rites, the “Vade Mecum”
of “the superior man,” the text-book of the Board
of Rites.
5. Ch'un Ts’iu,
or “Spring and Autumn Annals,” the history of the State of Lu for a period of
about two hundred and fifty years.
The Four Shu are these:
1. Lun Yu, or the Analects,
consisting of dialogues of Confucius with his disciples, remarks on government,
virtue, etc.
2. Tai Hiau, or “the Great
Learning,” containing the detailed analysis of the process by means of
which man becomes, first the Sage, then the Ruler. This is an exceedingly
interesting little outline of Confucian ethics which has
had extraordinary influence on the molding of
Chinese character.
3. Chung Yung, or the Doctrine of the
Mean, compiled by Kung Ki, the grandson of the Sage, of whose tenets
he was one of the most enthusiastic exponents.
4. Mencius. The sayings of the philosopher of
that name.
After Confucius.
From the 4th Century B. C. onwards we have a great
deal of light thrown upon Chinese history in the work of Sze Ma
Kiang, the historian of the 11th century A. D. It has been made
accessible, so far as its material parts are concerned, for foreigners
in the great work of Father de Maille.
The story told makes it quite apparent that the last
days of the Chou dynasty were at this time approaching and that there was
a general weakening of the central Government in its relation to the many
contending States, amongst which the State of Tsin,
with its foreign elements of race and culture, was the most conspicuous. The
puppet Emperors of the period have for us little or no interest and may be
dismissed with scant notice. But, by way of compensation, there are three or
four philosophers on account of whom the period is not only interesting
but quite important.
Mencius.
First of all there is the
great apostle of Confucianism, Meng-ko, whose name is most familiar to us in
its Latinized form as Mencius. He was the contemporary of Plato, born in
the province of Shan-tung, not far from the birthplace of his illustrious
master. His mother is the model Chinese mother, so solicitous for her
son’s welfare that she moved her residence from time to time in order to avoid a dangerous moral environment. From the neighborhood of a cemetery she moved to prevent her little son from mimicking the mourners; from
the neighborhood of a slaughter house she moved again
to stop him from imitating the cries of the slaughtered animals; from a
house near the market to avoid his acquiring the manners of the trading
classes; and so on until by design or chance, she settled upon
the vicinity of a school. This proved so satisfactory on either side
that no further move was required. “At a later period,” says Mayers, “she destroyed with a knife a web of cloth on
which she was engaged as a practical lesson to her son who showed a
disposition to trifle in his studies.” The famous woman was, as we might
expect, highly reverenced by Mencius and, when she died, he gave her
a most sumptuous funeral. The philosopher was a great political economist, and
his teachings were of a most democratic character. He taught that of
the three objects of regard, the gods, the Emperor and the people, the people came first, the gods second and the Emperor
only third. He defended, consequently, the right of the people to
rebel, saying: “When the prince is guilty of great errors, the minister
should reprove him; if, after doing so again and again, he does not listen,
he should dethrone him and put another in his place.” “He who gains
the hearts of the people,” he said again, “secures the throne, and he
who loses the people’s heart, loses the throne.” Mencius insistently urged
upon rulers the benevolent administration of their realms. Provided,
he said, taxes were light and government just, the nation would need no
army of mailed warriors but would be able to beat off their foreign
enemies “with mere sticks in their hands.” He is regarded as the leading
advocate, if not the author, of the “tsing”
system, whereby land was divided into nine portions by lines resembling the
ideograph “tsing.” The eight outside divisions were
cultivated by individual owners for their own profit; the middle portion was
cultivated jointly for the benefit of the State. Mencius lived the last
twenty years of his life in retirement and died B. C. 289 in his 84th
year.
Yang Chu.
A philosopher of a quite differerent type was Yang Chu or Lie-tsze (Latinized as Licius). He is the Chinese Qoheleth,
the pessimist Epicurean who followed his inclination and sought happiness
in pleasure. Yet he taught at the same time that life was not worth the living and that after death comes nothing. It is
interesting to note that Epicurus, with whom in many respects he agrees,
was his contemporary. As was natural Yang Chu and Mencius were lifelong adversaries.
Mo-ti, or Nidus, was of
still another order. The two men, says Legge (alluding to Mo-ti and Yang Chu), “stood at
opposite poles of human thought and sentiment.” Mo-ti is the altruist, the teacher of the principle that “all evils
arise from lack of mutual love.” He too was opposed to, and by,
Mencius.
Chwang tsze.
At this time too lived the great interpreter of
Taoism, Chwang tsze, who
has already been alluded to. But for the dominance of Confucianism at this
time, his reputation would probably have stood higher than was actually the case. He plainly reflects in his writings,
which have much charm, an Indian influence, as in the closing lines of his
poem on “Peaceful Old Age.”
“Thus strong in faith I wait,
and long to be
One with the pulsings of
Eternity.”
Chwang tsze mingled wit with his philosophy and humility with both. The
following story is a good illustration:
“Chwang tsze was fishing in the P’u when the Prince of Ch’u sent two high officials to ask him to take charge
of the administration of the Ch’u State. Chwang tsze went on fishing, and,
without turning his head, said: ‘I have heard that in Ch’u there is a sacred tortoise which has been dead now some three thousand
years, and that the Prince keeps this tortoise
carefully enclosed in a chest on the altar of his ancestral
temple. Now, would this tortoise rather be dead and have its remains venerated, or be alive and wagging its tail
in the mud?’
“ ‘It would rather be alive,’ replied the two officials,
‘and wagging its tail in the mud.’
“ ‘Begone!’ cried Chwang tsze, ‘I too will wag my tail in the mud.’ ”.
He forbade his followers to give his body burial,
saying, “I will have Heaven and Earth for my sarcophagus; the sun and moon
shall be the insignia where I lie in state, and all creation shall be
mourners at my funeral.”
The Story of Chu Yuan.
The corruption of the times and the despair of good
men is illustrated by the story of the loyal minister, Chu Yuan, who wrote
his allegorical poem, “Falling into Trouble,” to describe the search for a
prince who might be induced to give heed to counsels of good government.
Driven at last to despair by the successful intrigues of his rivals, he
went to the river to commit suicide. “All the world,” he said, “is
foul and I am clean.” “The true sage,” replied the fisherman, “does not
quarrel with his environment. If the world is foul why not leap into
it and make it clean.” But Chu Yuan, clasping a big stone, leaped instead into
the river, and the Dragon Festival which takes place every year on
the 5th day of the 5th month, is said to represent the search for his body.
Su Ts’in.
From the middle of the 4th Century it was becoming difficult to hold the States together against the constantly
growing menace of the Kingdom of Tsin. One man
indeed in this turbulent epoch deserves mention for his efforts to
this end, namely, the statesman Su Ts’in, who in B. C. 333 actually
succeeded in forming a league of the six States of Yen, Chao, Han,
Wei, Ts’i and Ts’u.
For a while he managed the confederation successfully, moving from court
to court to impart backbone to the respective princes. But internal
intrigue nullified his efforts and he was
assassinated. He is famous as the author of the saying: “It is better to be a
fowl’s beak than the hinder part of an ox.” After his death war broke out
between the States and made the success of the Tsins certain. In an encounter between the forces of Yen and those of Ts’i, a hero of the latter state more than emulated
the Biblical story of Samson and the foxes. He collected a host of oxen,
tied swords to their horns and bunches of greased reeds to their tails
and drove them against the enemy who were routed in great confusion.
Nan Wang. B. C. 314-256.
The last monarch of the Chou dynasty was Nan Wang, who
reigned nearly sixty years, during which time he vainly tried by means of
alliances of various kinds to stem the successful career of the State of Tsin. Victory after victory marked the slow but
sure advance of the enemy and Nan Wang died just in time to avoid
witnessing the spectacle of the once mighty house of Chou crumbling into
ruins. The regent whom he left in charge was made prisoner and the
Nine Tripods of Yu captured.
A short period of interregnum or anarchy followed and
then the destinies of China passed into the keeping of the short-lived but
glorious Dynasty of Tsin.
THE TSIN DYNASTY
B. C. 249-210.
Chiang Stang Wang.
The history of the State of Tsin slides almost insensibly into that of the Imperial Tsin Dynasty. Chao Siang Wang, who had reigned fifty-two years over
the State of Tsin, died and left the succession
to Hiao Wen Wang. After a reign of but
three days this ruler (if we venture to give him the title) died, yielding
up his scarcely occupied throne to Prince I Jen, who took the name of
Chiang Siang Wang. The chief minister of this sovereign was a former
traveling merchant of the name of Lu-pu-wei who became known, first as literatus and then as counselor. As literatus he had such confidence in his
own ability that he suspended a thousand pieces of gold at the gates of
his house as a reward to any person who could better his composition
by the addition or omission of a single word. Such a temptation, hardly to
be re-78 sisted by any modern critic, apparently
fell in the way of no literary opponent. As minister. Lu-pu-wei betrayed his master’s
confidence by an intrigue with the Queen which resulted in the
birth of the Prince Cheng, afterwards the famous First Emperor. Chwang banished his minister but adopted the boy, who
was left to. fill the throne, made vacant by his adopted father’s death,
at the age of thirteen. The uncertainty about his birth continued to
be a stumbling block to some, and later on became
a convenient tool for his enemies and detractors. It makes no difference to
the real greatness of “the Napoleon of China.”
Tsin shih hwang ti.
About a generation before the end of the Chou dynasty
a certain politician was advising one of the feudal Kings to make peace with
another with whom he was then engaged in hostilities. “I saw this
morning,” he said, “on the beach a mussel open its shell to sun itself. Immediately an oyster catcher thrust in its
bill and as promptly the mussel closed its shell and held the bird fast.
‘If it doesn’t rain soon,’ said the oyster catcher, ‘there will be
a dead mussel.’ ‘And,’ replied the mussel, ‘if
you don’t get out of this soon there v ill be
a dead oyster catcher.’ Meanwhile up came a fisherman and caught them
both.” “I greatly fear,” added the politician, “that the Tsin state will be our fisherman.” The fear proved
only too well grounded. In Tsin shih hwang ti China found a ruler who
had the Imperial idea beyond any of his predecessors. Beyond the
doubt as to the legitimacy of his birth there is something puzzling about
his racial affinity. The theory has even been ventured that he was in some
way connected with that Maury an dynasty which at
this very time was ruling in India in the person of Asoka. The latter
was successfully achieving in India what Shih hwang ti attempted to accomplish in China, even to
the religious revolution which accompanied the consolidation of the
Empire. It would be strange indeed could we but accept this theory as
proven, but all that can be said here is that the portrait of the
first great Chinese Emperor presents some striking contrasts to the usual
Chinese type. In any case, as we have said above, his greatness
is incontestable, in spite of the fact that the
Confucian literati endeavored to do for him by
abuse what the Brahmins succeeded in doing for Asoka by ten centuries
of silence. They called him bastard, debauchee
and fool, but they cannot blind us to the tremendous importance of
the work he did.
The First Emperor.
Three special claims to distinction must be conceded
to Tsin shih hwang ti. The first of these is in the use of the name China
as a designation for the whole country. While not certain, it is in the highest
degree probable, that it was on account of the prestige of the first Emperor’s
name and state that the use of the term China came about. In any case, Tsin shih hwang ti was the country’s first real conqueror, going about
the matter deliberately and accomplishing his aim thoroughly. The two
great generals whose assistance was most helpful were Wang Tsien and Li Sin. The former subdued the state of Chao
in B. C. 229 and was then ordered to proceed to the subjugation of T’su. He demanded an army of 600,000 men for the task,
but Li Sin, his rival, offered to do it with only 200,000 and was,
consequently, badly defeated. Wang Tsien then
gained his point, collected the largest army China had ever seen
and, wearing out his adversary through his Fabian tactics, brought
the campaign to a successful conclusion in B. C. 222. By B. C. 221 the Emperor was master of all China and assumed the title
of Shih hwang ti, or first
Emperor, proclaiming that all his successors should date their reigns from
his and be known as Second, Third, and so on, “even to the ten thousandth
generation.” Alas! for the vanity of human pride!
The Building of the Great Wall.
This stupendous rampart was built, from the Liaotung
Gulf to the western extremity of the Province of Shen-si,
in pursuance of the policy of protecting the northern boundary from the
Tatars. The enterprise necessitated the labors of tens of thousands of men for many years, although in some places the
work was limited to connecting portions of already existing
walls. The general in charge was Meng Tien who, on the death of his
master and the murder of his successor, committed suicide. It is strange
that to this famous builder of the Great Wall of China should be also
assigned the invention of the hair brush used for
writing. Huge as the work of constructing the Great Wall undoubtedly was,
it was only one portion of a general plan for connecting the various parts
of the Empire with good roads and so making the defense more practical than it had hitherto been. Indeed, one’s admiration of the
Wall is even excelled by the feeling of wonder at the many other great
engineering undertakings, the piercing of mountains, the leveling of hills, the bridging of rivers, by means of
which the conquests of Tsin shih hwang ti were made secure and the imperial unity consolidated.
Other notable works include the erection of the great palace of A-Fong Kung,
near Hien-yang, on which it is said 700,000 criminals and prisoners
were employed at forced labor. “The central hall
was of such dimensions that ten thousand persons could be assembled within
it and banners sixty feet in height might be unfurled below.” Another
was the building of the many storied tower in the province of Shan-tung,
overtopping the hills and commanding an extensive view of the Eastern Sea.
The Burning of the Books.
The real reason for the destruction of the Confucian
books and for the persecution of the literati may never be known, as the
accounts which have survived contradict one another. Some say that the Confucianists
reproved the Emperor for unfilial conduct in the
banishment of his mother. Others assert that it was the Emperor’s ambition to be known as the originator of all that was great in
Chinese history and wanted no prior records in his way. A quite plausible
account, given by the historian Sze ma tshien relates that a certain Minister of learning reproaching the Emperor for breaking down the feudal system, Li
Sze (known as the inventor of the Lesser Seal1 style of writing)
sprang to the defense and warmly advocated the
destruction of everything which belonged to the past as a policy which
would stimulate the progress of the Empire. We may well conceive that
the brilliant conqueror found the Confucian system rather too inelastic
for his own grandiose and imperial projects and that he was genuinely
glad to find an excuse for ridding himself of the “dead hand” of the
great Sage and of the precedents furnished by the “Model Emperors.”
In any event, his procedure was sufficiently sweeping. The Confucian
Classics (with the single exception of the Yi-King) and all other
literature (with the exception of works on agriculture, medicine and
divination) were so thoroughly destroyed that when the Han dynasty
assumed the task of reviving the old studies, copies of the classics were with
difficulty discovered in the walls of houses, or reintegrated from the memories of men. It is said that Kung Fu, a
descendant of Confucius in the ninth degree, was one who had preserved hidden
in the walls of the ancestral house copies of the old books. But, as
observed above, it has been possible in our own day for writers to deny the
very existence of the Confucian classics prior to the time of the
historian Sze ma tshien who is charged with
having forged them. The literati shared with the books the wrath of the
tyrant and some hundreds of them (four hundred and sixty, to be
precise) are said to have been put to death under circumstances of such
revolting cruelty that the Emperor’s own eldest
son felt compelled to protest. For this interposition he was banished
and all those who resisted the surrender of their books were branded and forced
to work for four years on the Great Wall.
Taoist Propaganda.
The persecution of Confucianism went hand in hand with
an ardent advocacy of Taoism. Shih Hwang Ti’s belief
in this religion was perhaps in large part the result of his desire to obtain
the coveted Elixir Vitae, but a whole mass of more or less interesting fable
has associated itself with the Emperor’s devotion to
the cult, now far removed from its first purity. It is of this reign that
the story is told of the Taoist Rip Van Winkle which bears so close a
resemblance to the American version that it may be worth the re-telling.
It concerns the patriarch Wang Chih who having
wandered in the mountains of K’u Chow to gather
firewood entered a grotto in which some aged men were seated intent
upon a game of chess. He laid down his ax and
looked on at their game, in course of which one of the men handed to him a
thing in shape and size like a date-stone, telling him to put it in
his mouth. No sooner had he tasted it than he became oblivious of hunger
and thirst! After some time had elapsed, one of the players said: “It
is long since you came here; you should go home now!” Whereupon, Wang Chih, proceeding to pick up his ax,
found that its handle had moldered into dust. On
repairing to his home he found that centuries had
passed since the time when he had left it for the mountains and that
no vestige of his kinsfolk remained.
Another Taoist patriarch, An Ki Sheng, visited the Emperor B. C. 221 and conversed with him for three days
and three nights. The result of the interview was the sending of the
famous expedition to the Eastern seas.
“The Isles of the Blest.”
Tsin Shih Hwang ti “allowed
himself to be persuaded into the belief that in the Eastern
sea there were golden Islands of the Blest, where dwelt
genii, whose business and delight it was to dispense to all visitors
to their shores a draught of immortality compounded of the fragrant herbs
which grew in profusion around them.” Twice over was an expedition
dispatched to discover these “Isles of the Blest.” Su She and Lu Ngao, Taoist magicians, were put in
command and several thousands of girls and young men accompanied
the explorers. Both attempts, however, ended in failure. The expeditions
were, it is said, driven back by contrary winds, though it is highly
probable that Japan benefited by some access of population. So great a
monarch as Shih Hwang ti may well have feared
the shadow of death and craved a few more years in which to continue his
work, but “le breuvage de l’immortalité”
was not for him, and he died B. C. 210. Many of his wives and many of
his warriors, in accordance with the old Scythian custom, were buried
alive near his tomb that he, who had employed so many on earth, might
not want his servants in the grave.
The Tomb of Shih Hwang ti.
Of this tomb, excavated in a mountain, we have the
following account: “Upon the floor, which had a foundation of bronze, was
a map of the Empire with rivers of quicksilver; the roof was studded
with the constellations. All around were mechanical arrangements for
shooting stones and arrows immediately upon the appearance of any
intruders; while huge candles of seal’s fat, calculated to burn for
an indefinite period, threw their light upon the scene. When the passages
leading to the chamber had been stopped up, and before the workmen
who knew the secrets had come forth, the great outer gate was dropped, and
they were all buried alive. The entrance was banked up with earth,
and grass and plants were sown to conceal it from view.”
End of the Dynasty.
The close of the Tsin dynasty came almost simultaneously with the death of Tsin shih hwang ti. The elder
and stronger minded son, Fu Su, had been
banished as a result of his protest against the
massacre of the literati. The younger son, Hu Hai, was under the influence
of an ambitious and masterful eunuch, Chao Kao, who weeded out the more
independent and capable advisers by a device suggestive of Polonius. He would
present a stag to the Emperor and say, “Here is a
horse.” If any of the ministers said it was anything but a horse,
their disgrace was sealed. “It is certainly a horse,” said the weak and
complaisant ones, and these remained. It is no wonder that the young
Emperor, trained under such auspices as these, proved an easy victim to the
wiles of the unscrupulous eunuch. Chao Kao, however, met his own fate soon
afterwards and Hu Hai’s semblance of power only lasted three years.
Anarchy followed; even the wonderful tomb of the great conqueror was
desecrated and destroyed. The secret chambers were rifled and the fine buildings razed to the ground by the general Hiang-yu. Nothing was left but the coffin and even
this was shortly after burned, when a shepherd, seeking a lost sheep,
dropped by accident his torch in the cavern and set fire to the dry and
crumbling ruins which had been left. “Sic transit gloria mundi.”
THE HAN DYNASTY
B. C. 210—A. D. 220.
Kao Tsu.
The dynasty of
Han which lasted for four centuries and included the reigns of thirty-two
Emperors was founded by the successful soldier of fortune, Liu pang. Liu
pang was originally a peasant of the province of Kiang su who made himself popular among his fellowvillagers by his good nature and courage and made himself wealthy by marriage with
the woman who afterwards became notorious as the Empress Lu How.
Chosen as the head of a band of insurgents Liu pang gradually
attracted to himself leaders of influence and ability,
and, proclaiming himself Prince of Han, took advantage of the disturbed
condition of the country at the close of the Tsin dynasty to fight his way to supreme power. His principal opponent
was 89 his fellow general, Hiang Yu, a man
of immense stature, strength and courage.
Victory, however, fell to the lot of Liu pang and the Empire recognized
the victor who forthwith assumed the yellow Robe under the title of Kao Tsu. The reign lasted about seven years and was
marked by considerable wisdom and moderation.
Lu How.
Not so much can be said in favor of the reign which immediately followed. The widow of Kao Tsu terrorized the young prince, her son, who
succeeded to the throne, until, at the end of seven years, he was driven
into sheer imbecility and died. The masterful Empress then reigned
alone and in her own right until her death in B. C. 180. It is the only
instance of a female rule over China which is regarded by
the historians as possessing a legitimate title. A more attractive
personality is that of Wen Ti, who succeeded the
stalwart Empress. The moderation and unselfishness of his character are
illustrated by the story that he abandoned the building of his projected
“Dew Tower” when he learned that its cost would be a hundred bars
of gold. “I will not spend on this building,” he said, “what will
furnish ten households with a fortune.”
Wu ti. B.C. 140-87.
The greatest of the Han sovereigns was undoubtedly the
sixth of the dynasty, Wu ti, whose long reign of
fifty-four years was one of the most splendid in the whole history of
China. He was an enthusiastic patron of literature and during his earlier
years he did much to promote the study of the re-discovered Confucian
classics. His proclamation, calling for men of genius to present
themselves at court, met with a prompt response. Among those who came
was the famous Tung fang so. This worthy replied to the imperial
invitation in this wise: “I am now twenty-two years old; I am 9 feet
3 inches high; my eyes are like swinging pearls; my teeth like a row of
shells. I am brave as Meng Pen, prompt as Ch’ing Chi, pure as Pao Shu Ya, devoted as Wei Shang. I consider myself fit to be an high officer of State and with my life in my
hand await your Majesty’s reply.” He was received, and rose to the office of Censor. On many occasions he kept the Emperor amused by his wit, but on one occasion drank a potion of Immortality, brewed by some Taoist sage
for his Majesty’s own use, and was thereupon condemned to death. He got
out of the scrape by exclaiming: “If the potion was genuine, you cannot
kill me, whereas, if it was not, what harm has been done?” Wu ti displayed in his later life a great devotion to the
superstitions and magical rites of Taoism and is said to have
been the author of the so-called “Dew-receiving Vase” in the belief
that the drinking of the dew thus collected would secure immortality. His
addiction to Taoism may have given rise to the legends of the visits of
the fairy Queen, Si Wang Mu, the Queen Mother of the West, already
referred to in connection with the reign of Muh Wang. Wu ti initiated a series of Imperial
pilgrimages on the most gorgeous scale to perform sacrificial rites
at the various mountain shrines.
Wu ti’s real fame rests upon
the remarkable expansion of the Empire westward which his reign witnessed.
He found on his accession that the Empire was seriously threatened by the
growing power of the Hiung nu, or Huns, and labored hard (not without much success) to oppose their
advances through his own generals and by means of alliance with the
Yueh chih, or Indo-Scythians, against the common
enemy. Many famous generals come to the front in this memorable conflict,
a conflict which had the most far-reaching results both for Europe
and Asia. There was Chang K’ien, who “pierced
the void” by penetrating to the extreme west, from whence he brought back
not only the laurels of victory but the Persian grape vine. There was
Li Kwang, victorious in seventy battles against the Huns, who committed
suicide after his last victory, because the Khan, for whose capture
he had pledged his word, managed to escape. There was also Li Kwang Li, who in
B. C. 104 carried his victorious banners to the borders of Persia.
Not less notable again was the ambassador Su Wu who
in B. C. 100 was sent on a mission to the Hun chief and there detained
a prisoner for nineteen years. Compelled to tend the flocks of the
Huns in the deserts around Lake Balkash, he
retained all those years his rod of office which he used as a shepherd’s
staff. His captivity was at last discovered when a wild goose, with a
message from the home-sick exile fastened to its feathers, was shot by the Emperor in his imperial hunting grounds. Su Wu returned at last, B. C. 81, a prematurely old
and broken man, but an immortal example of loyalty and patriotic
spirit.
Remarkable testimony to the thoroughness with which
the work of caring for the interests of the empire in the western marches is
afforded by Dr. Aurel Stein
in his recent book, “The Ruins of Desert Cathay.” Here we are brought
face to face with the wall which was built to exclude China’s most
formidable foreign foes. The evidences are still
plain, in the long, straight furrow which is still discernible some twenty
feet from the line of the wall, of the vigilance with which the sentinels
fulfilled their duty when they mounted guard. The very stacks of reeds
which were kept along the road to serve as material for fire signals
have been discovered in the sand, where for two millenniums they were
buried. Newly discovered documents give exact details of the
campaigns, together with an account of all the provisions made for
transforming an army of conquest into an agricultural colony. We know what
clothing was served out to the soldiers and what their weapons were, down
to the number of arrows allowed to each quiver. We enter into all the intimate circumstances of the daily life of the colony and can
appreciate to the full the old poem which Dr. Stein quotes, translated by M. Chavannes:
“Every ten li a horse starts;
Every five li a whip is raised high.;
A military order of the Protector
General of the Transfrontier regions has arrived
With news that the Huns were besieging Chiu Chuan;
But just then the snowflakes were falling on the hills
Along which the barrier stretches,
And the signal fires could raise no smoke.”
Sze Ma Tshien on the Han
Dynasty.
The general trend of the history of China under
the Han dynasty has never been more vividly and comprehensively set
forth than in the following passage from the great historian of the period, Sze
Ma Tshien. The quotation, though a long one,
will readily be excused.
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