SNAP  READING  UP  DOWN  TOP
 

Mencius. Book 3, Part 2, Chapter 10.
Book 3, T'ang Wan Kung. Part 2.

1. K'wang Chang said to Mencius, "Is not Ch'an Chung a man of true self-denying purity? He was living in Wooling, and for three days without food, till he could neither hear nor see. Over a well there grew a plum tree, the fruit of which had been more than half eaten by worms. He crawled to it, and tried to eat some of the fruit, when, after swallowing three mouthfuls, he recovered his sight and hearing.

2. Mencius replied, "Among the scholars of Ts'e, I must regard Chung as the thumb among the fingers. But still, where is the self-denying purity he pretends to? To carry out the principles which he holds, one must became an earthworm, for so only can it be done.

3. "Now, an earthworm eats the dry mold above and drinks the yellow spring below. Was the house in which Chung dwells built by a Pih-e? or was it built by a robber like Chih? Was the millet which he eats planted by a Pih-e? or was it planted by a robber like Chih? Thse are things which cannot be known."

4. "But," said Chang, "what does that matter? He himself weaves sandals of hemp, and his wife twists hempen threads, to barter them."

5. Mencius rejoince, "Chung belongs to an ancient and noble family of Ts'e. His elder brother Tae received from Ko a revenue of 10,000 chung bu the considered his brother's emolument to be unrighteous, and would not eat of it, and in the same way he considered his brother's house to be unrighteous, and would not dwell in it. Avoiding his brother and leaving his mother, he went and dwelt in Woo-ling. One day afterwards, he returned to their house, when it happened that some one sent his brother a present of a live goose. He, knitting his eyebrows, said, 'What are you going to use that cackling thing for?' By and by his mother killed the goose, and gave him some of it to eat. Just then his brother came into the house, and said, 'It's the flesh of that cackling thing,' upon which he went out and vomited it.

6. "Thus, what his mother gave him he would not eat, but what his wife gives him he eats. He will not dwell in his brother's house, but he dwells in Woo-ling. How can he in such circumstances complete the style of life which he professes? With such principles as Chung holds, a man must be an earthworm, and then he can carry them out."

Footer section, if any

SNAP  READING  UP  DOWN  TOP
 

Text source: The Works of Mencius. Translated by James Legge.

Footer section, if any

SNAP  READING  UP  DOWN  TOP
 

place  time  topic  people  language

China - Ancient - Philosophy - Chinese - Chinese translation

Footer section, if any

SNAP  READING  UP  DOWN  TOP
 

 

Footer section, if any