1. |
1.0. |
1.1. |
1.2. |
1.3. |
1.4. |
1.5. |
1.6. |
1.7. |
1.7.75. |
1.7.75. |
1.7.76. |
1.7.76. |
1.7.77. |
1.7.77. |
1.7.78. |
1.7.78. |
1.7.79. |
1.7.79. |
1.7.80. |
1.7.80. |
1.7.81. |
1.7.81. |
1.7.82. |
1.7.82. |
1.7.83. |
1.7.83. |
1.7.84. |
1.7.84. |
1.7.85. |
1.7.85. |
1.7.86. |
1.7.86. |
1.7.87. |
1.7.87. |
1.7.88. |
1.7.88. |
1.7.89. |
1.7.89. |
1.7.90. |
1.7.90. |
1.7.91. |
1.7.91. |
1.7.92. |
1.7.92. |
1.7.93. |
1.7.93. |
1.7.94. |
1.7.94. |
1.7.95. |
1.7.95. |
1.8. |
1.9. |
1.10. |
1.11. |
1.12. |
1.13. |
1.14. |
1.15. |
2. |
3. |
4. |
Shi Ji Zhuan | ||
They clear away the grass and the bushes ;
And the ground is laid open by their ploughs .
In thousands of pairs they remove the roots ,
Some in the low wet lands , some along the dykes .
There are the master and his eldest son ;
His younger sons , and all their children ;
Their strong helpers , and their hired servants .
How the noise of their eating the viands brought to them resounds !
[The husbands] think lovingly of their wives ;
[The wives] keep close to their husbands .
[Then] with their sharp plough-shares ,
They set to work on the south-lying acres .
They sow their different kinds of grain ,
Each seed containing in it a germ of life .
In unbroken lines rises the blade ,
And well-nourished the stalks grow long .
Luxuriant looks the young grain ,
And the weeders go among it in multitudes .
Then come the reapers in crowds ,
And the grain is piled up the fields ,
Myriads , and hundreds of thousands , and millions [of stacks] ;
For spirits and for sweet spirits ,
To offer to our ancestors , male and female ,
And to provide for all ceremonies .
Fragrant is their aroma ,
Enhancing the glory of the State .
Like pepper is their smell ,
To give comfort to the aged .
It is not here only that there is this [abundance] ;
It is not now only that there is such a time :—
From of old it has been thus .
And the ground is laid open by their ploughs .
In thousands of pairs they remove the roots ,
Some in the low wet lands , some along the dykes .
There are the master and his eldest son ;
His younger sons , and all their children ;
Their strong helpers , and their hired servants .
How the noise of their eating the viands brought to them resounds !
[The husbands] think lovingly of their wives ;
[The wives] keep close to their husbands .
[Then] with their sharp plough-shares ,
They set to work on the south-lying acres .
They sow their different kinds of grain ,
Each seed containing in it a germ of life .
In unbroken lines rises the blade ,
And well-nourished the stalks grow long .
Luxuriant looks the young grain ,
And the weeders go among it in multitudes .
Then come the reapers in crowds ,
And the grain is piled up the fields ,
Myriads , and hundreds of thousands , and millions [of stacks] ;
For spirits and for sweet spirits ,
To offer to our ancestors , male and female ,
And to provide for all ceremonies .
Fragrant is their aroma ,
Enhancing the glory of the State .
Like pepper is their smell ,
To give comfort to the aged .
It is not here only that there is this [abundance] ;
It is not now only that there is such a time :—
From of old it has been thus .
Shi Ji Zhuan | ||