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3

3. On Disguise and Falsification

Matters of falsification and disguise make the lord of men
miss what he ought to censure and make the ministers
accomplish their private interests. Thus, the gate-men
poured water but I-shê was censured; the Lord of Chi-yang
forged the King's order but his two enemies paid for the
crime; Ssŭ-ma Hsi killed Yuan Ch'ien but Chi Hsin was
censured; Chêng Hsiu said the new court ladies disliked the
bad smell of His Majesty's breath and the newcomers had
their noses cut off; Fei Wu-chi[9] told Ch`i Yüan to parade
weapons but the magistrate censured the latter; Ch`ên Hsü
killed Chang Shou but Hsi-shou[10] had to run into exile; and,
similarly, when the silo was burned, the King of Central Hills
held the innocent prince guilty, and when the old literatus
was killed, the Lord of Chi-yang rewarded the assassin.

 
[9]

With Wang Hsien-shen [OMITTED] should be [OMITTED].

[10]

[OMITTED] was originally the name of the post held by Kung-sun Yen, till
it almost became his pen-name.