Han shih wai chuan Han Ying's Illustrations of the didactic application of the Classic of songs |
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CHAPTER IV Han shih wai chuan | ||
28[1]
Though the road be near, there will be no arriving without
walking; though the task be small, unless it be undertaken it will
not be completed. If days spent in idleness be many, there will
bow, laminated with horn, covered with sinew, and joined with
glue and lacquer, may be a thing of value [even in a state of] ten
thousand chariots. In those hands[4] it is not worth a few shu.[5]
When the men are the same and their talents, equal, that one is
worth ten thousand of the other is because one devotes his mind
and directs his will [to the task in hand].[6] The Ode says,[7]
And never will forget it.
Cf. Hsün-tzŭ 1.21b (Dubs 51) for the first three sentences. The whole passage is
corrupt. Though I have been able to make some sort of sense out of it by following
the easier readings, I suspect that the argument originally may have been quite
different.
[OMITTED]. B, C have [OMITTED] for [OMITTED]. D has [OMITTED] for [OMITTED]. CHy
has [OMITTED], and [OMITTED] for [OMITTED], emending on the basis of Hsün-tzŭ: [OMITTED]
[OMITTED]. As Hao I-hsing and Wang Nien-sun both prefer [OMITTED] for [OMITTED], I accept
CHy's emendation but retain [OMITTED].
CHAPTER IV Han shih wai chuan | ||