Book Title: General Index to Names and Subject Matter
Author(s): M Winternitz
Publisher: Oxford

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Page 686
________________ YEAR-YI KING Dasarâtra they sacrifice to the Y., and they become that deity, the Y., 44, 141, 141 n., 143; the Y. is Man, the ceremonies of the sacrificial session being his limbs, 44, 144 sq., 160-70; the months are the limbs of the y., 44, 158; is a great eagle, 44, 158; means constantly existing food, 44, 222; the thirteenth month is the y. itself, 44, 247; days and nights, half-months, months, and seasons are established in the y., 44, 252; is the bull among the seasons, 44, 276; the thirteenth month is an excrescence of the y., 44, 276; by means of the seasonal sacrifice the Sacrificer gains the y., 44, 309, 309 n.; samvatsara, parivatsara, &c., years of the five ys.' cycle, 44, 415. See also Time. Yen, younger brother of the count of Wei, 27, 120. Yen, Minister of War to King Yung of Wei, 40, 118 sq. Yen Ho, being about to undertake the office of teacher to Duke Ling's son, consults Kü Po-yü, 39, 132, 21517; describes Confucius to Duke Ai of Lû as unfit to be entrusted with the government, 39, 161; 40, 207-9; warns the reckless driver Tung-yê Kî, 40, 23, 23 n.; had attained to the Tão, refuses a gift of silks sent by the ruler of Lû, 40, 153. Yen Hui, or Hui, or Yen Yüan, disciple of Confucius, nearly attained the standard of perfection, 16, 392 sq., 395 n.; 40, 160; mourning rites for him, 27, 137, 139; his conversation with 3ze-lû, 27, 185; wishes to go to Wei to reform the character and government of its ruler, 39, 132, 203-10; Confucius's sorrow at Hui's going to Khi, 39, 149; 40, 7 sq.; instructed about Tâoism by Confucius, 39, 253 sq., 256 sq.; asked the music-master Kin about Confucius, 39, 351 sq.; asks Confucius about the ferryman who handled the boat like a spirit, 40, 15 sq.; instructed by Confucius about Heaven, 40, 37-9; complains that he is unable to follow Confucius in explaining the Tâo, 40, 44-6; Confucius reports to him his con 669 versation with Lâo-3ze, 40, 49; questions Confucius, 40, 53, 72; is poor, but contented, 40, 158 sq.; accompanies Confucius as his charioteer, 40, 167, 200; became one with the Great Pervader, 40, 283. Yen Kang, condoles on the death of Lâo-lung Kî, 40, 68. Yen Khang 3ze-yû, disciple of Nankwo (or Nan-po, or Tung-kwo) 3ze-kbî, 39, 176-8, 176 n.; 40, 103, 145 sq. Yen Kih, hid a copy of the Hsiao King, 3, 452. Yen Liû, an authority on funeral rites, 27, 188. Yen Pû-î, friend of the king of Wû, 40, 102 sq. Yen-sze, Shăn-hsiang wailing for, 27, 133. Yen Tî, divine ruler of summer, 27, 268, 272, 276. Yen Ting, mourned skilfully for his father, 27, 179. Yen Yen = 3ze-yû, q. v. Yen Yû, disciple of Confucius, 28, 270 sq. Yen Yüan, see Yen Hui. Yen-3ze, and Confucius, 40, 293. Yeshtiha, moments, in the world of Brahman, 1, 275, 276. Yî, forester to Shun, helped Yü in his work against the inundation, 3, 16 sq., 44, 56-8; conversation between Shun and Yu and Y. on right government, 3, 46-8; helped Yü to bring the lord of Miâo to submission, 3, 52. Yî, n. of a Recorder, 3, 195, 195 n.; funeral rites for his son who died prematurely, 27, 340 sq.; 3zekung's interview with the musicmaster Y., 28, 129-31. Yî-khâo, eldest son of King Wăn, 27, 120. Yî King, or Book of Changes, 3, xvixviii; 16, 208 sq. n.; exempted from the burning of Confucian literature, 3, xvii; 16, 2; now made up of the Text and the Appendixes, the latter ascribed to Confucius, 16, xiii sq., xvii-xix, 1-3, 7 sq.; difficulties of its interpretation, 16, xiii-xvi; ascribed to King Wăn and his son Tan, 16, xiii, xv-xix, 5 sq., 404 n.; considered as a book of divination, 16, xv, 2, Digitized by Microsoft®

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