Book Title: Questions of King Milinda Part 02
Author(s): T W Rhys Davids
Publisher: Oxford

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Page 2221
________________ 330 THE TEXTS OF TÂOISM. Lill Hsiang (Han officer and writer), i, 97, 100, 107; ii, 132. LiG Hsin (Han librarian, son of Hsiang), i, 6. Lo-sung (name for reading), i, 247. Lü (the state), i, 223, 224, 228, 229, 284, 353; ii, 8, 17, 22, 26, 29, 34, 43, 49, 50, 153, 157, 160, 167, 168, 169, 172, 175, 193, 197, 216. Lü Kü (a philosopher), ii, 99. LÊ Năng-shih (commentator), 5, 76. Lu Shih (work of Lo Pî), i, 351. Lû Shû-kih (the editor), i, p. xix, 143, 148, 150, 153, 154, 161; ii, 146, 179. LQ Teh-ming (the author), i, p. xix, 103; ii, 37. Lû Zhien-hsü (a writer), ii, 264. Lü Liang (the gorge of Lü), ii, 20. Lü Shui (a river), ii, 163. Lü 3ů (famous Taoist), i.q. Lü Tung-pin, Lü Kbun-yang), i, pp. xvi, xvii. Lung-făng, ii, 131. See Kwan Lung tăng. Lung Lĩ-kbăn (a minister of Wei), ii, 43. Mân Kâu-teh (unprincipled de bater), ii, 176, 177, 178. Man-shih (=Mr. Stupidity), ii, 119, 120. Măn Wu-kwei (man in time of king Wa), i, 324, 325. Măn-yin Tắng-hăng (officer of Thang), i, 7. Măng-sun Zhai or Shih (member of Măng-sun family), 1, 255, 254. Măng Zze-fan (Taoist, time of Con fucius), i, 250. Mao Zhiang (the beauty), i, 191. Mâu (prince of Wei), ii, 159. Mayers's Manual, i, 40, 41, 167, 301, 374 ; ii, 317, et al. Mencius, i, 65, 111, 131, 134, 372, 380; ii, 54, 116, 216, Miâo-kû-shih (a mysterious hill), i, 170, 172. Min-zze (disciple of Confucius), i, 232. Ming (a hill in the north), i, 347. Ming-ling (a great tree), i, 166. Mo, Mo-zze, and Mo Tí (the he resiarch; his followers), i, 182, 270, 287, 296, 360; ii, 73, 99, 100, 177, 178, 204, 205, 219, 220, 221. MQ (duke of Kbin), ii, 50, 89. Nan-kwo Bze-kbi (a great Taoist), i, 176. Nan-po 3ze-kbi (same as the above), i, 219; ii, 103. See 3ze-kbi. Nan-yueh (Yüeh in the south), ii, 30. Nestorian monument, the, i, 94. Nieh-hsü (name for hearing or re port), i, 247. Nieh Kbüeh (ancient Taoist), i, 190, 192, 259, 312; ii, 61, 62, 108. Ni Shang (favourite of marquis of Wei), ii, 91, 92, 93. Nü Yü (great Taoist), i, 245. Numerical categories : Three precious things, i, 110; precious ones, or refuges, i, 43, 111; pure ones, i, 43; three meals, i, 166 ; dynasties, i, 271; Mâo, and three Wei, i, 295; dynasties, kings of the, i, 295, 381 ; hosts, i, 334; Hwang and five Ti, i, 353; five Ti and three Wang, i, 376; branches of kindred, ii, 204 ; most distinguished officers, ii, 156; swords, ii, 189; luminaries, ii, 190; pairs of Thâi stars, ii, 236; spirits of the recumbent body, ii, 236; regions, ii, 249; poisons, ii, 251; despoilers, ii, 260. Four seas, the, i, 171, 295; phi losophers or perfect ones, i, 172; boundaries (= a neighbourhood), i, 230; seasons, i, 239, et saepe; quarters of the earth, i, 330; wild tribes on the four quarters, ii, 189, 220; evils, the, ii, 196, 197; misrepresentations, the, ii, 197. Five grains, the, i, 171; chiefs, i, 245; viscera, i, 220, 247, 268, 294; colours, i, 328; notes of music, i, 328; weapons, i, 334 ; punishments, i, 335; elements, i, 346; ii, 189, 258; virtues, i, 349; regulators of the five notes, i, 351; fivefold arrangement of the virtues, ii, 178, 179; feudal lordships, ii, 220; moun tains, ii, 317. Six elemental energies, i, 169, 301; conjunctions (=the uni Digitized by Google Digitized by

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