________________
474
THE TEXTS OF CONFUCIANISM.
Doubts, submitted to divination, i,
145-6. Dress, ordinary, of young men and
their wives, iii, 449-50; of mourning, see Mourning rites. The black robes, iv, 352-64. The long dress, iv, 395-6. Darkcoloured robes, iii, 448; various
particulars about, iv, 9-17. Drinks, iii, 446-7(and note), 460; iv, 8. Drinking in the country districts,
ceremony of, iii, 56; iv, 435-45. Dyeing, ii, 278. Dynasties, see Three, Four, Five,
Seven.
worthies
DECOFRE 247 Usband alive anos, of
videt
Dancing or pantomime, taught to
boys at thirteen, and afterwards, iii, 477 (and note); 255 (and note), 345, 347; iv, 92 (and note), 121-31 (to the piece Tawų)." Dancing habits of Yin, i,
239. See also i, 343, 375. Death, what takes place at, iii, 369,
444; iv, 220-1; names for, of different parties, iii, 108, 112, 117; of parents alive and dead, 118; of husband, wife's lament over, i, 441-2; of three worthies
of Kbin, i, 443-4. Decades, life divided into, and de
scribed, iii, 65-6. Demeanour, importance of, i, 413-
4; of different parties, iii, 112; iv, 25-7; of son, on father's death, iii, 129; at grave, 137; in serving parents, i, 480-1; in
mourning, 487-8. Different, teaching of the different
classical books, iv, 255-6; answers to questions about age
and wealth, iii, 115-6. Dishes, arrangement of, at feast, iii,
79; various, of food, iii, 459
64; 468-70. Divination, i, 50, 104, 128, 145-7
(and note), 153-4, 157-9, 161, 183, 189-90, 349, 350-2 (about dreams), 358-9; ii, 371-2 (and all ii. is, in form at least, a book of divination); iii, 78, 94, 119, 128, 181, 235, 238, 385, 428,472 ; iv, 51, 71, 84, 135, 156, 180, 223,
289, 295, 298, 320, 331, 349-51. Division of kingdom into twelve
provinces, i, 40, 60; into nine, i, 64-72, 101 (see also 310); iii, 111, 211-2, 413 ; iv, 208. Division and apportioning of the
income, iii, 321-2. Divorce, iii, 122 (and note, Did
Confucius divorce his wife?), 457 (and note); iv, 42, 44, 45, 57; of a lady sent back before she had become the acknowledged
wife, iv, 170-1. Doctor's family should have prac
tised medicine for three genera
tions, iii, 114. Domains or tenures, the five, i, 75-6,
229. See also i, 163, 176-7, 183, 207, 244.
Ears, cutting off, a punishment, i,
168, 256; left, of captives, i,
339, 392. Ears of grain, left in field for the
widow, i, 373. Eating, rules in, iii, 80-1,89; iv, 20-1. Eclipse of the sun, and ceremonies
at, i, 82 (and note); another, i,
355 ; at an interment, iii, 338-9. Economy, rules of, iv, 3, 4; iii, 237. Education and schools, iii, 231-5,
342, 255, 266, 308, 347-9, 35961; iv, 81-90; attention of king Wo to, i, 137. Education of young princes, iii, 345-50; iv, 82-90; ordinary of a boy, iii, 476-7; of a girl, 478. The
Great Learning, iv, 411-34. Eight is the number of the months
of spring, iii, 250, 258, 262. Eight objects of government, i, 141-2; ii, 230, 248; tribes of the Man, i, 150; iv, 30; kâ sacrifices, iii, 431; materials of musical instruments, iv, III; men walked beside the ruler's bier with clappers, iv, 165; bells at the bits of carriage team, i, 338, 426; baskets of grain placed by ruler's coffin, iv,
197; dishes at sacrifice, iv, 38. Eighty, old men of, iii, 66, 463-6;
iv, 230, 232. Endogens and exogens, iji, 394(note). Equilibrium and barmony, state of,
iv, 300-29 (see note 3, p. 301). Eulogies, rule for, iii, 333-4(and note). Example, the, of the sovereign, i,
53-4, 60, 88-9; effects of, i, 201-4; of crown-prince, iii,
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