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INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
479
ing, iii, 130. See Notes, Officers, and Tubes.
Rome man a hunc sacrifice. with
unplastered apartment, iv, 134, 154, 163, 191-2. The wailing, leaping, and beating the breast, iii, 89, 93 (and note), 131-7, 150, 160; iv, 51, 58-9, 143, 188-90, 194-6, 370-9, 385-6, et saepe. Visits of condolence, iii, 123, 135-6, 141; iv, 41, 54, 58, 139, 144, et saepe. The use of the staff, iii, 134, 136, 161, 313, 372, 334 ; iv, 48, 54, 57, 163, 180-1, 378-9, 467-8. The coffin and burial, see Burial. Sacrifices, in connexion with mourning, see Sacrifice. A bald man, a hunchback, and a lame man, and the rites, iv, 378. Real grief is better than many
rites, iii, 141. Music, the, of Shun, i, 61; of Yão,
Shun, and Yü, iv, 106 (and note); of Wū, 121-4 (see also 130); the ancient schools of, 109; rules and times for teaching and practising, iii, 232, 255, 261, 266, 269-71, 274, 293, 348; iv, 274-5; instruments of, i, 305,319,323-4, 326, 367; iii, 83, 219, 273; iv, 35-7, 97, III, 115, 119-31, 123; times for regulating, iii, 217, 373; were composed of eight materials, iv, 11-2. The Record of music, iv, 95-131; with the account of it in, iii, 32-3. Object and effects of music, iii, 389-91; iv, 107, 224-5, 255-6; see also i, 61. The music that has no sound, iv, 279; see 276. Officers kept their instruments at hand, iii, 106. But music was not played during mourning, i, 41; ii, 103; nor in bad years, iii, 106; nor at marriages, iii, 442 (and note); nor for three days after bride came to her husband's, 332 (and note); nor in escorting friends or in autumn, iv, 210. Occasions when the ruler gave up bis music, iii, 159; iv, 164; see iii, 179-80. It was used at sacrifices, iv, 213-4, 350; but with discrimination, iv, 330; and not in preliminary purification, iv, 240. Confucius and Hsien-jze, in resuming music after mourn
Name, the first, was given in child
hood, iii, 79, 144; by the father, three months after birth, iii, 473-5; that of maturity (the designation), at the capping at the age of twenty, iii, 65, 79, 144, 438; the name of uncle was not used till fifty, iii, 144. The honorary or posthumous name, see Honorary. The first naming of a ruler's heir-son, born after his father's death, iii,
311-3; after the burial, 313-4. Names which should not be given to
a child, iii, 78 (and note), 474-5. On the avoiding of certain names, and the names used in certain circumstances, iii, 66, 79, 93, 101, 107-8, 110-1, 190; iv, 18, 27-8, 138, 161, 175; case of names, composed of two characters, iii, 93, 190; sacrificial names for victims, offerings, grandparents and parents, iii,
117-8. Dogs got names, iv, 76. Natural phenomena of the different
months, iii, 251, 258, 259-60, 263-4, 269, 272, 275, 277-8, 283, 287, 289, 291-2, 295, 297, 302,
305-6, 308. Nine is the number of the months
of autumn, iii, 283, 286, 291; and the indication of the strong or undivided lines in the diagrams of volume ii. Nine provinces, see Divisions; classes of kin, i, 32; iv, 42 ; pastors, i, 229; virtues, i, 54, 221; divisions of the Great Plan, i, 13949; tribes of the i, i, 150; iv, 30; services of good government, and nine songs of them, i, 48, 61; plains, iii, 196, 199; individuals supported on best farms, 210; high ministers, 213, 269; symbols of distinction, 215; years' surplus of income, 222; ladies of honour, 259; gates of capital, 265-6; things that suspend a sacrifice, 330; boys taught to number the days at nine, 476; nine 3hâi, iv, 30; the ninth year of study, 83;
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