Book Title: Text of Confucianism Part 01
Author(s): James Legge
Publisher: Oxford

View full book text
Previous | Next

Page 2799
________________ APP. VII. THE STONE TABLET TO LÃO-SZE. 319 Ever kept he in mind (the sage) beneath the Pillar, Still emulous of the sovereigns most ancient. So has he built this pure temple, And planned its stately structure; Pleasant, with hills and meadows around, And lofty pavilion with its distant prospect. St. 10. Its beams are of plum-tree, its ridge-pole of cassia ; A balustrade winds round it; many are its pillars; About them spreads and rolls the fragrant smoke 3 ; Cool and pure are the breezes and mists. The Immortal officers come to their places *; The Plumaged guests are found in its court“, Numerous and at their ease, They send down blessing, bright and efficacious. St. 11. Most spirit-like, unfathomable, (Tâo's) principles abide, with their symbolism at tached 5. Loud is Its note, but never sound emits, Yet always it awakes the highest echoes. From far and near men praise It; In the shades, and in the realms of light, they look up for Its aid; Reverently have we graven and gilt this stone And made our lasting proclamation thereby to heaven and earth. 1. The (sage) beneath the Pillar' must be Lâo-zze. See above in the Introductory notice, p. 313. See the note on the meaning of the epithet * E, vol. xxxix, p. 40. 3 "The smoke,' I suppose, of the incense, and from the offerings.' * Taoist monks are called 'Plumaged or Feathered Scholars ( +),' from the idea that by their discipline and pills, they can emancipate themselves from the trammels of the material body, and ascend (fly up) to heaven. Arrived there, as Immortals or Hsien (), it further appears they were constituted into a hierarchy or society, of which some of them were officers,' higher in rank than others. 5 An allusion to the text of the hexagrams of the Yi King, where the explanations of them by king Wăn,-his thwan, are followed by the symbolism of their different lines by the duke of Kâu,-his hsiang. • See the Tao Teh King, ch. xli, par. 2. Digitized by Google

Loading...

Page Navigation
1 ... 2797 2798 2799 2800 2801 2802 2803 2804 2805 2806 2807 2808 2809 2810 2811 2812 2813 2814 2815 2816 2817 2818 2819 2820 2821 2822 2823 2824 2825 2826 2827 2828 2829