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

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Page 2806
________________ 326 Hsien-kbih (Hwang-Ti's music), i, 348; ii, 8, 218. Hsien-yuan Shih (Hwang-Tî), i, 287. Hsin (the mound-sprite), ii, 19. Hsing-than (apricot altar), ii, 192. Hsio-kiû (a kind of dove), i, 166. Hsü-âo (state), i, 190, 206. Hsu Wu-kwei (a recluse), ii, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94. Hsü-yî (a mystical name), i, 247. Hsu Ya (a contemporary and teacher of Yão), i, 169, 255, 256, 312; ii, 108, 161, 183, 210. Hsü-yü (name of count of Ki), i, THE TEXTS OF TAOISM. 239. Hsüan-ming (name of Profundity), i, 247. Hsuan Shui (the dark river, metaphorical), ii, 57. Hsüan-yang 3ze (an author), ii, 265. Hsuan Ying (editor), i, p.xx, 197, 269. Hû (state), i, 206. Hû (god of Northern sea), i, 267. Hû Pu-kieh (ancient worthy), i, 239. Hû-zze (teacher of Lieh-3ze), i, 263, 264, 265. Hû Wǎn-ying (editor and commentator), i, p. xx, 325; ii, 63, 71. Hui (favourite disciple of Confucius), i, 209. See Yen Yüan. Hui-zze, or Hui Shih (philosopher, and friend of Kwang-jze), i, 172, 174, 186, 234, 235, 391, 392; ii, 4, 137, 144, 229. Hwâ (a place), i, 313. Hwâ, Eastern, the (divine ruler of), ii, 248, 254. Hwâ-kieh Shû (a man with one foot), ii, 5. Hwâ-liû (one of king Mû's famous horses), i, 381. Hwâ-shan (a hill), ii, 222. Hwan (Confucianist of Kăng), ii, 204, 205. Hwan (duke of Kbî), i, 233, 343; ii, 18, 20, 101, 177. Hwan Tâu (minister of Yão), i, 295. Hwan Twan (a Tâoist sophist), ii, 230. Hwang-fu Mi (the writer), i, 8. Hwang-kwang (some strange production), ii, 9. Hwang-kung (the first of the upper musical Accords), i, 269. Hwang Liâo (a sophist), ii, 231. Hwang-Ti (the ancient sovereign), i, 193, 244, 256, 295, 297, 298, 299, 311, 338, 348, 370; ii, 7, 28, 55, 58, 60, 73, 96, 97, 171, 172, 218, 255. Hwang-ze Kâo-ão (an officer of Kbi), ii, 19. Hwun-tun (chaos), i, 267, 322. I (name of a place); may be read Ai, i, 194. I (the ancient archer), i, 227; ii, 36, 99. (wild tribes so named), ii, 220. 1- (a bird), ii, 32. I Kieh (a parasite of the court of Kbu), ii, 114. f-lião (a scion of the house of Kbû), ii, 28, 104, 121. f-lo (some strange growth), ii, 9. i-r Bze (a fabulous personage), i, 255, 256. I-shih (name for speculation about the origin of things), i, 247. f Yin (Thang's adviser and minister), i, 6; ii, 162. Jesuit translation of the Tâo Teh King, i, pp. xii, xiii, 95, 115. Julien, Stanislas (the Sinologue), i, pp. xiii, xv, xvi, xvii, 12, 13, 34, 35, 72, 73, 104, 109, 123, 124; ii, 239, 243, 245. Kan Ying Phien (the Treatise), i, P. xi, 38, 40, 43; ii, 235-246. Kan-yüeh (a place in Wu, famous for its swords), i, 367. Kao Yu (the glossarist), i, 86. Kâu-kien (king of Yüeh), ii, 111. Ko (name of the stream, near whose bank Lâo-jze was born), ii, 317. Ko Yuan or Hsüan (a Tâoist writer), ii, 248. Kû (name for female slave), i, 273. Ku-ku (ancient state), ii, 163, 173. Ka Khi (an attendant of Hwang-Tî), ii, 96. Ku-kbüeh (metaphorical name for a height), ii, 58. Kumâragiva (Indian Buddhist), i, 76, 90. Kung-kung (Yao's minister of works), i, 295. Kung Po (earl of Kung), ii, 161. Kung Shan (mount Kung), ii, 161. Kung-sun Lung (noble, and sophist Digitized by Google

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