{1} ed to have lived 800 years.
{2} 1783 B.C.
{3} P er compilation. See tion quot;Parables of Ancient P;
{4} the wind.
{5} 2357 B.C.
{6} Sage emperors/
{7} A sop and friend of Cse es h him.
{8} Agitations of to tations of t (music of Earth).
{9} Lit. quot;true lord.quot;
{10} Ss and mental distinctions; quot;rig; and quot;; quot;truequot; and quot;false,quot; quot;isquot; and quot;is not,quot; quot;affirmativequot; and quot;negative,quot; also quot;to justifyquot; and quot;condemn,quot; quot;to affirmquot; and quot;deny.quot;
{11} tse s in Cses days. See tions from Motse.
{12} tences is made clear by a line belo;But if t categories in one. tegory cease to exist.quot;
{13} C. quot;;deficient.quot;
quot;; refers to unspoiled unity of tao. In tences, c;success quot; It is explained by commentators t t;s only in silence, and t as soon as one note is struck, otes are necessarily rue of arguments: rutain aspects of it.
{14} See Laotse, Ch. 42.
{15} See Laotse, Ch. 5.
{16} See Laotse, Ch. 58.
{17} Lit. in t;Palace of ;
{18} Personal name of Cse. quot;tsequot; being t of quot;Master.quot;
{19} An important idea t recurs frequently in Cse, all tant flo aspects of the One.
{20} Best disciple of Confucius.
{21} Lit. quot;regarded as sons (ie. fat;
{22} t part of ts.
{23} ter deals entirely iesa literary device for emprast of ter man.
{24} A er referred to in ts.
{25} Lit. quot;tside of frame and bones.quot;
{26} se often discusses ture of attributes, like t;; and quot;; of objects.
{27} All of torical and semi-orical persons arving tending insanity, in protest against a to avoid being called into office.
{28} General attitude of fluidity towards life.
{29} Myto ations of Yin and Yang.
{30} it a beasts body.
{31} A river spirit.
{32} A mountain god.
{33} A semi-mythical ruler, who ruled in 2698-2597 B.C.
{34} A semi-mytly before Emperor Yao.
{35} A er god h a human face and a birds body.
{36} A monarcy, 1324-l266 B.C.100
{37} A famous sword.
{38} Personal name of Confucius.
{39} a-lu: andard pitchpipes.
{40} tseng tsan and Shih Yu:, disciples of Confucius.
{41} I Yang cse (Mo ti).
{42} Beginning yle and vocabulary in t.
{43} Because o serve ty.
{44} Sun Yang, 658-619 B.C.
{45} A mythical ruler.
{46} 481 B.C.
{47} tse lived to see only tion of tiens, At least t;t; must er scribe. t sufficient to vitiate ter, as some quot;textual criticsquot; claim.
{48} Reference to a story. tates Lu and Ced o trickery of a servant, ting bad s city an was beseiged.
{49} See Laotse, Ch. 36.
{50} See Laotse, Ch. 19.
{51} See Laotse, Ch. 45.
{52} See Note 40.
{53} See Laotse, Ch. 1.
{54} All legendary ancient rulers.
{55} Cf. Laotse, Ch. 80.
{56} See Laotse, Ch. 13.
{57} Laotse, tan being one of tse (Li tan, or Li Er;Laoquot; means quot;old,quot; ; is the family name.
{58} ties, hsia, Shang and Chou (2205-222 B.C.)
{59} Signal for attack.
{60} Lit. quot;;
{61} Yin, yang, and darkness.
{62} Great Nebulous is ;; See Note 60.
{63} See Note 58.
{64} ter furter quot;On Levelling All t; and contains tant p of relativity.
{65} ei-Lu:, a myttom or end of the ocean.
{66} Mythree Kings.
{67} Lit. quot;levelling of ranks or distinctions.quot;
{68} From o t of the passages are rhymed.
{69} Kuei, a mythical, one-legged animal.
{70} Now a slogan used in C Japan.
{71} A Neo-Motseanist (of t scer Cse. tion must ters disciples, as is easy to see from tories about Cse which follow.
{72} Capital of Chao.