<h2><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P167"></SPAN></span><SPAN name="chapXXX"></SPAN>XXX<br/> CONFUCIUS AND LAO TSE</h2>
<p>We have still to tell of two other great men, Confucius and Lao Tse, who lived
in that wonderful century which began the adolescence of mankind, the sixth
century <small>B.C.</small> In this history thus far we have told very little
of the early story of China. At present that early history is still very
obscure, and we look to Chinese explorers and archæolologists in the new China
that is now arising to work out their past as thoroughly as the European past
has been worked out during the last century. Very long ago the first primitive
Chinese civilizations arose in the great river valleys out of the primordial
heliolithic culture. They had, like Egypt and Sumeria, the general
characteristics of that culture, and they centred upon temples in which priests
and priest kings offered the seasonal blood sacrifices. The life in those
cities must have been very like the Egyptian and Sumerian life of six or seven
thousand years ago and very like the Maya life of Central America a thousand
years ago.</p>
<p>If there were human sacrifices they had long given way to
animal sacrifices before the dawn of history. And a form of
picture writing was growing up long before a thousand years
<small>B.C.</small></p>
<p>And just as the primitive civilizations of Europe and western
Asia were in conflict with the nomads of the desert and the
nomads of the north, so the primitive Chinese civilizations
had a great cloud of nomadic peoples on their northern
borders. There was a number of tribes akin in language and
ways of living, who are spoken of in history in succession as
the Huns, the Mongols, the Turks and Tartars. They changed
and divided and combined and re-combined, just as the Nordic
peoples in north Europe and central Asia changed and varied
in name rather than in nature. These Mongolian nomads had
horses earlier than the Nordic peoples, and it may <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P168"></SPAN></span>be that in the
region of the Altai Mountains they made an independent
discovery of iron somewhen after 1000 <small>B.C.</small>
And just as in the western case so ever and
again these eastern nomads would achieve a sort of political
unity, and become the conquerors and masters and revivers of
this or that settled and civilized region.</p>
<p>It is quite possible that the earliest civilization of China
was not Mongolian at all any more than the earliest
civilization of Europe and western Asia was Nordic or
Semitic. It is quite possible that the earliest civilization
of China was a brunette civilization and of a piece with the
earliest Egyptian, Sumerian and Dravidian civilizations, and
that when the first recorded history of China began there had
already been conquests and intermixture. At any rate we find
that by 1750 <small>B.C.</small> China was already a
vast system of little kingdoms and city states, all
acknowledging a loose allegiance and paying more or less
regularly, more or less definite feudal dues to one great
priest emperor, the “Son of Heaven.” The
“Shang” dynasty came to an end in 1125
<small>B.C.</small> A “Chow” dynasty succeeded
“Shang,” and maintained China in a relaxing unity
until the days of Asoka in India and of the Ptolemies in
Egypt. Gradually China went to pieces during that long
“Chow” period. Hunnish peoples came down and set
up principalities; local rulers discontinued their tribute
and became independent. There was in the sixth century
<small>B.C.</small>, says one Chinese authority, five or
six thousand practically independent states in China. It was
what the Chinese call in their records an “Age of
Confusion.”</p>
<p>But this Age of Confusion was compatible with much
intellectual activity and with the existence of many local
centres of art and civilized living. When we know more of
Chinese history we shall find that China also had her Miletus
and her Athens, her Pergamum and her Macedonia. At present
we must be vague and brief about this period of Chinese
division simply because our knowledge is not sufficient for
us to frame a coherent and consecutive story.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P169"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-169"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-169.jpg" alt="CONFUCIUS" width-obs="450" height-obs="725" /> <p class="caption">
CONFUCIUS
<br/><small>Copy of stone carving in the Temple of Confucius at
K’iu Fu
<br/>
<i>(From the records of the Archæological Mission to North
China (Chavannes))</i>
</small></p>
</div>
<p>And just as in divided Greece there were philosophers and in
shattered and captive Jewry prophets, so in disordered China
there were philosophers and teachers at this time. In all
these cases <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P170"></SPAN></span>insecurity and uncertainty seemed
to have quickened the better sort of mind. Confucius was a
man of aristocratic origin and some official importance in a
small state called Lu. Here in a very parallel mood to the
Greek impulse he set up a sort of Academy for discovering and
teaching Wisdom. The lawlessness and disorder of China
distressed him profoundly. He conceived an ideal of a better
government and a better life, and travelled from state to
state seeking a prince who would carry out his legislative
and educational ideas. He never found his prince; he found a
prince, but court intrigues undermined the influence of the
teacher and finally defeated his reforming proposals. It is
interesting to note that a century and a half later the Greek
philosopher Plato also sought a prince, and was for a time
adviser to the tyrant Dionysius who ruled Syracuse in Sicily.</p>
<p>Confucius died a disappointed man. “No intelligent
ruler arises to take me as his master,” he said,
“and my time has come to die.” But his teaching
had more vitality than he imagined in his declining and
hopeless years, and it became a great formative influence
with the Chinese people. It became one of what the Chinese
call the Three Teachings, the other two being those of Buddha
and of Lao Tse.</p>
<p>The gist of the teaching of Confucius was the way of the
noble or aristocratic man. He was concerned with personal
conduct as much as Gautama was concerned with the peace of
self-forgetfulness and the Greek with external knowledge and
the Jew with righteousness. He was the most public-minded of
all great teachers. He was supremely concerned by the
confusion and miseries of the world, and he wanted to make
men noble in order to bring about a noble world. He sought
to regulate conduct to an extraordinary extent; to provide
sound rules for every occasion in life. A polite, public-
spirited gentleman, rather sternly self-disciplined, was the
ideal he found already developing in the northern Chinese
world and one to which he gave a permanent form.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P171"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-171"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-171.jpg" alt="THE GREAT WALL OF CHINA" width-obs="600" height-obs="806" /> <p class="caption">
THE GREAT WALL OF CHINA
<br/><small>As it crosses the mountains in Manchuria
<br/>
<i>Photo: Underwood & Underwood</i>
</small></p>
</div>
<p>The teaching of Lao Tse, who was for a long time in charge of
the imperial library of the Chow dynasty, was much more
mystical and vague and elusive than that of Confucius. He
seems to have preached a stoical indifference to the
pleasures and powers of the <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P172"></SPAN></span>world and a return to an imaginary
simple life of the past. He left writings very contracted in
style and very obscure. He wrote in riddles. After his
death his teachings, like the teachings of Gautama Buddha,
were corrupted and overlaid by legends and had the most
complex and extraordinary observances and superstitious ideas
grafted upon them. In China just as in India primordial
ideas of magic and monstrous legends out of the childish past
of our race struggled against the new thinking in the world
and succeeded in plastering it over with grotesque,
irrational and antiquated observances. Both Buddhism and
Taoism (which ascribes itself largely to Lao Tse) as one
finds them in China now, are religions of monk, temple,
priest and offering of a type as ancient in form, if not in
thought, as the sacrificial religions of ancient Sumeria and
Egypt. But the teaching <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P173"></SPAN></span>of Confucius was not so overlaid
because it was limited and plain and straightforward and lent
itself to no such distortions.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-172"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-172.jpg" alt="EARLY CHINESE BRONZE BELL" width-obs="400" height-obs="707" /> <p class="caption">
EARLY CHINESE BRONZE BELL
<br/><small>Inscribed in archaic characters: “made for use by
the elder of Hing village in Ting district;” latter half of
the Chou Dynasty, Sixth Century <small>B.C.</small>
<br/>
<i>(In the Victoria and Albert Museum)</i>
</small></p>
</div>
<p>North China, the China of the Hwang-ho River, became
Confucian in thought and spirit; south China, Yang-tse-Kiang
China, became Taoist. Since those days a conflict has always
been traceable in Chinese affairs between these two spirits,
the spirit of the north and the spirit of the south, between
(in latter times) Pekin and Nankin, between the official-
minded, upright and conservative north, and the sceptical,
artistic, lax and experimental south.</p>
<p>The divisions of China of the Age of Confusion reached their
worst stage in the sixth century <small>B.C.</small>
The Chow dynasty was so enfeebled and so discredited that Lao
Tse left the unhappy court and retired into private life.</p>
<p>Three nominally subordinate powers dominated the situation in
those days, Ts’i and Ts’in, both northern powers,
and Ch’u, which was an aggressive military power in the
Yangtse valley. At last Ts’i and Ts’in formed an
alliance, subdued Ch’u and imposed a general treaty of
disarmament and peace in China. The power of Ts’in
became predominant. Finally about the time of Asoka in India
the Ts’in monarch seized upon the sacrificial vessels
of the Chow emperor and took over his sacrificial duties.
His son, Shi-Hwang-ti (king in 246
<small>B.C.</small>, emperor in 220
<small>B.C.</small>), is called in the Chinese Chronicles
“the First Universal Emperor.”</p>
<p>More fortunate than Alexander, Shi-Hwang-ti reigned for
thirty-six years as king and emperor. His energetic reign
marks the beginning of a new era of unity and prosperity for
the Chinese people. He fought vigorously against the Hunnish
invaders from the northern deserts, and he began that immense
work, the Great Wall of China, to set a limit to their
incursions.</p>
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