Page:A history of Chinese literature - Giles.djvu/418

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406 CHINESE LITERATURE

" At the end of the letter, however, you mention that you have a tobacco-pouch for me, which shall be sent on as soon as I forward you a stanza. Surely this reminds one of the evil days of the Chous and the Chengs, when each State took pledges from the other. It certainly is not in keeping with the teaching of the sages, viz., that friends should be the first to give. Why then do you neglect that teaching for the custom of a degraded age ?

" If for a tobacco-pouch you insist upon having a stanza, for a hat or a pair of boots you would wani at least a poem ; while your brother might send me ? cloak or a coat, and expect to get a whole epic in return ! In this way, the prosperity on which you congratulate me would not count for much.

" Shun Yii-t'an of old sacrificed a bowl of rice and a perch to get a hundred waggons full of grain ; he offered little and he wanted much. And have you not heard how a thousand pieces of silk were given for a single word ? two beautiful girls for a stanza ? compared with which your tobacco-pouch seems small indeed. It is probably because you are a military man, accustomed to drill soldiers and to reward them with a silver medal when they hit the mark, that you have at last come to regard this as the proper treatment of an old friend.

" Did not Mencius forbid us to presume upon any- thing adventitious ? And if friends may not presume upon their worth or position, how much less upon a tobacco-pouch ? For a tobacco-pouch, pretty as it may be, is but the handiwork of a waiting-maid ; while my verses, poor as they may be, are the outcome of my intellectual powers. So that to exchange the work of a waiting-maid's fingers for the work of my brain, is a great compliment to the waiting-maid, but a small one to

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