Chinese Literature eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 342 pages of information about Chinese Literature.

Chinese Literature eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 342 pages of information about Chinese Literature.

After starting from Ch’ang-gan, they passed through Lung, [3] and came to the kingdom of K’een-kwei,[4] where they stopped for the summer retreat.  When that was over, they went forward to the kingdom of Now-t’an, crossed the mountain of Yang-low, and reached the emporium of Chang-yih.[5] There they found the country so much disturbed that travelling on the roads was impossible for them.  Its king, however, was very attentive to them, kept them in his capital, and acted the part of their danapati.[6]

Here they met with Che-yen, Hwuy-keen, Sang-shao, Pao-yun, and Sang-king; and in pleasant association with them, as bound on the same journey with themselves, they passed the summer retreat of that year [7] together, resuming after it their travelling, and going on to T’un-hwang, [8] the chief town in the frontier territory of defence extending for about eighty li from east to west, and about forty from north to south.  Their company, increased as it had been, halted there for some days more than a month, after which Fa-hien and his four friends started first in the suite of an envoy, having separated for a time from Pao-yun and his associates.

Le Hao, the prefect of Tun-hwang, had supplied them with the means of crossing the desert before them, in which there are many evil demons and hot winds.  Travellers who encounter them perish all to a man.  There is not a bird to be seen in the air above, nor an animal on the ground below.  Though you look all round most earnestly to find where you can cross, you know not where to make your choice, the only mark and indication being the dry bones of the dead left upon the sand.

[Footnote 1:  Ch’ang-gan is still the name of the principal district (and its city) in the department of Se-gan, Shen-se.  It had been the capital of the first empire of Han (B.C. 202 A.D. 24), as it subsequently was that of Suy (A.D. 589-618).]

[Footnote 2:  The period Hwang-che embraced from A.D. 399 to 414, being the greater portion of the reign of Yao Hing of the After Ts’in, a powerful prince.  He adopted Hwang-che for the style of his reign in 399, and the cyclical name of that year was Kang-tsze.  It is not possible at this distance of time to explain, if it could be explained, how Fa-hien came to say that Ke-hae was the second year of the period.  It seems most reasonable to suppose that he set out on his pilgrimage in A.D. 399, the cycle name of which was Ke-hae.  In the “Memoirs of Eminent Monks” it is said that our author started in the third year of the period Lung-gan of the Eastern Ts’in, which was A.D. 399.]

[Footnote 3:  Lung embraced the western part of Shen-se and the eastern part of Kan-suh.  The name remains in Lung Chow, in the extreme west of Shen-se.]

[Footnote 4:  K’een-kwei was the second king of “the Western Ts’in.”  Fa-hien would find him at his capital, somewhere in the present department of Lan-chow, Kan-suh.]

[Footnote 5:  Chang-yih is still the name of a district in Kan-chow department, Kan-suh.  It is a long way north and west from Lan-chow, and not far from the Great Wall.  Its king at this time was, probably, Twan-yeh of “the northern Leang.”]

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Chinese Literature from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.