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[dev-serveez] cistern


From: Neddy Smart
Subject: [dev-serveez] cistern
Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2006 18:57:03 -0400

Chang Yu tells the followinganecdote of P`ei Hsing-chien (A. If the banners and flags are shifted about,sedition is afoot. , and may well causeus to blush for the Christian armies that entered Peking in 1900A. He who exercises no forethought but makes light of hisopponents is sure to be captured by them. This would connect thesentence with what went before about rewards and punishments. If the officers are angry, it means that themen are weary. There are twointerpretations available here. Now is the time to strike, before Hsiao Hsieneven knows that we have got an army together. But it hardly needs a Sun Tzu to draw such anobvious inference. When the soldiers stand leaning on their spears, theyare faint from want of food. T`ien Tan knew then that his soldiers were ready forany enterprise. These are: (1) Flight; (2)insubordination; (3) collapse; (4) ruin; (5) disorganization; (6)rout. The answer was, that they were contendingwith one another in putting the weight and long-jumping. Ho Shihsuggested: ground on which intercommunication is easy. Ts`ao Kungthinks it is some strategical advantage on which the enemy isdepending. Theother is indicated in Ts`ao Kungs brief note: Draw closertogether--i. Somebody asked her, saying: Why do you cry? But it hardly needs a Sun Tzu to draw such anobvious inference. There are twointerpretations available here. Ts`ao Kung says it means groundcovered with a network of roads, like a chessboard. There are twointerpretations available here. , and may well causeus to blush for the Christian armies that entered Peking in 1900A. He had invadedthe Ch`u State, where a universal levy was made to oppose him. 619-682), who was sent on apunitive expedition against the Turkic tribes. Forthwith the besiegers dug up all the graves and burned thecorpses lying in them. The latter pressed for hastymeasures, but Sung turned a deaf ear to his counsel. At last therebels were utterly worn out, and began to throw down theirweapons of their own accord. But it hardly needs a Sun Tzu to draw such anobvious inference. Onthe whole, the weight of the commentators certainly inclines tothe rendering defile. When the enemys men were united, they managed to keepthem in disorder. But this is only one of the lures which might induce usto quit our position. Advancing, we can nowhere take a breathing-space; retreating, wehave no haven of refuge. Movement amongst the trees of a forest shows that theenemy is advancing. A fortnight later, Hsin-ch`eng had fallen and Meng Ta had lost his head.

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