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GENERALSHIP AND PREVENTION OF ANARCHY
" No more the thirsty entrance of this soil
Shall daub her lips with her own children's blood.
No more shall trenching war channel her fields
Nor bruise her flowerets with the armed hoofs
Of hostile paces: those opposed eyes,
Which, like the meteors of a troubled heaven,
All of one nature, of one substance bred,
Did lately meet in the intestine shock
And furious close of civil butchery,
Shall now, in mutual well-beseeming ranks,
March all one way: and be no more opposed
Against acquaintance, kindred and allies:
The edge of war, like an ill-sheathed knife,
No more shall cut his master."
SHAKESPEARE.
p. 182
VII
DISSERTATION ON
GENERALSHIP AND PREVENTION OF ANARCHY
{notes|elucidations and analyses}
Kao Yu's explanation of the title Ping Lueh (###) is: Military functions are for defence against incipient anarchy (nip it in the bud), consonant with the Chinese saying ### 'take it before it comes on.' To do this well lies in tactics.
In ancient times the military was employed neither for the enlargement of territory, nor for lust of gain, but Military defensive in purpose.
rather its use arose from the wish, either to preserve decaying houses, to continue the succession of some dynasty, or the pacification of rebellious people and the elimination of the perils that afflicted the people.
All creatures of flesh and blood are endowed with teeth, horns, claws, or heels. Those with horns butt; Animals endowed with arms.
those with teeth bite; those with venom poison; and those with heels kick. They like to play and gambol when pleased, and to hurt when angry. This is nature.
The appetites of man demand food and clothes: and since there are not enough for them all, they congregate in Social struggles.
communities, in various clans, high and low, in different places. When goods are unequally distributed, contending communities struggle for possession; and it follows that the strong oppress the weak, and the bold terrorize the timid.
Since man is without the strong muscle and bone of the animals, and lacks the advantages of tooth and claw, p. 183 Sage works for social justice.
he therefore cuts hide for armour and makes swords of iron. And it comes to pass that the greedy and gluttonous rob and despoil others, disturbing the tranquillity of the world. Anon, the wise man, grieved, appears to quell the rapacity of the unruly, to bring peace to disturbed peoples and to define the path of duty. He extirpates the dangerous and exterminates the foul, thus making the turbid clear and the perilous places safe. In this way a peaceful settlement is obtained.
The origin and sources of militarism are to be found in the distant past. Huang Ti, once upon a time, warred Soldiers were for defence.
against Yen Ti, in the deserts of Cho Lu. Chuen Hsü made war on Kung Kung. Yao fought against the unrighteous king on the banks of the Tan river. Yao punished the Three Aborigines.1 Ch‛i fought Yu Hu. From the era of the Five Emperors, the land has not been free from the clash of arms, especially in times of decay and degeneration.
Now the reason for the existence of soldiers arose from the necessity of preventing lawlessness and the To quell the lawless.
quelling of anarchy. Because Yen Ti was a fire-pest, he was captured by Huang Ti. And Kung Kung was slain by Chuan Hsü, because he was corrupt as the guardian against floods. These culprits had the knowledge of truth and the guidance of morals; but since they refused to be led by such, they were disciplined by the majesty of power. Unsubmissive to the power of majesty, they were coerced by military force. These were the principles on which the Sage Kings acted in the employment of soldiers. The method may be compared to the combing of the hair, and the hoeing of the ground. The elimination was that of weeds only. The hurt from this was little; the advantage was great.
No crimes are greater than the killing of the innocent, and the feeding of a lot of unprincipled rulers. There can be no calamity greater than the grabbing of territory, done p. 184 When bad men held military power.
in order to satisfy the lust of an ambitious individual. Take the case of Chieh of Hsia and that of Chou of Yin. If they had been taken in hand immediately, when the people began to suffer, it would have never come about that a person would be roasted on hot irons, as happened after the iniquitous reign had gone on for long. Again if Li of Tsin and Kang of Sung, who lost their lives and ruined their countries by unprincipled acts, had been arrested early in their evil course, it could never have come Execution of kings justified.
about that they robbed in their aggression and in their violence as they did. Anarchy of the realm causes general suffering to the people. One man, by pandering to his vicious desires, fills the land with woe. Such outrages are intolerable to the law of Heaven.
The restraint of violence and the punishment of anarchy are the prime reasons for the establishment of Kings set up for order.
kings. But it has come about that kings take up advantage of the might of the myriad people and turn it to an instrument for burdening others, and use it as an occasion for rapine and slaughter. They play the tiger and the panther. Is it not justifiable, then, to exterminate such monsters? If you want to breed Tyrants to be exterminated.
fish in a lake, you must first destroy the otters. If you wish to breed animals, you must first destroy the wolves. How much more is such a course necessary in the case of shepherding the people!
Hence the militarism of the autocrat and king was a matter of anxious consideration by conference, of arrangement by plans, and of support by justice. The object was not to overthrow the existing but to keep waning powers alive. Therefore, when it was heard that the prince of an enemy country was adding oppression to oppression on his people, troops were put in motion and came to the confines of his country. He was reprimanded for his injustice, p. 185 Just to discipline unruly princes.
and rebuked for his errors. When the army reached his kingdom, the commandant issued general orders to his troops forbidding the felling of trees, the injuring of graves, the burning of crops, the destruction of property, the enslavement of the people, the robbing of animals. An announcement was also made to the people saying that the prince of their country was arrogant towards Heaven, a reviler of the spirits, his judgments were unjust and he killed the innocent. For these crimes he was doomed by Heaven and hated by the people. The army had come to oust the unrighteous prince and put a righteous one in his place. Whoever trespasses against the law of Heaven is the leader of traitors to the people. He himself must die and his clan be exterminated. A family giving ear to the proclamation would have a family's reward; a hamlet would have a hamlet's; a village a village's; a district a district's.
The country that surrenders will have its freedom. In a word, the punishment of the kingdom shall not fall Banish a bad prince but treat his people kindly.
on the people. With the punishment of the king, and a change of government, the gentry shall be honoured, the worthy employed, the orphans and widows shall be cared for, and kindness shown to the poor and needy. Further, innocent prisoners shall be released and the meritorious shall be rewarded. Such justice and clemency will ensure the allegiance of the people, who will open their doors to the invading army and await its coming. Tribute will be willingly given in grain and goods. The people's only fear will be lest it should not come. Such were the principles by which Tang and Wu won the kingship, and the method by which Duke Huan2 of Ch‛i became the leader of the hegemony and autocrats.
We thus clearly see that when a king is without the Tao, his subjects look on the invading soldiers even as the parched land looks for rain and the thirsty long for water. When just soldiers, therefore, come, there would be no war.
p. 186
The soldiers of later times, in every case, even when the king is without the Tao, dig moats and trenches; they Altruistic idea lost.
hold the bastions and guard the city. The invading army comes to the attack with an aim of conquest and aggrandisement, and not for the purpose of curbing the wrongdoer and cleaning the land from iniquity. Thus it is we have come to have slain men in war, and streams of blood in the daily and continuous sanguingary conflicts. The merits of the autocrats and kings no longer appear in the world, for the reason that it is all for self now.
When the cause of war arises from the lust of territory, it would be vain to hope for true kingship. He who fights In just war the goodwill of the people essential.
for his own self, ends by finding no accruing merit. When, on the contrary, a case arises which involves the interests of the people all will help: but an aggressor for personal ends will always be left to his fate. He who has the goodwill of the people, will be strong in spite of small resources. The powerful monarch, on the other hand, who has lost the goodwill of the people, is certain to perish. If an army has lost the Tao it is weak; if it possesses the Tao, it is strong. If the commandant loses the Tao, he will be powerless, but if he has the Tao, he will be proficient. If a country is imbued with the Tao, it will abide: if it loses the Tao, it will perish.
What is meant by the Tao? To embody the Round and3 imitate the Square.4 It carries the Yin and embraces the Yang: Its left is soft, its right hard. Its base is dark, its crown is light. Its transformations are irregular (inconstant). It possesses the root of the Unity in order to satisfy the whole creation.5 This is Enlightenment!6 By "Round" is meant Heaven, and by "Square," Earth. There is no beginning point in the rotundity of Heaven; there is no boundary to the squareness of Earth, hence it is not possible to peer in through its doors. Heaven revolves, bringing fecundity at every turn; yet it has no p. 187 shape or form. Earth begets and nourishes boundlessly. Profound and exuberant! Who can sound the depths of their resources? Every created thing has some beginning. It is the Tao alone that has no beginning. The reason of its having no beginning is that it has no constant and rigid form. It revolves, but is inexhaustible, like the Sun and Moon in their convolutions, like the Spring and Autumn in their sequences, like Day and Night. When one ends, the other begins. Light is followed by dark. It is impossible to take count of their records. The Tao creates form, but is without form itself; and for this reason its work is achieved. It creates matter, but is not matter: hence it is victorious and is not subjugated. Destruction No war best.
is, at best, the soldier's aim. There is yet a better aim still, viz., not to have destruction,—to have no war. Therefore the superior soldier is not harmful, being in line with the Divine afflatus. The tools of war are not sharpened, yet no enemy dare attack. The great drum is not brought out from the armoury7 and there is not one of the feudal lords but trembles and shows the white feather. They stand in awe and dare not lift their heads towards the place. Hence he who fights without going from the temple is the Emperor. He whose virtue is felt where he goes, is the King. "Warring in the temple" implies the imitation of the way of Heaven. He whose transforming virtue is felt, imitates the duties of the four seasons. The practice of a perfect government within the kingdom leads outside people to long for such virtue. The perfect rule is the way of Heaven.
Victory won without drawing the sword, resulting in the obedience of the Feudatories to their Lord, implies the art of perfect rule. Hence he who has won the true art of governing is in repose and imitates the way of Heaven: in action, he follows the way of the Sun and Moon. His anger and gentleness are consonant with the four seasons: his calls are like peals of thunder; his voice and spirit are not forced, but harmonious: the eight tones p. 188 of harmony never fail to respond correctly. Everything is in harmony. There is no disobedience to the five elements. Below are scaly creatures, and above the feathered tribes: Perfect order in nature.
every twig and leaf throughout creation is arranged, from root to branch, in the most perfect order. Therefore the creative energy enters the smallest crevice without force, and fills the largest spaces with ease: it baptizes the metals and stones with lustre, and all grasses and trees glisten with its sheen. Even the very tiniest hair is arranged and the six quarters of the world are stretched by it. There is nothing discordant. The baptism and the enduements of the Tao penetrate all, even the tiniest pore. Its triumphant powers are many.
If there is any miscalculation in archery, the target will never be hit. If there is any sinew or joint which the Ch‛i horse does not put into full use, it will never do a thousand li in the day. Likewise failure to obtain victory, The Tao state need never war.
does not happen from any error on the day the drum is sounded, but from faults of long standing. The preparatory days have been wanting in discipline. Therefore, the soldiers that are imbued with the Tao,8 need never send the war chariot forth; the edge of the sword never need reek with blood; the horse need not be saddled, nor need the drum have the dust fall from it when struck, nor the flag be unfurled: the arrows need not leave the quiver; the seat of government need not be shifted about; the tradesman does not need to leave his shop nor the ploughman his field. Unity of purpose gives unity of aid.
Why? Because when justice is advertised to the many and the delinquent is reprimanded for his faults, the powerful state will pay attention, and the small principality will bow the head, in obedience to the wish of the people, who desire peace. The reprimand is made and takes advantage of the strength of the people. For it is to their own interests, to eliminate wrongs and expel wrongdoers. Identity of p. 189 interests brings mutual co-operation: identity of feeling brings unity of action and mutual achievement. When there is identity of desire, mutual help follows, and when action is carried on in the spirit of the Tao, the whole empire is responsive. When the anxieties of the people are considered, the whole empire will join in a conflict. The hunter, following the chase, gets every ounce of strength out of carriage and horse and man: this mutual help comes not from the fear of punishment but from mutual interest. The roads are packed with those eager to help. When fellow-passengers on a boat, crossing the Yangtse meet with a strong wind and rolling billows, then every son of them, though perfect strangers, joins in helping to keep the boat from foundering. Their anxiety is common, and so they all equally strive to save the ship. No mutual exhortation is needed.
Likewise, the enlightened king in the use of soldiers acts in the interests of the community and for the A disinterested king wins.
elimination of the evil in the land. All participate in the benefit. The people in the service of country are like sons working for the father. The majesty of action is overwhelming, like a falling mountain or the rushing torrent from a crumbling dam. No enemy can withstand the onset. Hence the wise employment of troops consists in their service being for all, themselves included. The man who is not able to use them is he who is working for his own personal ends. When used for public ends, there is nothing they cannot do; when used selfishly, it is but little that can be accomplished.
In military governing there are three important points to note. (a) The highest method of its functions is this, Conditions of success unity and loyalty.
to regulate and govern the country, to administer justice, to actuate moral ideas, to establish correct laws, to shut up all avenues of evil, to keep the community and ministers friendly and the people acting in concert; p. 190 high and low, all of one mind. King and minister must co-operate in their energies, the Feudal Lords respect such majestic force, and all parts of the empire must cherish splendid virtue. When such conduct as the above is cultivated in the Temple,9 even the distant parts will bend and point to such high examples, and the whole empire will be responsive. (b) The next step in excellence is this. discipline, efficiency.
When the territory is wide, the people numerous, the prince virtuous, the generals loyal, the country rich and the soldiers strong; when contracts are faithfully kept, and the military is disciplined, then when the bell tolls and the drum calls to war, the army of the enemy will flee before battle is joined. (c) The lower method is this. To know the lie of the land, to be versed in the points of danger and vantage, to anticipate unexpected situations and be conversant with all methods strategy and courage.
of deployment, to have the drum attached to the arm ready for instant action; then with naked swords and flying arrows to come out of the sanguinary battle victorious, trampling the bloody field strewn with corpses for a thousand li, and with the chariots moving about laden with the dead and wounded, thus winning a decisive battle. This is the baser use of militarism.
To-day the empire knows only the application of rules in a superficial way. There is no application of Aids to victory.
fundamental principles. The root is abandoned and the branch alone is cultivated. The points wherein the military may be of assistance in victory are many; but the essential points in securing victory are few. The armour may be strong, the tools sharp, the chariots firm, the horses excellent, the commissariat full, the soldiers abundant and chariots many; these things are the army's capital. But the essentials of victory do not lie in these.
To be learned in the movements of the heavenly bodies and in the art of divining the psychology of the soldier p. 191 The Tao of the General.
and his destiny; to be versed in strategy;—these are all aids to warfare: but they are not all. The general's essential of victory lies in intuitive genius, the endowment of intelligence which is inborn: his essential is in the Tao that cannot be expressed. It is this which differentiates him from the multitude.
Now the utmost care is required in the selection of good officers and the elimination of the bad. The different The choice of officers.
duties may be apportioned as follows: Times for movement and rest of troops; the division of soldiers; the arrangements of companies and battalions, fitting each and all into the right places; the preparation for the call of the drum and the unfurling of Right man in right place.
the flags; these are the duties of the Yü officers. The knowledge of dangerous and advantageous positions; a survey of the enemy's position and knowledge of his soldiers and finding out his situation, is the work of the Scout Master. To find out the conditions of the road for quick marching and spots where are convenient wells for cooking, are the duties of the Ssû Kung officers.10 The care of the commissariat so that nothing is abandoned in moving camp; the supervision of conveyances so that there shall be enough without any Fitness in service.
waste; the digging of trenches is the work of the transport officers. And the relation of these five heads to the General may be compared to the relation of the arm, hand and leg to the body. Thus there must be a selection of different abilities to ensure the efficient doing of the work. There must be instruction in administrative duties; all must be informed by command: and their service must be similar to the tiger and the leopard in the use they make of their teeth and claws, or the birds in the use of the principal feathers of the wings. Nothing and no one shall be without its place and Worth in Command.
use. Nevertheless these are only the assisting instruments of the General towards victory, and not the vital instrument by which it shall p. 192 be won. Victory and defeat of the army ultimately lie with the High Authorities. When they are worthy, the people below will be obedient to those above; and the army will be strong. When the people are more worthy than their rulers, there will be a cleavage and an estrangement between them. In that case, the army will be weak.
When virtue and justice are enough to influence the whole people of the empire; when means are sufficient to Essential point of victory.
meet all the urgent matters of the empire; when selection of officers is broad enough to win the approbation of the good; when measures and plans are made with enough care to know the conditions of strength and weakness—these measures form the essential points of victory.
Broad territories and many people are not enough to make a country strong, nor are a virile soldiery and sharp implements enough to ensure victory. High walls and deep moats are not enough to supply firm stability. Power lies in good rule.
Stringent commands and multitudinous punishments are not sufficient to inspire awe. Given an existing government with good rule, and a country, though small, will abide; but a rotting government will perish, however big the country may be.
The ancient kingdom of Ts‛u embraced the waters of Yuan and Hsiang, on the South, and on the North it was Examples.
bounded by the waters of Ying and Ssû. On the West, it included the territories of Shu Tung. On the East, there was Kuo T‛an Huai, with the waters of Yin and Ju serving as fosses. The Yangtse Chiang and the Han River were its ramparts and the Teng forests its battlements. High mountains that sought the clouds and fathomless abysses were its frontiers. The position of its territories was most advantageous. Its people were courageous. They had rhinoceros-hides for armour and caps made of tapir skins. Their spears were long and their claymores were short. The army vanguard was complete and its rearguard was thick with the cross-bow. p. 193 Strong war-chariots guarded its flanks.
Speedy as the flying arrow were they. When travelling together, they sounded like roaring thunder; they were like wind and rain when going in loose formation. Nevertheless, these formidable troops were annihilated at Tsui Hsia and their power wrecked at Pei Chu. The powerful Ts‛u, great of territory, numerous of people, possessed half the empire; nevertheless its king, Huai Wang feared Meng Chang Chun of the North. He had to leave his lares and penates and become the slave of the mightier Ts‛in. His soldiers were captured, his lands were appropriated, and he died in servitude and never returned home.
Hu Hai,11 Ch‛in Shih Huang, the second, held the imperial power of the world. His kingdom was most wealthy. Where the foot of man went, no spot on which oars plied the boats but was embraced within his rule. In the pursuit of his extravagancies and his lusts of eye and ear he exhausted every art. He never heeded the hunger, poverty and cold of the people. He built myriad chariots and the famous palace of Ao Fang.12 He conscripted the youths of the villages, sending them to disant parts as indentured soldiers. He exacted taxes, amounting to more than half the nation's wealth. He drafted people from afar into his service and punished mercilessly any delinquents. Countless numbers were dying without food and clothes. How many myriads died daily I do not know. Discontent prevailed throughout the land. The people had no peace; they were giddy with heat and bent with hard labour. There was no mutual help between officials and the common people. Mutual suspicion filled every breast. A rustic, named Ch‛en Sheng,13 in Ta Tze, appeared in rebellion, with bared shoulders, proclaiming that he was establishing the Great Ts‛u. He called, and the whole nation responded to his call. He had no well-furnished armoury nor trained soldiers with strong cross-bows and sharp swords. But they made lances of brier and date trees, fixing into them sharpened iron points. These, alone, were p. 194 their weapons. With only such arms they met an army furnished with lances and cross-bows. They attacked fortified cities and occupied territories. Everything fell before them. The people of the whole empire were seething with discontent like writhing worms. So the rebel army swept all before it. The old order passed away like a fleeting cloud or a rolling mist. This man, of humble origin and with such extemporized arms, turned out in the rough, won the whole land to his cause, which responded to his call, because the hearts of the people were full of anger and resentment.
Another example:—When King Wu undertook the chastisement of Chou,14 he met with discouraging omens in his enterprise, such as great rains, when he came to Fan: the head of the Kung mountain collapsed into the river when he came near. A comet appeared, with its tail pointing to the east, which seemed to be an omen favourable to Yin (Chow) and indicating that Wu would be routed. During the war, the elements were boisterous for the space of ten days, and in the middle of the march, the army was embarrassed by storms of wind and rain. Nevertheless, those who pressed on, though not encouraged by rewards, nor laggards urged by the threat of punishment, succeeded, with but little serious fighting, in winning a victory that wrested the empire from the hands of Chou. Therefore, we learn that he who governs well need never fear an enemy: and he who wars well, on high moral principles, will have no battles to wage. He who is clear on the doctrine of prohibitions and permissions,15 on what to open and on what to close taking the right opportunity and following the popular wish, wins that day. Therefore, he who would govern well, accumulates virtue. He is a good general who arouses the spirit of his soldiers. The people will serve loyally if there is a fund of virtue in the leader, and the exercise of authority will enhance the power of awe. Therefore, where the accretion of spirit is slight, the strength for victory will be small. Where there is a large flow of benevolent virtue p. 195 towards people there will be a wide influence of awe. Where awe prevails there will be strength in the one and weakness in the other. It follows, then, that a wise general will first use such methods as exist for weakening the enemy, and only subsequently should he engage in battle. In which case with less than half the expenditure of power applied, results will be doubled.
The territory of Tang was only 70 li in extent. It became a kingdom through the cultivation of virtue. Chih Pei had a 1000 li of land, yet he perished, enfeebled by militarism. So the kingdom of a thousand chariots expanded through the cultivation of virtue: the kingdom of ten thousand chariots became extinct through too much inclination to use military operations. Hence conquering troops must first gain the victory through well thought out plans, and battle may then be undertaken. Undisciplined troops go headlong into war and expect victory simply by an engagement of arms.
Given equality of virtue16 in the contending parties, the victory will lie with the party with most soldiers. Armament Equality in virtue.
being equal, the clever will overcome the stupid: and the man of plans will beat the man without them. He who would employ troops must beforehand win his battles in the Sacred Fane.17 It is from here that victory is got. Here it is the King weighs whether he or his enemy is the worthier, and which side has the abler General; whose people is the more loyal to his sovereign: which of the two has the better rule; which has husbanded the greater resources; whose officers are the more efficient; whose implements are the sharper and the best prepared. Hence victory in decided by the weighing of plans and policy in the Palace of State. When this is the case, victory is certain, though the field of battle be a thousand li away.
Visible strongholds are seen of all: there are military works which are handed on and studied from one age to another. All such are the visible means of getting a victory. p. 196 But he who is apt in these visible things does not stake his all on them. What he esteems still more is the tao. He esteems this because of its formlessness. Being without material form it cannot be imposed upon, it cannot be fathomed.18 Skill may be met by skill; the form visible can be met with opposition; the appearance of the whole army may be concealed with ambush; the appearance of arms will be met by preparation in arms. Movements, The Tao mind.
envelopments, feints, withdrawals, can be cunningly met by similar action. None of these are good. The movements of the Tao-inspired are like a spirit's emergence and a demon's action, unexpected and sudden, like the sudden shining of the stars and their sinking into darkness again; like the rising of the fabulous bird Luan, and the excitation of the Lin, like the flight of the phoenix or the ascension of the dragon. Skilful movement is like the autumn wind, swift like the electric fish. Similarly the capable commander attacks the leisurely manner of his opponent with vigorous activity. With abounding vitality he smothers the crumbling ineptitude of the other; with swiftness he stifles the slowness of the other: with affluence he controls the hunger of his enemy. These are the conquering factors. The effect is like water extinguishing fire; like heat liquefying snow. Thus whatever is done, succeeds; success follows every action.
All pervasive through the regions of the mind, the spirit speeds to the boundless without. The will, active in the invisible world, will issue forth in most unexpected ways: with power it goes, with suddenness it comes. There is no divining its movements. It emerges clear and hits the object truly. The objective of the spirit is known to no mortal. It is swift as the lightning and rapid as the wind and the rain. It seems as though it sprang from earth or fell from heaven. Alone it issues, alone it enters: nothing can withstand it. It is like the shuttle and the bronze-pointed arrow. There is none to compare with it! Now light, now dark! Who can know its beginning? p. 197 Who can divine its end? Before it is seen, it has already accomplished its purpose.
Therefore, he who is a wise leader, when he sees the weak spot of his enemy, presses on him without rest: Swift energy of the wise leader.
he pursues him without giving him breathing space: he hangs on to him and does not let him go for a moment. He attacks the enemy when he is unprepared and falls on him when he least expects it, quick as is the thunder, which allows no time to stop the ears; swift as the lightning which gives no time to shield the eyes. The wise leader of troops is swift as an echo which follows the sound, or as the drum responding to the tattoo. Dazed, there is no time to rub the eyes, nor space to draw in the breath after a cry! So when the onset starts, the enemy beholds the thick host upon him; he has no time to look up to heaven or down to earth. Hands fail to grasp the lance; the soldier can't even draw out his sword. Thus, swift as lightning or the sweep of a hot wind, or as the flame of the fire, or the plunge of a wave, he leaps upon the enemy, who thus suddenly paralysed, has no way of defending himself, if he stands still, nor does he know what action to take, if he moves. So with the tattooing of the drum and the waving of the flag, every obstacle will be swept away. Nothing under heaven can withstand the awe-inspiring force; no one will dare to contest and stand against such might! The attacking power will always overcome the defensive force. He who has pondered in mind the problems before him, will always conquer the man who has not thought out his plans.
The cool soldier is strong. In unity there is strength and concentrated fierceness: Fearlessness of death and Unity of will.
fixity of purpose makes the hero. Hesitation results in defeat, and divided strength leads to weakness. Hence, he who can sow the seeds of disintegration in the soldiers of another man and throw hesitation into the enemy's ranks, will make it possible for the few to overthrow the many. Where this is impossible, p. 198 double the number of soldiers would not he enough to do the work. Thus the soldiers of Chou had a hundred myriad minds: the three thousand soldiers of Wu Wang were of one mind. So a thousand soldiers who are of one mind give a thousand men's strength. But ten thousand soldiers, each of different mind, will not have the power of one man.
When general and soldier, officers and people move as one body, the enemy can be met and engaged in battle. Confidence and Preparedness.
Therefore, when plans are fixed and issued, when operations are put in motion without divided authority, when the General has no doubts on the plans fixed upon and the soldiers are of one mind, when movements are without procrastination and waste; when there are no contrary orders and no empirical attempts, the enemy will be met with vigour, and the operations will be intense. So the General looks on the people as the body, and the people regard the General as the heart. Given a sincere heart, the bodily members will rush on naked steel: but when the heart hesitates as though in doubt, the bodily members will be confused and timid. When the heart is divided with contrarieties, the bodily members will fail to act together. Where there is a lack of perfect sincerity in the general, the soldiers will be wanting in valour.
We may say thus, that a good general's soldiers are as the teeth of the tiger, the horns of the rhinoceros, the feathers of a bird, the legs of the centipede. They can walk, they can toss, they can bite and they can butt. Though strong, the enemy will not succeed, though numerous, it will cause but little injury. The result of unity of heart is mighty! Where the soldiers sincerely follow the command, they will have no fear, though few. On the contrary, when they do not follow, sincerely, the supreme command, they are weak in power, though they be a host in number. And so when the masses below have no regard for the powers above, they put no heart into their service. When the soldier has no fear of the general it will be seen in the p. 199 demeanour of slackness in battle. There must be the essential of firmness in defence, and the essential of victory in attack. Without even awaiting a close engagement, the occasion of success and failure may verily be learnt from the outward demeanour and conduct of the army.
An army has three Influences and two Adjustments (ch‛uan). There is the Influence of Morale, the Influence of Position, and the Influence of (yin.) Opportunity. When Three Influences.
the general is full of courage and despises the enemy, the soldiers go to battle then really with courage and joy. As the captain of a mighty host, whose will is as buoyant as the floating cloud, whose spirit is as resilient as the wafted breeze, whose cry is like the thunder reverberating, whose accumulated stores of sincerity towards his men, he will fall on the enemy as an avalanche, with majestic awe. This may be said to be the Influence of Morale.
An exiguous pass, a ferry pontoon, a great mountain, a serpentine defile, a cul-de-sac, a dangerous pitfall, a narrow ravine, full of winding ways like the intestines of a sheep, a hole like a fisher's net, which admits, but from which there is no exit, are situations in which one man can hold back a thousand. They may be called the Influence of Position. The Influence of Opportunity is the tiredness, the disorder, the hunger and thirst, the coldness, the uncertainty of the time of attack, unwatchfulness in the time of tent-pegging, or the striking of the camp, of the enemy.
Skilful in the use of bluffing and spying, in finding out the mistakes and in calculating the troubles of the enemy Two Adjustments.
and in preparing ambushes and camouflage; concealing one's own movements and falling on the enemy unawares, so that his soldiers have no means to prepare against the irruption—all such Power.
methods belong to Influence of Power, the adjustment of knowledge.
Correct arrangement of the line of battle; placing picked soldiers in front: arranging orderly advance and p. 200 retreat: disposing of the attacking platoons so that the front and rear do not tread on each other, or the right and left mutually clash, thus ensuring few casualties, yet inflicting many on the enemy: such may be called Tactics. Tactics.
Adjustment of tactic power and influence must have expression. In this way. Officers and soldiers must be allotted, each to his own department. The selection of the able, the employment of talent, fixing schemes and perfecting plans, getting the right men for officials, the timely advance and dismissal of men, carefully thinking out gains and losses,—these measures will enhance Administration.
the spirit of awe. Given these conditions, vigorous attack must be made without waiting for the armoured chariots and scaling ladders. And thus the city is taken. To break the enemy even without actual battle at close quarters, depends on the essentials of victory having been thought out and matured beforehand. War, therefore, must not be thoughtlessly entered into without the assurance of certain victory. When victory Battle joined must be with power.
is certain, then the battle may be joined. After the army is put in motion. The soldiers are massed in order and not scattered about. The army must never go forth and return without good results. If it does not move, well! But if it does advance, it must do go in a stupendous way. It must astonish heaven and shake the earth: it must sustain Taishan19 and startle the whole world: even the demons must shuffle out of the way: birds and beasts must be petrified with fear. Thus, stupendously powerful, there will be no battlefield; for the enemy will not come near. The cities of the kingdom will need no guards to hold them. Impetuosity will be controlled by fundamental repose. Disorder will be held in check by order. By imperturbability of mind the commander calms turbulence, and by orderly government, he controls disorder.
The invisible governs all the visible, and Wu wei, p. 201 Wu wei secret of success.
Tao action, meets every change. Though victory may not be got over the enemy, yet, there is no way by which the enemy can possibly conquer.
If the enemy makes the first move, his intentions may be seen. He being in commotion, and I at rest with the fundamental, has his strength worn out. When his movements are seen, the possibility of victory may be controlled. When his strength is on the wane, then will be my chance to show power. Seeing his movements, I may adapt my plans according to all his changes. Watching the enemy's weak and strong points, gives me the control of his life. I offer him the baits which he desires, until he is satiated with them, and so, when I see any weak spot for an opening, I rush in to seize the advantage. When his strategy has come to an end, then I grip him: and when his various schemes are exhausted, then the opportunity to overthrow him has arrived.
On the other hand, if the enemy should also resort to non-activity, he must be met by some exceptional strategy: if he will not come to an open engagement, then will be the time to perfect plans and wait for him to engage. If the enemy manoeuvres, in open response to his opponents movement, which being seen, there may be mutual attempts to circumvent the rear of each other. When he expects "me" to follow in pursuit of his feint of deployment, he will naturally concentrate his best soldiers in one spot; with the result that his army will be thinned in other parts: when the seasoned soldiers wheel to the left, his right wing (west) will be endangered. When his troops get separated, then will be the time to give pursuit. When the enemy is very near and yet shows no sign of moving to the attack, and he is in a state of lethargy, then is the time to attack him with a rush like thunder and mow down his troops like grass and trees. It will be easy work: flash on him like lightning: accelerate speed with speed. The enemy will have no time to wheel round: his chariots p. 202 will be paralyzed. His troops will be stock-still like trees: his bows will be stiff like rams' horns: his troops, though multitudinous, will not dare to face "mine" in battle. Whoever has a full perspective of conditions will gain the victory. All outward and concrete actions can be countered and met. Therefore, the wise man conceals the outward expression of purpose within the wu, the invisible, the mind. The mind roams in the region of the immaterial. Winds and rain can be closed against, but cold and heat cannot be shut out because they have no form. Now those things that can penetrate through the minutest pores, (like water through the pores of blotting-paper) and infiltrate metal and stone and reach to the utmost distances, and place themselves above the ninth heaven, or wreathe themselves underground21 can only do so by wu hsing, the formless.
A general, able in handling soldiers, should attack the enemy in disorder, but not attack him when he is in good order. No surprise attack can be made on a redoubtable army nor an assault carried out against flags that stand upright and float proudly.
When the outlook regarding the enemy is not clear, then is the time to consider the star of destiny22a in Look to the star of destiny.
preparing to meet him. When he seems to be inert, then is the occasion to overwhelm him. When the enemy seems to be in good luck, then it is not the time to make a move. If the tiger and the leopard would keep quiet they would not fall into the pitfall. When the tailed deer and the stag keep still, they will not get entangled in the snare. When birds keep Caution in moving.
quiet, they will not be caught in the fowlers net. When fish and lobster keep still, they will not be trapped by hook and gin. Creatures have never been put in subjection except through movement. Hence the sages value tranquility. Tranquility, then, can meet turbulence: and the soldiers who move last can stand against the soldiers who move first. The diligent will beat the slack: the complete plan will beat the imperfect plan. p. 203 Therefore a capable commander should have his soldiers animated by the same spirit, and by concentration increase their strength. The brave must not advance alone, nor the apprehensive retreat without support. When the soldiers halt, it must be as one, and they must show the firmness of the Ch‛iu22 mountain. They must deploy like the wind and rain, simultaneously and vigorously. With such a front no enemy can stand against them. There is nothing that will not be broken up by them. On the march and in halting the action must be as of one man. This attitude is invincible. Many of the enemy may be wounded, and yet there need not be much hand to hand fighting. To flick with the fingers is not so deadly as a blow with the fist.