Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 March 2011
A rigorous restriction of space in the Journal, which to the editor has all the virtues of necessity, and to the contributor most of the features of calamity, confines me to a few lines of preliminary matter. I should have wished to explain the use in these papers of the words “ ideogram ” and “ ideographic ”, but I cannot. I should also have liked to include entries on the important characters yin and yany of the dualistic system, which occur in my own collection of Honan relics, but are unknown to either Lo Chên-yü or Wang Hsiang, but this too is impossible. Let us therefore proceed to business.
page 384 note 1 = the later tzŭ chü.
page 388 note 1 See the point discussed by the former in part shang, pp. 26–7 and 29 of his work, and by the latter on p. 13 of chüan 19 of his.
page 388 note 2 The Chinese Classics, vol. iv, pt. ii, p. 455.