Chapter
1 2 | with the reverence due to age the elders in your own family,
2 3 | the manners of the present age.'~3. Mencius said, 'If your
3 7 | Nobility is one of them; age is one of them; virtue is
4 7 | the three; in villages, age holds the first place; and
5 15| than a thousand lî, and the age of the one sage was posterior
6 16| calamity.'~1. Yü and Chî, in an age when the world was being
7 16| The disciple Yen, in an age of disorder, dwelt in a
8 16| the common usage of the age to be unfilial. The first
9 18| Ch'in, he had reached the age of seventy. If by that time
10 19| ground of one's superior age, or station, or the circumstances
11 21| and I give honour to his age. It is not that there is
12 21| principle of such reverence to age. It is just as when there
13 21| which we acknowledge the age of an old horse and that
14 21| which we acknowledge the age of an old man? And what
15 21| our giving honour to his age?'~4. Kâo said, 'There is
16 21| feeling is determined by the age, and therefore I say that
17 21| and now the honour due to age is rendered to the other; --
18 26| him who presumes on his age, nor him who presumes on
19 27| stores of gain are large; an age of corruption cannot confound
20 28| and distant? Born in this age, we should be of this age,
21 28| age, we should be of this age, to be good is all that
22 28| They consent with an impure age. Their principles have a
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