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Sun Tzu on The Art of War, by Lionel Giles (trans, ed)
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May, 1994 [Etext #132]
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The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Art of War by Sun Tzu
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SUN TZU ON THE ART OF WAR
|
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|
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THE OLDEST MILITARY TREATISE IN THE WORLD
|
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|
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Translated from the Chinese with Introduction
|
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and Critical Notes
|
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BY
|
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|
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LIONEL GILES, M.A.
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Assistant in the Department of Oriental Printed Books and MSS.
|
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in the British Museum
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First Published in 1910
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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To my brother
|
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Captain Valentine Giles, R.G.
|
|||
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in the hope that
|
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a work 2400 years old
|
|||
|
may yet contain lessons worth consideration
|
|||
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by the soldier of today
|
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this translation
|
|||
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is affectionately dedicated.
|
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|
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
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|
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Preface to the Project Gutenburg Etext
|
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--------------------------------------
|
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|
|
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When Lionel Giles began his translation of Sun Tzu's ART OF
|
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|
WAR, the work was virtually unknown in Europe. Its introduction
|
|||
|
to Europe began in 1782 when a French Jesuit Father living in
|
|||
|
China, Joseph Amiot, acquired a copy of it, and translated it
|
|||
|
into French. It was not a good translation because, according to
|
|||
|
Dr. Giles, "[I]t contains a great deal that Sun Tzu did not
|
|||
|
write, and very little indeed of what he did."
|
|||
|
The first translation into English was published in 1905 in
|
|||
|
Tokyo by Capt. E. F. Calthrop, R.F.A. However, this translation
|
|||
|
is, in the words of Dr. Giles, "excessively bad." He goes
|
|||
|
further in this criticism: "It is not merely a question of
|
|||
|
downright blunders, from which none can hope to be wholly exempt.
|
|||
|
Omissions were frequent; hard passages were willfully distorted
|
|||
|
or slurred over. Such offenses are less pardonable. They would
|
|||
|
not be tolerated in any edition of a Latin or Greek classic, and
|
|||
|
a similar standard of honesty ought to be insisted upon in
|
|||
|
translations from Chinese." In 1908 a new edition of Capt.
|
|||
|
Calthrop's translation was published in London. It was an
|
|||
|
improvement on the first -- omissions filled up and numerous
|
|||
|
mistakes corrected -- but new errors were created in the process.
|
|||
|
Dr. Giles, in justifying his translation, wrote: "It was not
|
|||
|
undertaken out of any inflated estimate of my own powers; but I
|
|||
|
could not help feeling that Sun Tzu deserved a better fate than
|
|||
|
had befallen him, and I knew that, at any rate, I could hardly
|
|||
|
fail to improve on the work of my predecessors."
|
|||
|
Clearly, Dr. Giles' work established much of the groundwork
|
|||
|
for the work of later translators who published their own
|
|||
|
editions. Of the later editions of the ART OF WAR I have
|
|||
|
examined; two feature Giles' edited translation and notes, the
|
|||
|
other two present the same basic information from the ancient
|
|||
|
Chinese commentators found in the Giles edition. Of these four,
|
|||
|
Giles' 1910 edition is the most scholarly and presents the reader
|
|||
|
an incredible amount of information concerning Sun Tzu's text,
|
|||
|
much more than any other translation.
|
|||
|
The Giles' edition of the ART OF WAR, as stated above, was a
|
|||
|
scholarly work. Dr. Giles was a leading sinologue at the time
|
|||
|
and an assistant in the Department of Oriental Printed Books and
|
|||
|
Manuscripts in the British Museum. Apparently he wanted to
|
|||
|
produce a definitive edition, superior to anything else that
|
|||
|
existed and perhaps something that would become a standard
|
|||
|
translation. It was the best translation available for 50 years.
|
|||
|
But apparently there was not much interest in Sun Tzu in English-
|
|||
|
speaking countries since the it took the start of the Second
|
|||
|
World War to renew interest in his work. Several people
|
|||
|
published unsatisfactory English translations of Sun Tzu. In
|
|||
|
1944, Dr. Giles' translation was edited and published in the
|
|||
|
United States in a series of military science books. But it
|
|||
|
wasn't until 1963 that a good English translation (by Samuel B.
|
|||
|
Griffith and still in print) was published that was an equal to
|
|||
|
Giles' translation. While this translation is more lucid than
|
|||
|
Dr. Giles' translation, it lacks his copious notes that make his
|
|||
|
so interesting.
|
|||
|
Dr. Giles produced a work primarily intended for scholars of
|
|||
|
the Chinese civilization and language. It contains the Chinese
|
|||
|
text of Sun Tzu, the English translation, and voluminous notes
|
|||
|
along with numerous footnotes. Unfortunately, some of his notes
|
|||
|
and footnotes contain Chinese characters; some are completely
|
|||
|
Chinese. Thus, a conversion to a Latin alphabet etext was
|
|||
|
difficult. I did the conversion in complete ignorance of Chinese
|
|||
|
(except for what I learned while doing the conversion). Thus, I
|
|||
|
faced the difficult task of paraphrasing it while retaining as
|
|||
|
much of the important text as I could. Every paraphrase
|
|||
|
represents a loss; thus I did what I could to retain as much of
|
|||
|
the text as possible. Because the 1910 text contains a Chinese
|
|||
|
concordance, I was able to transliterate proper names, books, and
|
|||
|
the like at the risk of making the text more obscure. However,
|
|||
|
the text, on the whole, is quite satisfactory for the casual
|
|||
|
reader, a transformation made possible by conversion to an etext.
|
|||
|
However, I come away from this task with the feeling of loss
|
|||
|
because I know that someone with a background in Chinese can do a
|
|||
|
better job than I did; any such attempt would be welcomed.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bob Sutton
|
|||
|
al876@cleveland.freenet.edu
|
|||
|
bobs@gnu.ai.mit.edu
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
INTRODUCTION
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Sun Wu and his Book
|
|||
|
-------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Ssu-ma Ch`ien gives the following biography of Sun Tzu: [1]
|
|||
|
--
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Sun Tzu Wu was a native of the Ch`i State. His ART OF
|
|||
|
WAR brought him to the notice of Ho Lu, [2] King of Wu. Ho
|
|||
|
Lu said to him: "I have carefully perused your 13 chapters.
|
|||
|
May I submit your theory of managing soldiers to a slight
|
|||
|
test?"
|
|||
|
Sun Tzu replied: "You may."
|
|||
|
Ho Lu asked: "May the test be applied to women?"
|
|||
|
The answer was again in the affirmative, so arrangements
|
|||
|
were made to bring 180 ladies out of the Palace. Sun Tzu
|
|||
|
divided them into two companies, and placed one of the King's
|
|||
|
favorite concubines at the head of each. He then bade them
|
|||
|
all take spears in their hands, and addressed them thus: "I
|
|||
|
presume you know the difference between front and back, right
|
|||
|
hand and left hand?"
|
|||
|
The girls replied: Yes.
|
|||
|
Sun Tzu went on: "When I say "Eyes front," you must
|
|||
|
look straight ahead. When I say "Left turn," you must face
|
|||
|
towards your left hand. When I say "Right turn," you must
|
|||
|
face towards your right hand. When I say "About turn," you
|
|||
|
must face right round towards your back."
|
|||
|
Again the girls assented. The words of command having
|
|||
|
been thus explained, he set up the halberds and battle-axes
|
|||
|
in order to begin the drill. Then, to the sound of drums, he
|
|||
|
gave the order "Right turn." But the girls only burst out
|
|||
|
laughing. Sun Tzu said: "If words of command are not clear
|
|||
|
and distinct, if orders are not thoroughly understood, then
|
|||
|
the general is to blame."
|
|||
|
So he started drilling them again, and this time gave
|
|||
|
the order "Left turn," whereupon the girls once more burst
|
|||
|
into fits of laughter. Sun Tzu: "If words of command are
|
|||
|
not clear and distinct, if orders are not thoroughly
|
|||
|
understood, the general is to blame. But if his orders ARE
|
|||
|
clear, and the soldiers nevertheless disobey, then it is the
|
|||
|
fault of their officers."
|
|||
|
So saying, he ordered the leaders of the two companies
|
|||
|
to be beheaded. Now the king of Wu was watching the scene
|
|||
|
from the top of a raised pavilion; and when he saw that his
|
|||
|
favorite concubines were about to be executed, he was greatly
|
|||
|
alarmed and hurriedly sent down the following message: "We
|
|||
|
are now quite satisfied as to our general's ability to handle
|
|||
|
troops. If We are bereft of these two concubines, our meat
|
|||
|
and drink will lose their savor. It is our wish that they
|
|||
|
shall not be beheaded."
|
|||
|
Sun Tzu replied: "Having once received His Majesty's
|
|||
|
commission to be the general of his forces, there are certain
|
|||
|
commands of His Majesty which, acting in that capacity, I am
|
|||
|
unable to accept."
|
|||
|
Accordingly, he had the two leaders beheaded, and
|
|||
|
straightway installed the pair next in order as leaders in
|
|||
|
their place. When this had been done, the drum was sounded
|
|||
|
for the drill once more; and the girls went through all the
|
|||
|
evolutions, turning to the right or to the left, marching
|
|||
|
ahead or wheeling back, kneeling or standing, with perfect
|
|||
|
accuracy and precision, not venturing to utter a sound. Then
|
|||
|
Sun Tzu sent a messenger to the King saying: "Your soldiers,
|
|||
|
Sire, are now properly drilled and disciplined, and ready for
|
|||
|
your majesty's inspection. They can be put to any use that
|
|||
|
their sovereign may desire; bid them go through fire and
|
|||
|
water, and they will not disobey."
|
|||
|
But the King replied: "Let our general cease drilling
|
|||
|
and return to camp. As for us, We have no wish to come down
|
|||
|
and inspect the troops."
|
|||
|
Thereupon Sun Tzu said: "The King is only fond of
|
|||
|
words, and cannot translate them into deeds."
|
|||
|
After that, Ho Lu saw that Sun Tzu was one who knew how
|
|||
|
to handle an army, and finally appointed him general. In the
|
|||
|
west, he defeated the Ch`u State and forced his way into
|
|||
|
Ying, the capital; to the north he put fear into the States
|
|||
|
of Ch`i and Chin, and spread his fame abroad amongst the
|
|||
|
feudal princes. And Sun Tzu shared in the might of the King.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
About Sun Tzu himself this is all that Ssu-ma Ch`ien has to
|
|||
|
tell us in this chapter. But he proceeds to give a biography of
|
|||
|
his descendant, Sun Pin, born about a hundred years after his
|
|||
|
famous ancestor's death, and also the outstanding military genius
|
|||
|
of his time. The historian speaks of him too as Sun Tzu, and in
|
|||
|
his preface we read: "Sun Tzu had his feet cut off and yet
|
|||
|
continued to discuss the art of war." [3] It seems likely, then,
|
|||
|
that "Pin" was a nickname bestowed on him after his mutilation,
|
|||
|
unless the story was invented in order to account for the name.
|
|||
|
The crowning incident of his career, the crushing defeat of his
|
|||
|
treacherous rival P`ang Chuan, will be found briefly related in
|
|||
|
Chapter V. ss. 19, note.
|
|||
|
To return to the elder Sun Tzu. He is mentioned in two
|
|||
|
other passages of the SHIH CHI: --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In the third year of his reign [512 B.C.] Ho Lu, king of
|
|||
|
Wu, took the field with Tzu-hsu [i.e. Wu Yuan] and Po P`ei,
|
|||
|
and attacked Ch`u. He captured the town of Shu and slew the
|
|||
|
two prince's sons who had formerly been generals of Wu. He
|
|||
|
was then meditating a descent on Ying [the capital]; but the
|
|||
|
general Sun Wu said: "The army is exhausted. It is not yet
|
|||
|
possible. We must wait".... [After further successful
|
|||
|
fighting,] "in the ninth year [506 B.C.], King Ho Lu
|
|||
|
addressed Wu Tzu-hsu and Sun Wu, saying: "Formerly, you
|
|||
|
declared that it was not yet possible for us to enter Ying.
|
|||
|
Is the time ripe now?" The two men replied: "Ch`u's general
|
|||
|
Tzu-ch`ang, [4] is grasping and covetous, and the princes of
|
|||
|
T`ang and Ts`ai both have a grudge against him. If Your
|
|||
|
Majesty has resolved to make a grand attack, you must win
|
|||
|
over T`ang and Ts`ai, and then you may succeed." Ho Lu
|
|||
|
followed this advice, [beat Ch`u in five pitched battles and
|
|||
|
marched into Ying.] [5]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This is the latest date at which anything is recorded of Sun
|
|||
|
Wu. He does not appear to have survived his patron, who died
|
|||
|
from the effects of a wound in 496.
|
|||
|
In another chapter there occurs this passage: [6]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
From this time onward, a number of famous soldiers
|
|||
|
arose, one after the other: Kao-fan, [7] who was employed by
|
|||
|
the Chin State; Wang-tzu, [8] in the service of Ch`i; and Sun
|
|||
|
Wu, in the service of Wu. These men developed and threw
|
|||
|
light upon the principles of war.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It is obvious enough that Ssu-ma Ch`ien at least had no
|
|||
|
doubt about the reality of Sun Wu as an historical personage; and
|
|||
|
with one exception, to be noticed presently, he is by far the
|
|||
|
most important authority on the period in question. It will not
|
|||
|
be necessary, therefore, to say much of such a work as the WU
|
|||
|
YUEH CH`UN CH`IU, which is supposed to have been written by Chao
|
|||
|
Yeh of the 1st century A.D. The attribution is somewhat
|
|||
|
doubtful; but even if it were otherwise, his account would be of
|
|||
|
little value, based as it is on the SHIH CHI and expanded with
|
|||
|
romantic details. The story of Sun Tzu will be found, for what
|
|||
|
it is worth, in chapter 2. The only new points in it worth
|
|||
|
noting are: (1) Sun Tzu was first recommended to Ho Lu by Wu
|
|||
|
Tzu-hsu. (2) He is called a native of Wu. (3) He had previously
|
|||
|
lived a retired life, and his contemporaries were unaware of his
|
|||
|
ability.
|
|||
|
The following passage occurs in the Huai-nan Tzu: "When
|
|||
|
sovereign and ministers show perversity of mind, it is impossible
|
|||
|
even for a Sun Tzu to encounter the foe." Assuming that this
|
|||
|
work is genuine (and hitherto no doubt has been cast upon it), we
|
|||
|
have here the earliest direct reference for Sun Tzu, for Huai-nan
|
|||
|
Tzu died in 122 B.C., many years before the SHIH CHI was given to
|
|||
|
the world.
|
|||
|
Liu Hsiang (80-9 B.C.) says: "The reason why Sun Tzu at the
|
|||
|
head of 30,000 men beat Ch`u with 200,000 is that the latter were
|
|||
|
undisciplined."
|
|||
|
Teng Ming-shih informs us that the surname "Sun" was
|
|||
|
bestowed on Sun Wu's grandfather by Duke Ching of Ch`i [547-490
|
|||
|
B.C.]. Sun Wu's father Sun P`ing, rose to be a Minister of State
|
|||
|
in Ch`i, and Sun Wu himself, whose style was Ch`ang-ch`ing, fled
|
|||
|
to Wu on account of the rebellion which was being fomented by the
|
|||
|
kindred of T`ien Pao. He had three sons, of whom the second,
|
|||
|
named Ming, was the father of Sun Pin. According to this account
|
|||
|
then, Pin was the grandson of Wu, which, considering that Sun
|
|||
|
Pin's victory over Wei was gained in 341 B.C., may be dismissed
|
|||
|
as chronological impossible. Whence these data were obtained by
|
|||
|
Teng Ming-shih I do not know, but of course no reliance whatever
|
|||
|
can be placed in them.
|
|||
|
An interesting document which has survived from the close of
|
|||
|
the Han period is the short preface written by the Great Ts`ao
|
|||
|
Ts`ao, or Wei Wu Ti, for his edition of Sun Tzu. I shall give it
|
|||
|
in full: --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I have heard that the ancients used bows and arrows to
|
|||
|
their advantage. [10] The SHU CHU mentions "the army" among
|
|||
|
the "eight objects of government." The I CHING says:
|
|||
|
"'army' indicates firmness and justice; the experienced
|
|||
|
leader will have good fortune." The SHIH CHING says: "The
|
|||
|
King rose majestic in his wrath, and he marshaled his
|
|||
|
troops." The Yellow Emperor, T`ang the Completer and Wu Wang
|
|||
|
all used spears and battle-axes in order to succor their
|
|||
|
generation. The SSU-MA FA says: "If one man slay another of
|
|||
|
set purpose, he himself may rightfully be slain." He who
|
|||
|
relies solely on warlike measures shall be exterminated; he
|
|||
|
who relies solely on peaceful measures shall perish.
|
|||
|
Instances of this are Fu Ch`ai [11] on the one hand and Yen
|
|||
|
Wang on the other. [12] In military matters, the Sage's rule
|
|||
|
is normally to keep the peace, and to move his forces only
|
|||
|
when occasion requires. He will not use armed force unless
|
|||
|
driven to it by necessity.
|
|||
|
Many books have I read on the subject of war and
|
|||
|
fighting; but the work composed by Sun Wu is the profoundest
|
|||
|
of them all. [Sun Tzu was a native of the Ch`i state, his
|
|||
|
personal name was Wu. He wrote the ART OF WAR in 13 chapters
|
|||
|
for Ho Lu, King of Wu. Its principles were tested on women,
|
|||
|
and he was subsequently made a general. He led an army
|
|||
|
westwards, crushed the Ch`u state and entered Ying the
|
|||
|
capital. In the north, he kept Ch`i and Chin in awe. A
|
|||
|
hundred years and more after his time, Sun Pin lived. He was
|
|||
|
a descendant of Wu.] [13] In his treatment of deliberation
|
|||
|
and planning, the importance of rapidity in taking the field,
|
|||
|
[14] clearness of conception, and depth of design, Sun Tzu
|
|||
|
stands beyond the reach of carping criticism. My
|
|||
|
contemporaries, however, have failed to grasp the full
|
|||
|
meaning of his instructions, and while putting into practice
|
|||
|
the smaller details in which his work abounds, they have
|
|||
|
overlooked its essential purport. That is the motive which
|
|||
|
has led me to outline a rough explanation of the whole.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
One thing to be noticed in the above is the explicit
|
|||
|
statement that the 13 chapters were specially composed for King
|
|||
|
Ho Lu. This is supported by the internal evidence of I. ss. 15,
|
|||
|
in which it seems clear that some ruler is addressed.
|
|||
|
In the bibliographic section of the HAN SHU, there is an
|
|||
|
entry which has given rise to much discussion: "The works of Sun
|
|||
|
Tzu of Wu in 82 P`IEN (or chapters), with diagrams in 9 CHUAN."
|
|||
|
It is evident that this cannot be merely the 13 chapters known to
|
|||
|
Ssu-ma Ch`ien, or those we possess today. Chang Shou-chieh
|
|||
|
refers to an edition of Sun Tzu's ART OF WAR of which the "13
|
|||
|
chapters" formed the first CHUAN, adding that there were two
|
|||
|
other CHUAN besides. This has brought forth a theory, that the
|
|||
|
bulk of these 82 chapters consisted of other writings of Sun Tzu
|
|||
|
-- we should call them apocryphal -- similar to the WEN TA, of
|
|||
|
which a specimen dealing with the Nine Situations [15] is
|
|||
|
preserved in the T`UNG TIEN, and another in Ho Shin's commentary.
|
|||
|
It is suggested that before his interview with Ho Lu, Sun Tzu had
|
|||
|
only written the 13 chapters, but afterwards composed a sort of
|
|||
|
exegesis in the form of question and answer between himself and
|
|||
|
the King. Pi I-hsun, the author of the SUN TZU HSU LU, backs
|
|||
|
this up with a quotation from the WU YUEH CH`UN CH`IU: "The King
|
|||
|
of Wu summoned Sun Tzu, and asked him questions about the art of
|
|||
|
war. Each time he set forth a chapter of his work, the King
|
|||
|
could not find words enough to praise him." As he points out, if
|
|||
|
the whole work was expounded on the same scale as in the above-
|
|||
|
mentioned fragments, the total number of chapters could not fail
|
|||
|
to be considerable. Then the numerous other treatises attributed
|
|||
|
to Sun Tzu might be included. The fact that the HAN CHIH
|
|||
|
mentions no work of Sun Tzu except the 82 P`IEN, whereas the Sui
|
|||
|
and T`ang bibliographies give the titles of others in addition to
|
|||
|
the "13 chapters," is good proof, Pi I-hsun thinks, that all of
|
|||
|
these were contained in the 82 P`IEN. Without pinning our faith
|
|||
|
to the accuracy of details supplied by the WU YUEH CH`UN CH`IU,
|
|||
|
or admitting the genuineness of any of the treatises cited by Pi
|
|||
|
I-hsun, we may see in this theory a probable solution of the
|
|||
|
mystery. Between Ssu-ma Ch`ien and Pan Ku there was plenty of
|
|||
|
time for a luxuriant crop of forgeries to have grown up under the
|
|||
|
magic name of Sun Tzu, and the 82 P`IEN may very well represent a
|
|||
|
collected edition of these lumped together with the original
|
|||
|
work. It is also possible, though less likely, that some of them
|
|||
|
existed in the time of the earlier historian and were purposely
|
|||
|
ignored by him. [16]
|
|||
|
Tu Mu's conjecture seems to be based on a passage which
|
|||
|
states: "Wei Wu Ti strung together Sun Wu's Art of War," which
|
|||
|
in turn may have resulted from a misunderstanding of the final
|
|||
|
words of Ts`ao King's preface. This, as Sun Hsing-yen points
|
|||
|
out, is only a modest way of saying that he made an explanatory
|
|||
|
paraphrase, or in other words, wrote a commentary on it. On the
|
|||
|
whole, this theory has met with very little acceptance. Thus,
|
|||
|
the SSU K`U CH`UAN SHU says: "The mention of the 13 chapters in
|
|||
|
the SHIH CHI shows that they were in existence before the HAN
|
|||
|
CHIH, and that latter accretions are not to be considered part of
|
|||
|
the original work. Tu Mu's assertion can certainly not be taken
|
|||
|
as proof."
|
|||
|
There is every reason to suppose, then, that the 13 chapters
|
|||
|
existed in the time of Ssu-ma Ch`ien practically as we have them
|
|||
|
now. That the work was then well known he tells us in so many
|
|||
|
words. "Sun Tzu's 13 Chapters and Wu Ch`i's Art of War are the
|
|||
|
two books that people commonly refer to on the subject of
|
|||
|
military matters. Both of them are widely distributed, so I will
|
|||
|
not discuss them here." But as we go further back, serious
|
|||
|
difficulties begin to arise. The salient fact which has to be
|
|||
|
faced is that the TSO CHUAN, the greatest contemporary record,
|
|||
|
makes no mention whatsoever of Sun Wu, either as a general or as
|
|||
|
a writer. It is natural, in view of this awkward circumstance,
|
|||
|
that many scholars should not only cast doubt on the story of Sun
|
|||
|
Wu as given in the SHIH CHI, but even show themselves frankly
|
|||
|
skeptical as to the existence of the man at all. The most
|
|||
|
powerful presentment of this side of the case is to be found in
|
|||
|
the following disposition by Yeh Shui-hsin: [17] --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It is stated in Ssu-ma Ch`ien's history that Sun Wu was
|
|||
|
a native of the Ch`i State, and employed by Wu; and that in
|
|||
|
the reign of Ho Lu he crushed Ch`u, entered Ying, and was a
|
|||
|
great general. But in Tso's Commentary no Sun Wu appears at
|
|||
|
all. It is true that Tso's Commentary need not contain
|
|||
|
absolutely everything that other histories contain. But Tso
|
|||
|
has not omitted to mention vulgar plebeians and hireling
|
|||
|
ruffians such as Ying K`ao-shu, [18] Ts`ao Kuei, [19], Chu
|
|||
|
Chih-wu and Chuan She-chu [20]. In the case of Sun Wu, whose
|
|||
|
fame and achievements were so brilliant, the omission is much
|
|||
|
more glaring. Again, details are given, in their due order,
|
|||
|
about his contemporaries Wu Yuan and the Minister P`ei. [21]
|
|||
|
Is it credible that Sun Wu alone should have been passed
|
|||
|
over?
|
|||
|
In point of literary style, Sun Tzu's work belongs to
|
|||
|
the same school as KUAN TZU, [22] LIU T`AO, [23] and the YUEH
|
|||
|
YU [24] and may have been the production of some private
|
|||
|
scholar living towards the end of the "Spring and Autumn" or
|
|||
|
the beginning of the "Warring States" period. [25] The story
|
|||
|
that his precepts were actually applied by the Wu State, is
|
|||
|
merely the outcome of big talk on the part of his followers.
|
|||
|
From the flourishing period of the Chou dynasty [26]
|
|||
|
down to the time of the "Spring and Autumn," all military
|
|||
|
commanders were statesmen as well, and the class of
|
|||
|
professional generals, for conducting external campaigns, did
|
|||
|
not then exist. It was not until the period of the "Six
|
|||
|
States" [27] that this custom changed. Now although Wu was
|
|||
|
an uncivilized State, it is conceivable that Tso should have
|
|||
|
left unrecorded the fact that Sun Wu was a great general and
|
|||
|
yet held no civil office? What we are told, therefore, about
|
|||
|
Jang-chu [28] and Sun Wu, is not authentic matter, but the
|
|||
|
reckless fabrication of theorizing pundits. The story of Ho
|
|||
|
Lu's experiment on the women, in particular, is utterly
|
|||
|
preposterous and incredible.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Yeh Shui-hsin represents Ssu-ma Ch`ien as having said that
|
|||
|
Sun Wu crushed Ch`u and entered Ying. This is not quite correct.
|
|||
|
No doubt the impression left on the reader's mind is that he at
|
|||
|
least shared in these exploits. The fact may or may not be
|
|||
|
significant; but it is nowhere explicitly stated in the SHIH CHI
|
|||
|
either that Sun Tzu was general on the occasion of the taking of
|
|||
|
Ying, or that he even went there at all. Moreover, as we know
|
|||
|
that Wu Yuan and Po P`ei both took part in the expedition, and
|
|||
|
also that its success was largely due to the dash and enterprise
|
|||
|
of Fu Kai, Ho Lu's younger brother, it is not easy to see how yet
|
|||
|
another general could have played a very prominent part in the
|
|||
|
same campaign.
|
|||
|
Ch`en Chen-sun of the Sung dynasty has the note: --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Military writers look upon Sun Wu as the father of their
|
|||
|
art. But the fact that he does not appear in the TSO CHUAN,
|
|||
|
although he is said to have served under Ho Lu King of Wu,
|
|||
|
makes it uncertain what period he really belonged to.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
He also says: --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The works of Sun Wu and Wu Ch`i may be of genuine
|
|||
|
antiquity.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It is noticeable that both Yeh Shui-hsin and Ch`en Chen-sun,
|
|||
|
while rejecting the personality of Sun Wu as he figures in Ssu-ma
|
|||
|
Ch`ien's history, are inclined to accept the date traditionally
|
|||
|
assigned to the work which passes under his name. The author of
|
|||
|
the HSU LU fails to appreciate this distinction, and consequently
|
|||
|
his bitter attack on Ch`en Chen-sun really misses its mark. He
|
|||
|
makes one of two points, however, which certainly tell in favor
|
|||
|
of the high antiquity of our "13 chapters." "Sun Tzu," he says,
|
|||
|
"must have lived in the age of Ching Wang [519-476], because he
|
|||
|
is frequently plagiarized in subsequent works of the Chou, Ch`in
|
|||
|
and Han dynasties." The two most shameless offenders in this
|
|||
|
respect are Wu Ch`i and Huai-nan Tzu, both of them important
|
|||
|
historical personages in their day. The former lived only a
|
|||
|
century after the alleged date of Sun Tzu, and his death is known
|
|||
|
to have taken place in 381 B.C. It was to him, according to Liu
|
|||
|
Hsiang, that Tseng Shen delivered the TSO CHUAN, which had been
|
|||
|
entrusted to him by its author. [29] Now the fact that
|
|||
|
quotations from the ART OF WAR, acknowledged or otherwise, are to
|
|||
|
be found in so many authors of different epochs, establishes a
|
|||
|
very strong anterior to them all, -- in other words, that Sun
|
|||
|
Tzu's treatise was already in existence towards the end of the
|
|||
|
5th century B.C. Further proof of Sun Tzu's antiquity is
|
|||
|
furnished by the archaic or wholly obsolete meanings attaching to
|
|||
|
a number of the words he uses. A list of these, which might
|
|||
|
perhaps be extended, is given in the HSU LU; and though some of
|
|||
|
the interpretations are doubtful, the main argument is hardly
|
|||
|
affected thereby. Again, it must not be forgotten that Yeh Shui-
|
|||
|
hsin, a scholar and critic of the first rank, deliberately
|
|||
|
pronounces the style of the 13 chapters to belong to the early
|
|||
|
part of the fifth century. Seeing that he is actually engaged in
|
|||
|
an attempt to disprove the existence of Sun Wu himself, we may be
|
|||
|
sure that he would not have hesitated to assign the work to a
|
|||
|
later date had he not honestly believed the contrary. And it is
|
|||
|
precisely on such a point that the judgment of an educated
|
|||
|
Chinaman will carry most weight. Other internal evidence is not
|
|||
|
far to seek. Thus in XIII. ss. 1, there is an unmistakable
|
|||
|
allusion to the ancient system of land-tenure which had already
|
|||
|
passed away by the time of Mencius, who was anxious to see it
|
|||
|
revived in a modified form. [30] The only warfare Sun Tzu knows
|
|||
|
is that carried on between the various feudal princes, in which
|
|||
|
armored chariots play a large part. Their use seems to have
|
|||
|
entirely died out before the end of the Chou dynasty. He speaks
|
|||
|
as a man of Wu, a state which ceased to exist as early as 473
|
|||
|
B.C. On this I shall touch presently.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But once refer the work to the 5th century or earlier, and
|
|||
|
the chances of its being other than a bona fide production are
|
|||
|
sensibly diminished. The great age of forgeries did not come
|
|||
|
until long after. That it should have been forged in the period
|
|||
|
immediately following 473 is particularly unlikely, for no one,
|
|||
|
as a rule, hastens to identify himself with a lost cause. As for
|
|||
|
Yeh Shui-hsin's theory, that the author was a literary recluse,
|
|||
|
that seems to me quite untenable. If one thing is more apparent
|
|||
|
than another after reading the maxims of Sun Tzu, it is that
|
|||
|
their essence has been distilled from a large store of personal
|
|||
|
observation and experience. They reflect the mind not only of a
|
|||
|
born strategist, gifted with a rare faculty of generalization,
|
|||
|
but also of a practical soldier closely acquainted with the
|
|||
|
military conditions of his time. To say nothing of the fact that
|
|||
|
these sayings have been accepted and endorsed by all the greatest
|
|||
|
captains of Chinese history, they offer a combination of
|
|||
|
freshness and sincerity, acuteness and common sense, which quite
|
|||
|
excludes the idea that they were artificially concocted in the
|
|||
|
study. If we admit, then, that the 13 chapters were the genuine
|
|||
|
production of a military man living towards the end of the "CH`UN
|
|||
|
CH`IU" period, are we not bound, in spite of the silence of the
|
|||
|
TSO CHUAN, to accept Ssu-ma Ch`ien's account in its entirety? In
|
|||
|
view of his high repute as a sober historian, must we not
|
|||
|
hesitate to assume that the records he drew upon for Sun Wu's
|
|||
|
biography were false and untrustworthy? The answer, I fear, must
|
|||
|
be in the negative. There is still one grave, if not fatal,
|
|||
|
objection to the chronology involved in the story as told in the
|
|||
|
SHIH CHI, which, so far as I am aware, nobody has yet pointed
|
|||
|
out. There are two passages in Sun Tzu in which he alludes to
|
|||
|
contemporary affairs. The first in in VI. ss. 21: --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Though according to my estimate the soldiers of Yueh
|
|||
|
exceed our own in number, that shall advantage them nothing
|
|||
|
in the matter of victory. I say then that victory can be
|
|||
|
achieved.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The other is in XI. ss. 30: --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Asked if an army can be made to imitate the SHUAI-JAN, I
|
|||
|
should answer, Yes. For the men of Wu and the men of Yueh
|
|||
|
are enemies; yet if they are crossing a river in the same
|
|||
|
boat and are caught by a storm, they will come to each
|
|||
|
other's assistance just as the left hand helps the right.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
These two paragraphs are extremely valuable as evidence of
|
|||
|
the date of composition. They assign the work to the period of
|
|||
|
the struggle between Wu and Yueh. So much has been observed by
|
|||
|
Pi I-hsun. But what has hitherto escaped notice is that they
|
|||
|
also seriously impair the credibility of Ssu-ma Ch`ien's
|
|||
|
narrative. As we have seen above, the first positive date given
|
|||
|
in connection with Sun Wu is 512 B.C. He is then spoken of as a
|
|||
|
general, acting as confidential adviser to Ho Lu, so that his
|
|||
|
alleged introduction to that monarch had already taken place, and
|
|||
|
of course the 13 chapters must have been written earlier still.
|
|||
|
But at that time, and for several years after, down to the
|
|||
|
capture of Ying in 506, Ch`u and not Yueh, was the great
|
|||
|
hereditary enemy of Wu. The two states, Ch`u and Wu, had been
|
|||
|
constantly at war for over half a century, [31] whereas the first
|
|||
|
war between Wu and Yueh was waged only in 510, [32] and even then
|
|||
|
was no more than a short interlude sandwiched in the midst of the
|
|||
|
fierce struggle with Ch`u. Now Ch`u is not mentioned in the 13
|
|||
|
chapters at all. The natural inference is that they were written
|
|||
|
at a time when Yueh had become the prime antagonist of Wu, that
|
|||
|
is, after Ch`u had suffered the great humiliation of 506. At
|
|||
|
this point, a table of dates may be found useful.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
B.C. |
|
|||
|
|
|
|||
|
514 | Accession of Ho Lu.
|
|||
|
512 | Ho Lu attacks Ch`u, but is dissuaded from entering Ying,
|
|||
|
| the capital. SHI CHI mentions Sun Wu as general.
|
|||
|
511 | Another attack on Ch`u.
|
|||
|
510 | Wu makes a successful attack on Yueh. This is the first
|
|||
|
| war between the two states.
|
|||
|
509 |
|
|||
|
or | Ch`u invades Wu, but is signally defeated at Yu-chang.
|
|||
|
508 |
|
|||
|
506 | Ho Lu attacks Ch`u with the aid of T`ang and Ts`ai.
|
|||
|
| Decisive battle of Po-chu, and capture of Ying. Last
|
|||
|
| mention of Sun Wu in SHIH CHI.
|
|||
|
505 | Yueh makes a raid on Wu in the absence of its army. Wu
|
|||
|
| is beaten by Ch`in and evacuates Ying.
|
|||
|
504 | Ho Lu sends Fu Ch`ai to attack Ch`u.
|
|||
|
497 | Kou Chien becomes King of Yueh.
|
|||
|
496 | Wu attacks Yueh, but is defeated by Kou Chien at Tsui-li.
|
|||
|
| Ho Lu is killed.
|
|||
|
494 | Fu Ch`ai defeats Kou Chien in the great battle of Fu-
|
|||
|
| chaio, and enters the capital of Yueh.
|
|||
|
485 |
|
|||
|
or | Kou Chien renders homage to Wu. Death of Wu Tzu-hsu.
|
|||
|
484 |
|
|||
|
482 | Kou Chien invades Wu in the absence of Fu Ch`ai.
|
|||
|
478 |
|
|||
|
to | Further attacks by Yueh on Wu.
|
|||
|
476 |
|
|||
|
475 | Kou Chien lays siege to the capital of Wu.
|
|||
|
473 | Final defeat and extinction of Wu.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The sentence quoted above from VI. ss. 21 hardly strikes me
|
|||
|
as one that could have been written in the full flush of victory.
|
|||
|
It seems rather to imply that, for the moment at least, the tide
|
|||
|
had turned against Wu, and that she was getting the worst of the
|
|||
|
struggle. Hence we may conclude that our treatise was not in
|
|||
|
existence in 505, before which date Yueh does not appear to have
|
|||
|
scored any notable success against Wu. Ho Lu died in 496, so
|
|||
|
that if the book was written for him, it must have been during
|
|||
|
the period 505-496, when there was a lull in the hostilities, Wu
|
|||
|
having presumably exhausted by its supreme effort against Ch`u.
|
|||
|
On the other hand, if we choose to disregard the tradition
|
|||
|
connecting Sun Wu's name with Ho Lu, it might equally well have
|
|||
|
seen the light between 496 and 494, or possibly in the period
|
|||
|
482-473, when Yueh was once again becoming a very serious menace.
|
|||
|
[33] We may feel fairly certain that the author, whoever he may
|
|||
|
have been, was not a man of any great eminence in his own day.
|
|||
|
On this point the negative testimony of the TSO CHUAN far
|
|||
|
outweighs any shred of authority still attaching to the SHIH CHI,
|
|||
|
if once its other facts are discredited. Sun Hsing-yen, however,
|
|||
|
makes a feeble attempt to explain the omission of his name from
|
|||
|
the great commentary. It was Wu Tzu-hsu, he says, who got all
|
|||
|
the credit of Sun Wu's exploits, because the latter (being an
|
|||
|
alien) was not rewarded with an office in the State.
|
|||
|
How then did the Sun Tzu legend originate? It may be that
|
|||
|
the growing celebrity of the book imparted by degrees a kind of
|
|||
|
factitious renown to its author. It was felt to be only right
|
|||
|
and proper that one so well versed in the science of war should
|
|||
|
have solid achievements to his credit as well. Now the capture
|
|||
|
of Ying was undoubtedly the greatest feat of arms in Ho Lu's
|
|||
|
reign; it made a deep and lasting impression on all the
|
|||
|
surrounding states, and raised Wu to the short-lived zenith of
|
|||
|
her power. Hence, what more natural, as time went on, than that
|
|||
|
the acknowledged master of strategy, Sun Wu, should be popularly
|
|||
|
identified with that campaign, at first perhaps only in the sense
|
|||
|
that his brain conceived and planned it; afterwards, that it was
|
|||
|
actually carried out by him in conjunction with Wu Yuan, [34] Po
|
|||
|
P`ei and Fu Kai?
|
|||
|
It is obvious that any attempt to reconstruct even the
|
|||
|
outline of Sun Tzu's life must be based almost wholly on
|
|||
|
conjecture. With this necessary proviso, I should say that he
|
|||
|
probably entered the service of Wu about the time of Ho Lu's
|
|||
|
accession, and gathered experience, though only in the capacity
|
|||
|
of a subordinate officer, during the intense military activity
|
|||
|
which marked the first half of the prince's reign. [35] If he
|
|||
|
rose to be a general at all, he certainly was never on an equal
|
|||
|
footing with the three above mentioned. He was doubtless present
|
|||
|
at the investment and occupation of Ying, and witnessed Wu's
|
|||
|
sudden collapse in the following year. Yueh's attack at this
|
|||
|
critical juncture, when her rival was embarrassed on every side,
|
|||
|
seems to have convinced him that this upstart kingdom was the
|
|||
|
great enemy against whom every effort would henceforth have to be
|
|||
|
directed. Sun Wu was thus a well-seasoned warrior when he sat
|
|||
|
down to write his famous book, which according to my reckoning
|
|||
|
must have appeared towards the end, rather than the beginning of
|
|||
|
Ho Lu's reign. The story of the women may possibly have grown
|
|||
|
out of some real incident occurring about the same time. As we
|
|||
|
hear no more of Sun Wu after this from any source, he is hardly
|
|||
|
likely to have survived his patron or to have taken part in the
|
|||
|
death-struggle with Yueh, which began with the disaster at Tsui-
|
|||
|
li.
|
|||
|
If these inferences are approximately correct, there is a
|
|||
|
certain irony in the fate which decreed that China's most
|
|||
|
illustrious man of peace should be contemporary with her greatest
|
|||
|
writer on war.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Text of Sun Tzu
|
|||
|
-------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I have found it difficult to glean much about the history of
|
|||
|
Sun Tzu's text. The quotations that occur in early authors go to
|
|||
|
show that the "13 chapters" of which Ssu-ma Ch`ien speaks were
|
|||
|
essentially the same as those now extant. We have his word for
|
|||
|
it that they were widely circulated in his day, and can only
|
|||
|
regret that he refrained from discussing them on that account.
|
|||
|
Sun Hsing-yen says in his preface: --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
During the Ch`in and Han dynasties Sun Tzu's ART OF WAR
|
|||
|
was in general use amongst military commanders, but they seem
|
|||
|
to have treated it as a work of mysterious import, and were
|
|||
|
unwilling to expound it for the benefit of posterity. Thus
|
|||
|
it came about that Wei Wu was the first to write a commentary
|
|||
|
on it.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As we have already seen, there is no reasonable ground to
|
|||
|
suppose that Ts`ao Kung tampered with the text. But the text
|
|||
|
itself is often so obscure, and the number of editions which
|
|||
|
appeared from that time onward so great, especially during the
|
|||
|
T`ang and Sung dynasties, that it would be surprising if numerous
|
|||
|
corruptions had not managed to creep in. Towards the middle of
|
|||
|
the Sung period, by which time all the chief commentaries on Sun
|
|||
|
Tzu were in existence, a certain Chi T`ien-pao published a work
|
|||
|
in 15 CHUAN entitled "Sun Tzu with the collected commentaries of
|
|||
|
ten writers." There was another text, with variant readings put
|
|||
|
forward by Chu Fu of Ta-hsing, which also had supporters among
|
|||
|
the scholars of that period; but in the Ming editions, Sun Hsing-
|
|||
|
yen tells us, these readings were for some reason or other no
|
|||
|
longer put into circulation. Thus, until the end of the 18th
|
|||
|
century, the text in sole possession of the field was one derived
|
|||
|
from Chi T`ien-pao's edition, although no actual copy of that
|
|||
|
important work was known to have survived. That, therefore, is
|
|||
|
the text of Sun Tzu which appears in the War section of the great
|
|||
|
Imperial encyclopedia printed in 1726, the KU CHIN T`U SHU CHI
|
|||
|
CH`ENG. Another copy at my disposal of what is practically the
|
|||
|
same text, with slight variations, is that contained in the
|
|||
|
"Eleven philosophers of the Chou and Ch`in dynasties" [1758].
|
|||
|
And the Chinese printed in Capt. Calthrop's first edition is
|
|||
|
evidently a similar version which has filtered through Japanese
|
|||
|
channels. So things remained until Sun Hsing-yen [1752-1818], a
|
|||
|
distinguished antiquarian and classical scholar, who claimed to
|
|||
|
be an actual descendant of Sun Wu, [36] accidentally discovered a
|
|||
|
copy of Chi T`ien-pao's long-lost work, when on a visit to the
|
|||
|
library of the Hua-yin temple. [37] Appended to it was the I
|
|||
|
SHUO of Cheng Yu-Hsien, mentioned in the T`UNG CHIH, and also
|
|||
|
believed to have perished. This is what Sun Hsing-yen designates
|
|||
|
as the "original edition (or text)" -- a rather misleading name,
|
|||
|
for it cannot by any means claim to set before us the text of Sun
|
|||
|
Tzu in its pristine purity. Chi T`ien-pao was a careless
|
|||
|
compiler, and appears to have been content to reproduce the
|
|||
|
somewhat debased version current in his day, without troubling to
|
|||
|
collate it with the earliest editions then available.
|
|||
|
Fortunately, two versions of Sun Tzu, even older than the newly
|
|||
|
discovered work, were still extant, one buried in the T`UNG TIEN,
|
|||
|
Tu Yu's great treatise on the Constitution, the other similarly
|
|||
|
enshrined in the T`AI P`ING YU LAN encyclopedia. In both the
|
|||
|
complete text is to be found, though split up into fragments,
|
|||
|
intermixed with other matter, and scattered piecemeal over a
|
|||
|
number of different sections. Considering that the YU LAN takes
|
|||
|
us back to the year 983, and the T`UNG TIEN about 200 years
|
|||
|
further still, to the middle of the T`ang dynasty, the value of
|
|||
|
these early transcripts of Sun Tzu can hardly be overestimated.
|
|||
|
Yet the idea of utilizing them does not seem to have occurred to
|
|||
|
anyone until Sun Hsing-yen, acting under Government instructions,
|
|||
|
undertook a thorough recension of the text. This is his own
|
|||
|
account: --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Because of the numerous mistakes in the text of Sun Tzu
|
|||
|
which his editors had handed down, the Government ordered
|
|||
|
that the ancient edition [of Chi T`ien-pao] should be used,
|
|||
|
and that the text should be revised and corrected throughout.
|
|||
|
It happened that Wu Nien-hu, the Governor Pi Kua, and Hsi, a
|
|||
|
graduate of the second degree, had all devoted themselves to
|
|||
|
this study, probably surpassing me therein. Accordingly, I
|
|||
|
have had the whole work cut on blocks as a textbook for
|
|||
|
military men.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The three individuals here referred to had evidently been
|
|||
|
occupied on the text of Sun Tzu prior to Sun Hsing-yen's
|
|||
|
commission, but we are left in doubt as to the work they really
|
|||
|
accomplished. At any rate, the new edition, when ultimately
|
|||
|
produced, appeared in the names of Sun Hsing-yen and only one co-
|
|||
|
editor Wu Jen-shi. They took the "original edition" as their
|
|||
|
basis, and by careful comparison with older versions, as well as
|
|||
|
the extant commentaries and other sources of information such as
|
|||
|
the I SHUO, succeeded in restoring a very large number of
|
|||
|
doubtful passages, and turned out, on the whole, what must be
|
|||
|
accepted as the closes approximation we are ever likely to get to
|
|||
|
Sun Tzu's original work. This is what will hereafter be
|
|||
|
denominated the "standard text."
|
|||
|
The copy which I have used belongs to a reissue dated 1877.
|
|||
|
it is in 6 PEN, forming part of a well-printed set of 23 early
|
|||
|
philosophical works in 83 PEN. [38] It opens with a preface by
|
|||
|
Sun Hsing-yen (largely quoted in this introduction), vindicating
|
|||
|
the traditional view of Sun Tzu's life and performances, and
|
|||
|
summing up in remarkably concise fashion the evidence in its
|
|||
|
favor. This is followed by Ts`ao Kung's preface to his edition,
|
|||
|
and the biography of Sun Tzu from the SHIH CHI, both translated
|
|||
|
above. Then come, firstly, Cheng Yu-hsien's I SHUO, [39] with
|
|||
|
author's preface, and next, a short miscellany of historical and
|
|||
|
bibliographical information entitled SUN TZU HSU LU, compiled by
|
|||
|
Pi I-hsun. As regards the body of the work, each separate
|
|||
|
sentence is followed by a note on the text, if required, and then
|
|||
|
by the various commentaries appertaining to it, arranged in
|
|||
|
chronological order. These we shall now proceed to discuss
|
|||
|
briefly, one by one.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Commentators
|
|||
|
----------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Sun Tzu can boast an exceptionally long distinguished roll
|
|||
|
of commentators, which would do honor to any classic. Ou-yang
|
|||
|
Hsiu remarks on this fact, though he wrote before the tale was
|
|||
|
complete, and rather ingeniously explains it by saying that the
|
|||
|
artifices of war, being inexhaustible, must therefore be
|
|||
|
susceptible of treatment in a great variety of ways.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. TS`AO TS`AO or Ts`ao Kung, afterwards known as Wei Wu Ti
|
|||
|
[A.D. 155-220]. There is hardly any room for doubt that the
|
|||
|
earliest commentary on Sun Tzu actually came from the pen of this
|
|||
|
extraordinary man, whose biography in the SAN KUO CHIH reads like
|
|||
|
a romance. One of the greatest military geniuses that the world
|
|||
|
has seen, and Napoleonic in the scale of his operations, he was
|
|||
|
especially famed for the marvelous rapidity of his marches, which
|
|||
|
has found expression in the line "Talk of Ts`ao Ts`ao, and Ts`ao
|
|||
|
Ts`ao will appear." Ou-yang Hsiu says of him that he was a great
|
|||
|
captain who "measured his strength against Tung Cho, Lu Pu and
|
|||
|
the two Yuan, father and son, and vanquished them all; whereupon
|
|||
|
he divided the Empire of Han with Wu and Shu, and made himself
|
|||
|
king. It is recorded that whenever a council of war was held by
|
|||
|
Wei on the eve of a far-reaching campaign, he had all his
|
|||
|
calculations ready; those generals who made use of them did not
|
|||
|
lose one battle in ten; those who ran counter to them in any
|
|||
|
particular saw their armies incontinently beaten and put to
|
|||
|
flight." Ts`ao Kung's notes on Sun Tzu, models of austere
|
|||
|
brevity, are so thoroughly characteristic of the stern commander
|
|||
|
known to history, that it is hard indeed to conceive of them as
|
|||
|
the work of a mere LITTERATEUR. Sometimes, indeed, owing to
|
|||
|
extreme compression, they are scarcely intelligible and stand no
|
|||
|
less in need of a commentary than the text itself. [40]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2. MENG SHIH. The commentary which has come down to us
|
|||
|
under this name is comparatively meager, and nothing about the
|
|||
|
author is known. Even his personal name has not been recorded.
|
|||
|
Chi T`ien-pao's edition places him after Chia Lin,and Ch`ao Kung-
|
|||
|
wu also assigns him to the T`ang dynasty, [41] but this is a
|
|||
|
mistake. In Sun Hsing-yen's preface, he appears as Meng Shih of
|
|||
|
the Liang dynasty [502-557]. Others would identify him with Meng
|
|||
|
K`ang of the 3rd century. He is named in one work as the last of
|
|||
|
the "Five Commentators," the others being Wei Wu Ti, Tu Mu, Ch`en
|
|||
|
Hao and Chia Lin.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
3. LI CH`UAN of the 8th century was a well-known writer on
|
|||
|
military tactics. One of his works has been in constant use down
|
|||
|
to the present day. The T`UNG CHIH mentions "Lives of famous
|
|||
|
generals from the Chou to the T`ang dynasty" as written by him.
|
|||
|
[42] According to Ch`ao Kung-wu and the T`IEN-I-KO catalogue, he
|
|||
|
followed a variant of the text of Sun Tzu which differs
|
|||
|
considerably from those now extant. His notes are mostly short
|
|||
|
and to the point, and he frequently illustrates his remarks by
|
|||
|
anecdotes from Chinese history.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
4. TU YU (died 812) did not publish a separate commentary
|
|||
|
on Sun Tzu, his notes being taken from the T`UNG TIEN, the
|
|||
|
encyclopedic treatise on the Constitution which was his life-
|
|||
|
work. They are largely repetitions of Ts`ao Kung and Meng Shih,
|
|||
|
besides which it is believed that he drew on the ancient
|
|||
|
commentaries of Wang Ling and others. Owing to the peculiar
|
|||
|
arrangement of T`UNG TIEN, he has to explain each passage on its
|
|||
|
merits, apart from the context, and sometimes his own explanation
|
|||
|
does not agree with that of Ts`ao Kung, whom he always quotes
|
|||
|
first. Though not strictly to be reckoned as one of the "Ten
|
|||
|
Commentators," he was added to their number by Chi T`ien-pao,
|
|||
|
being wrongly placed after his grandson Tu Mu.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
5. TU MU (803-852) is perhaps the best known as a poet -- a
|
|||
|
bright star even in the glorious galaxy of the T`ang period. We
|
|||
|
learn from Ch`ao Kung-wu that although he had no practical
|
|||
|
experience of war, he was extremely fond of discussing the
|
|||
|
subject, and was moreover well read in the military history of
|
|||
|
the CH`UN CH`IU and CHAN KUO eras. His notes, therefore, are
|
|||
|
well worth attention. They are very copious, and replete with
|
|||
|
historical parallels. The gist of Sun Tzu's work is thus
|
|||
|
summarized by him: "Practice benevolence and justice, but on the
|
|||
|
other hand make full use of artifice and measures of expediency."
|
|||
|
He further declared that all the military triumphs and disasters
|
|||
|
of the thousand years which had elapsed since Sun Tzu's death
|
|||
|
would, upon examination, be found to uphold and corroborate, in
|
|||
|
every particular, the maxims contained in his book. Tu Mu's
|
|||
|
somewhat spiteful charge against Ts`ao Kung has already been
|
|||
|
considered elsewhere.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
6. CH`EN HAO appears to have been a contemporary of Tu Mu.
|
|||
|
Ch`ao Kung-wu says that he was impelled to write a new commentary
|
|||
|
on Sun Tzu because Ts`ao Kung's on the one hand was too obscure
|
|||
|
and subtle, and that of Tu Mu on the other too long-winded and
|
|||
|
diffuse. Ou-yang Hsiu, writing in the middle of the 11th
|
|||
|
century, calls Ts`ao Kung, Tu Mu and Ch`en Hao the three chief
|
|||
|
commentators on Sun Tzu, and observes that Ch`en Hao is
|
|||
|
continually attacking Tu Mu's shortcomings. His commentary,
|
|||
|
though not lacking in merit, must rank below those of his
|
|||
|
predecessors.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
7. CHIA LIN is known to have lived under the T`ang dynasty,
|
|||
|
for his commentary on Sun Tzu is mentioned in the T`ang Shu and
|
|||
|
was afterwards republished by Chi Hsieh of the same dynasty
|
|||
|
together with those of Meng Shih and Tu Yu. It is of somewhat
|
|||
|
scanty texture, and in point of quality, too, perhaps the least
|
|||
|
valuable of the eleven.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
8. MEI YAO-CH`EN (1002-1060), commonly known by his "style"
|
|||
|
as Mei Sheng-yu, was, like Tu Mu, a poet of distinction. His
|
|||
|
commentary was published with a laudatory preface by the great
|
|||
|
Ou-yang Hsiu, from which we may cull the following: --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Later scholars have misread Sun Tzu, distorting his
|
|||
|
words and trying to make them square with their own one-sided
|
|||
|
views. Thus, though commentators have not been lacking, only
|
|||
|
a few have proved equal to the task. My friend Sheng-yu has
|
|||
|
not fallen into this mistake. In attempting to provide a
|
|||
|
critical commentary for Sun Tzu's work, he does not lose
|
|||
|
sight of the fact that these sayings were intended for states
|
|||
|
engaged in internecine warfare; that the author is not
|
|||
|
concerned with the military conditions prevailing under the
|
|||
|
sovereigns of the three ancient dynasties, [43] nor with the
|
|||
|
nine punitive measures prescribed to the Minister of War.
|
|||
|
[44] Again, Sun Wu loved brevity of diction, but his meaning
|
|||
|
is always deep. Whether the subject be marching an army, or
|
|||
|
handling soldiers, or estimating the enemy, or controlling
|
|||
|
the forces of victory, it is always systematically treated;
|
|||
|
the sayings are bound together in strict logical sequence,
|
|||
|
though this has been obscured by commentators who have
|
|||
|
probably failed to grasp their meaning. In his own
|
|||
|
commentary, Mei Sheng-yu has brushed aside all the obstinate
|
|||
|
prejudices of these critics, and has tried to bring out the
|
|||
|
true meaning of Sun Tzu himself. In this way, the clouds of
|
|||
|
confusion have been dispersed and the sayings made clear. I
|
|||
|
am convinced that the present work deserves to be handed down
|
|||
|
side by side with the three great commentaries; and for a
|
|||
|
great deal that they find in the sayings, coming generations
|
|||
|
will have constant reason to thank my friend Sheng-yu.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Making some allowance for the exuberance of friendship, I am
|
|||
|
inclined to endorse this favorable judgment, and would certainly
|
|||
|
place him above Ch`en Hao in order of merit.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
9. WANG HSI, also of the Sung dynasty, is decidedly
|
|||
|
original in some of his interpretations, but much less judicious
|
|||
|
than Mei Yao-ch`en, and on the whole not a very trustworthy
|
|||
|
guide. He is fond of comparing his own commentary with that of
|
|||
|
Ts`ao Kung, but the comparison is not often flattering to him.
|
|||
|
We learn from Ch`ao Kung-wu that Wang Hsi revised the ancient
|
|||
|
text of Sun Tzu, filling up lacunae and correcting mistakes. [45]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
10. HO YEN-HSI of the Sung dynasty. The personal name of
|
|||
|
this commentator is given as above by Cheng Ch`iao in the TUNG
|
|||
|
CHIH, written about the middle of the twelfth century, but he
|
|||
|
appears simply as Ho Shih in the YU HAI, and Ma Tuan-lin quotes
|
|||
|
Ch`ao Kung-wu as saying that his personal name is unknown. There
|
|||
|
seems to be no reason to doubt Cheng Ch`iao's statement,
|
|||
|
otherwise I should have been inclined to hazard a guess and
|
|||
|
identify him with one Ho Ch`u-fei, the author of a short treatise
|
|||
|
on war, who lived in the latter part of the 11th century. Ho
|
|||
|
Shih's commentary, in the words of the T`IEN-I-KO catalogue,
|
|||
|
"contains helpful additions" here and there, but is chiefly
|
|||
|
remarkable for the copious extracts taken, in adapted form, from
|
|||
|
the dynastic histories and other sources.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
11. CHANG YU. The list closes with a commentator of no
|
|||
|
great originality perhaps, but gifted with admirable powers of
|
|||
|
lucid exposition. His commentator is based on that of Ts`ao
|
|||
|
Kung, whose terse sentences he contrives to expand and develop in
|
|||
|
masterly fashion. Without Chang Yu, it is safe to say that much
|
|||
|
of Ts`ao Kung's commentary would have remained cloaked in its
|
|||
|
pristine obscurity and therefore valueless. His work is not
|
|||
|
mentioned in the Sung history, the T`UNG K`AO, or the YU HAI, but
|
|||
|
it finds a niche in the T`UNG CHIH, which also names him as the
|
|||
|
author of the "Lives of Famous Generals." [46]
|
|||
|
It is rather remarkable that the last-named four should all
|
|||
|
have flourished within so short a space of time. Ch`ao Kung-wu
|
|||
|
accounts for it by saying: "During the early years of the Sung
|
|||
|
dynasty the Empire enjoyed a long spell of peace, and men ceased
|
|||
|
to practice the art of war. but when [Chao] Yuan-hao's rebellion
|
|||
|
came [1038-42] and the frontier generals were defeated time after
|
|||
|
time, the Court made strenuous inquiry for men skilled in war,
|
|||
|
and military topics became the vogue amongst all the high
|
|||
|
officials. Hence it is that the commentators of Sun Tzu in our
|
|||
|
dynasty belong mainly to that period. [47]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Besides these eleven commentators, there are several others
|
|||
|
whose work has not come down to us. The SUI SHU mentions four,
|
|||
|
namely Wang Ling (often quoted by Tu Yu as Wang Tzu); Chang Tzu-
|
|||
|
shang; Chia Hsu of Wei; [48] and Shen Yu of Wu. The T`ANG SHU
|
|||
|
adds Sun Hao, and the T`UNG CHIH Hsiao Chi, while the T`U SHU
|
|||
|
mentions a Ming commentator, Huang Jun-yu. It is possible that
|
|||
|
some of these may have been merely collectors and editors of
|
|||
|
other commentaries, like Chi T`ien-pao and Chi Hsieh, mentioned
|
|||
|
above.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Appreciations of Sun Tzu
|
|||
|
------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Sun Tzu has exercised a potent fascination over the minds of
|
|||
|
some of China's greatest men. Among the famous generals who are
|
|||
|
known to have studied his pages with enthusiasm may be mentioned
|
|||
|
Han Hsin (d. 196 B.C.), [49] Feng I (d. 34 A.D.), [50] Lu Meng
|
|||
|
(d. 219), [51] and Yo Fei (1103-1141). [52] The opinion of Ts`ao
|
|||
|
Kung, who disputes with Han Hsin the highest place in Chinese
|
|||
|
military annals, has already been recorded. [53] Still more
|
|||
|
remarkable, in one way, is the testimony of purely literary men,
|
|||
|
such as Su Hsun (the father of Su Tung-p`o), who wrote several
|
|||
|
essays on military topics, all of which owe their chief
|
|||
|
inspiration to Sun Tzu. The following short passage by him is
|
|||
|
preserved in the YU HAI: [54] --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Sun Wu's saying, that in war one cannot make certain of
|
|||
|
conquering, [55] is very different indeed from what other
|
|||
|
books tell us. [56] Wu Ch`i was a man of the same stamp as
|
|||
|
Sun Wu: they both wrote books on war, and they are linked
|
|||
|
together in popular speech as "Sun and Wu." But Wu Ch`i's
|
|||
|
remarks on war are less weighty, his rules are rougher and
|
|||
|
more crudely stated, and there is not the same unity of plan
|
|||
|
as in Sun Tzu's work, where the style is terse, but the
|
|||
|
meaning fully brought out.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The following is an extract from the "Impartial Judgments in
|
|||
|
the Garden of Literature" by Cheng Hou: --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Sun Tzu's 13 chapters are not only the staple and base
|
|||
|
of all military men's training, but also compel the most
|
|||
|
careful attention of scholars and men of letters. His
|
|||
|
sayings are terse yet elegant, simple yet profound,
|
|||
|
perspicuous and eminently practical. Such works as the LUN
|
|||
|
YU, the I CHING and the great Commentary, [57] as well as the
|
|||
|
writings of Mencius, Hsun K`uang and Yang Chu, all fall below
|
|||
|
the level of Sun Tzu.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Chu Hsi, commenting on this, fully admits the first part of
|
|||
|
the criticism, although he dislikes the audacious comparison with
|
|||
|
the venerated classical works. Language of this sort, he says,
|
|||
|
"encourages a ruler's bent towards unrelenting warfare and
|
|||
|
reckless militarism."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Apologies for War
|
|||
|
-----------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Accustomed as we are to think of China as the greatest
|
|||
|
peace-loving nation on earth, we are in some danger of forgetting
|
|||
|
that her experience of war in all its phases has also been such
|
|||
|
as no modern State can parallel. Her long military annals
|
|||
|
stretch back to a point at which they are lost in the mists of
|
|||
|
time. She had built the Great Wall and was maintaining a huge
|
|||
|
standing army along her frontier centuries before the first Roman
|
|||
|
legionary was seen on the Danube. What with the perpetual
|
|||
|
collisions of the ancient feudal States, the grim conflicts with
|
|||
|
Huns, Turks and other invaders after the centralization of
|
|||
|
government, the terrific upheavals which accompanied the
|
|||
|
overthrow of so many dynasties, besides the countless rebellions
|
|||
|
and minor disturbances that have flamed up and flickered out
|
|||
|
again one by one, it is hardly too much to say that the clash of
|
|||
|
arms has never ceased to resound in one portion or another of the
|
|||
|
Empire.
|
|||
|
No less remarkable is the succession of illustrious captains
|
|||
|
to whom China can point with pride. As in all countries, the
|
|||
|
greatest are fond of emerging at the most fateful crises of her
|
|||
|
history. Thus, Po Ch`i stands out conspicuous in the period when
|
|||
|
Ch`in was entering upon her final struggle with the remaining
|
|||
|
independent states. The stormy years which followed the break-up
|
|||
|
of the Ch`in dynasty are illuminated by the transcendent genius
|
|||
|
of Han Hsin. When the House of Han in turn is tottering to its
|
|||
|
fall, the great and baleful figure of Ts`ao Ts`ao dominates the
|
|||
|
scene. And in the establishment of the T`ang dynasty,one of the
|
|||
|
mightiest tasks achieved by man, the superhuman energy of Li
|
|||
|
Shih-min (afterwards the Emperor T`ai Tsung) was seconded by the
|
|||
|
brilliant strategy of Li Ching. None of these generals need fear
|
|||
|
comparison with the greatest names in the military history of
|
|||
|
Europe.
|
|||
|
In spite of all this, the great body of Chinese sentiment,
|
|||
|
from Lao Tzu downwards, and especially as reflected in the
|
|||
|
standard literature of Confucianism, has been consistently
|
|||
|
pacific and intensely opposed to militarism in any form. It is
|
|||
|
such an uncommon thing to find any of the literati defending
|
|||
|
warfare on principle, that I have thought it worth while to
|
|||
|
collect and translate a few passages in which the unorthodox view
|
|||
|
is upheld. The following, by Ssu-ma Ch`ien, shows that for all
|
|||
|
his ardent admiration of Confucius, he was yet no advocate of
|
|||
|
peace at any price: --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Military weapons are the means used by the Sage to
|
|||
|
punish violence and cruelty, to give peace to troublous
|
|||
|
times, to remove difficulties and dangers, and to succor
|
|||
|
those who are in peril. Every animal with blood in its veins
|
|||
|
and horns on its head will fight when it is attacked. How
|
|||
|
much more so will man, who carries in his breast the
|
|||
|
faculties of love and hatred, joy and anger! When he is
|
|||
|
pleased, a feeling of affection springs up within him; when
|
|||
|
angry, his poisoned sting is brought into play. That is the
|
|||
|
natural law which governs his being.... What then shall be
|
|||
|
said of those scholars of our time, blind to all great
|
|||
|
issues, and without any appreciation of relative values, who
|
|||
|
can only bark out their stale formulas about "virtue" and
|
|||
|
"civilization," condemning the use of military weapons? They
|
|||
|
will surely bring our country to impotence and dishonor and
|
|||
|
the loss of her rightful heritage; or, at the very least,
|
|||
|
they will bring about invasion and rebellion, sacrifice of
|
|||
|
territory and general enfeeblement. Yet they obstinately
|
|||
|
refuse to modify the position they have taken up. The truth
|
|||
|
is that, just as in the family the teacher must not spare the
|
|||
|
rod, and punishments cannot be dispensed with in the State,
|
|||
|
so military chastisement can never be allowed to fall into
|
|||
|
abeyance in the Empire. All one can say is that this power
|
|||
|
will be exercised wisely by some, foolishly by others, and
|
|||
|
that among those who bear arms some will be loyal and others
|
|||
|
rebellious. [58]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The next piece is taken from Tu Mu's preface to his
|
|||
|
commentary on Sun Tzu: --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
War may be defined as punishment, which is one of the
|
|||
|
functions of government. It was the profession of Chung Yu
|
|||
|
and Jan Ch`iu, both disciples of Confucius. Nowadays, the
|
|||
|
holding of trials and hearing of litigation, the imprisonment
|
|||
|
of offenders and their execution by flogging in the market-
|
|||
|
place, are all done by officials. But the wielding of huge
|
|||
|
armies, the throwing down of fortified cities, the hauling of
|
|||
|
women and children into captivity, and the beheading of
|
|||
|
traitors -- this is also work which is done by officials.
|
|||
|
The objects of the rack and of military weapons are
|
|||
|
essentially the same. There is no intrinsic difference
|
|||
|
between the punishment of flogging and cutting off heads in
|
|||
|
war. For the lesser infractions of law, which are easily
|
|||
|
dealt with, only a small amount of force need be employed:
|
|||
|
hence the use of military weapons and wholesale decapitation.
|
|||
|
In both cases, however, the end in view is to get rid of
|
|||
|
wicked people, and to give comfort and relief to the good....
|
|||
|
Chi-sun asked Jan Yu, saying: "Have you, Sir, acquired
|
|||
|
your military aptitude by study, or is it innate?" Jan Yu
|
|||
|
replied: "It has been acquired by study." [59] "How can
|
|||
|
that be so," said Chi-sun, "seeing that you are a disciple of
|
|||
|
Confucius?" "It is a fact," replied Jan Yu; "I was taught by
|
|||
|
Confucius. It is fitting that the great Sage should exercise
|
|||
|
both civil and military functions, though to be sure my
|
|||
|
instruction in the art of fighting has not yet gone very
|
|||
|
far."
|
|||
|
Now, who the author was of this rigid distinction
|
|||
|
between the "civil" and the "military," and the limitation of
|
|||
|
each to a separate sphere of action, or in what year of which
|
|||
|
dynasty it was first introduced, is more than I can say.
|
|||
|
But, at any rate, it has come about that the members of the
|
|||
|
governing class are quite afraid of enlarging on military
|
|||
|
topics, or do so only in a shamefaced manner. If any are
|
|||
|
bold enough to discuss the subject, they are at once set down
|
|||
|
as eccentric individuals of coarse and brutal propensities.
|
|||
|
This is an extraordinary instance in which, through sheer
|
|||
|
lack of reasoning, men unhappily lose sight of fundamental
|
|||
|
principles.
|
|||
|
When the Duke of Chou was minister under Ch`eng Wang, he
|
|||
|
regulated ceremonies and made music, and venerated the arts
|
|||
|
of scholarship and learning; yet when the barbarians of the
|
|||
|
River Huai revolted, [60] he sallied forth and chastised
|
|||
|
them. When Confucius held office under the Duke of Lu, and a
|
|||
|
meeting was convened at Chia-ku, [61] he said: "If pacific
|
|||
|
negotiations are in progress, warlike preparations should
|
|||
|
have been made beforehand." He rebuked and shamed the
|
|||
|
Marquis of Ch`i, who cowered under him and dared not proceed
|
|||
|
to violence. How can it be said that these two great Sages
|
|||
|
had no knowledge of military matters?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We have seen that the great Chu Hsi held Sun Tzu in high
|
|||
|
esteem. He also appeals to the authority of the Classics: --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Our Master Confucius, answering Duke Ling of Wei, said:
|
|||
|
"I have never studied matters connected with armies and
|
|||
|
battalions." [62] Replying to K`ung Wen-tzu, he said: I
|
|||
|
have not been instructed about buff-coats and weapons." But
|
|||
|
if we turn to the meeting at Chia-ku, we find that he used
|
|||
|
armed force against the men of Lai, so that the marquis of
|
|||
|
Ch`i was overawed. Again, when the inhabitants of Pi
|
|||
|
revolted, the ordered his officers to attack them, whereupon
|
|||
|
they were defeated and fled in confusion. He once uttered
|
|||
|
the words: "If I fight, I conquer." [63] And Jan Yu also
|
|||
|
said: "The Sage exercises both civil and military
|
|||
|
functions." [64] Can it be a fact that Confucius never
|
|||
|
studied or received instruction in the art of war? We can
|
|||
|
only say that he did not specially choose matters connected
|
|||
|
with armies and fighting to be the subject of his teaching.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Sun Hsing-yen, the editor of Sun Tzu, writes in similar
|
|||
|
strain: --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Confucius said: "I am unversed in military matters."
|
|||
|
[65] He also said: "If I fight, I conquer." Confucius
|
|||
|
ordered ceremonies and regulated music. Now war constitutes
|
|||
|
one of the five classes of State ceremonial, [66] and must
|
|||
|
not be treated as an independent branch of study. Hence, the
|
|||
|
words "I am unversed in" must be taken to mean that there are
|
|||
|
things which even an inspired Teacher does not know. Those
|
|||
|
who have to lead an army and devise stratagems, must learn
|
|||
|
the art of war. But if one can command the services of a
|
|||
|
good general like Sun Tzu, who was employed by Wu Tzu-hsu,
|
|||
|
there is no need to learn it oneself. Hence the remark added
|
|||
|
by Confucius: "If I fight, I conquer."
|
|||
|
The men of the present day, however, willfully interpret
|
|||
|
these words of Confucius in their narrowest sense, as though
|
|||
|
he meant that books on the art of war were not worth reading.
|
|||
|
With blind persistency, they adduce the example of Chao Kua,
|
|||
|
who pored over his father's books to no purpose, [67] as a
|
|||
|
proof that all military theory is useless. Again, seeing
|
|||
|
that books on war have to do with such things as opportunism
|
|||
|
in designing plans, and the conversion of spies, they hold
|
|||
|
that the art is immoral and unworthy of a sage. These people
|
|||
|
ignore the fact that the studies of our scholars and the
|
|||
|
civil administration of our officials also require steady
|
|||
|
application and practice before efficiency is reached. The
|
|||
|
ancients were particularly chary of allowing mere novices to
|
|||
|
botch their work. [68] Weapons are baneful [69] and fighting
|
|||
|
perilous; and useless unless a general is in constant
|
|||
|
practice, he ought not to hazard other men's lives in battle.
|
|||
|
[70] Hence it is essential that Sun Tzu's 13 chapters should
|
|||
|
be studied.
|
|||
|
Hsiang Liang used to instruct his nephew Chi [71] in the
|
|||
|
art of war. Chi got a rough idea of the art in its general
|
|||
|
bearings, but would not pursue his studies to their proper
|
|||
|
outcome, the consequence being that he was finally defeated
|
|||
|
and overthrown. He did not realize that the tricks and
|
|||
|
artifices of war are beyond verbal computation. Duke Hsiang
|
|||
|
of Sung and King Yen of Hsu were brought to destruction by
|
|||
|
their misplaced humanity. The treacherous and underhand
|
|||
|
nature of war necessitates the use of guile and stratagem
|
|||
|
suited to the occasion. There is a case on record of
|
|||
|
Confucius himself having violated an extorted oath, [72] and
|
|||
|
also of his having left the Sung State in disguise. [73] Can
|
|||
|
we then recklessly arraign Sun Tzu for disregarding truth and
|
|||
|
honesty?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bibliography
|
|||
|
------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The following are the oldest Chinese treatises on war, after
|
|||
|
Sun Tzu. The notes on each have been drawn principally from the
|
|||
|
SSU K`U CH`UAN SHU CHIEN MING MU LU, ch. 9, fol. 22 sqq.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. WU TZU, in 1 CHUAN or 6 chapters. By Wu Ch`i (d. 381
|
|||
|
B.C.). A genuine work. See SHIH CHI, ch. 65.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2. SSU-MA FA, in 1 CHUAN or 5 chapters. Wrongly attributed
|
|||
|
to Ssu-ma Jang-chu of the 6th century B.C. Its date, however,
|
|||
|
must be early, as the customs of the three ancient dynasties are
|
|||
|
constantly to be met within its pages. See SHIH CHI, ch. 64.
|
|||
|
The SSU K`U CH`UAN SHU (ch. 99, f. 1) remarks that the
|
|||
|
oldest three treatises on war, SUN TZU, WU TZU and SSU-MA FA,
|
|||
|
are, generally speaking, only concerned with things strictly
|
|||
|
military -- the art of producing, collecting, training and
|
|||
|
drilling troops, and the correct theory with regard to measures
|
|||
|
of expediency, laying plans, transport of goods and the handling
|
|||
|
of soldiers -- in strong contrast to later works, in which the
|
|||
|
science of war is usually blended with metaphysics, divination
|
|||
|
and magical arts in general.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
3. LIU T`AO, in 6 CHUAN, or 60 chapters. Attributed to Lu
|
|||
|
Wang (or Lu Shang, also known as T`ai Kung) of the 12th century
|
|||
|
B.C. [74] But its style does not belong to the era of the Three
|
|||
|
Dynasties. Lu Te-ming (550-625 A.D.) mentions the work, and
|
|||
|
enumerates the headings of the six sections so that the forgery
|
|||
|
cannot have been later than Sui dynasty.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
4. WEI LIAO TZU, in 5 CHUAN. Attributed to Wei Liao (4th
|
|||
|
cent. B.C.), who studied under the famous Kuei-ku Tzu. The work
|
|||
|
appears to have been originally in 31 chapters, whereas the text
|
|||
|
we possess contains only 24. Its matter is sound enough in the
|
|||
|
main, though the strategical devices differ considerably from
|
|||
|
those of the Warring States period. It is been furnished with a
|
|||
|
commentary by the well-known Sung philosopher Chang Tsai.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
5. SAN LUEH, in 3 CHUAN. Attributed to Huang-shih Kung, a
|
|||
|
legendary personage who is said to have bestowed it on Chang
|
|||
|
Liang (d. 187 B.C.) in an interview on a bridge. But here again,
|
|||
|
the style is not that of works dating from the Ch`in or Han
|
|||
|
period. The Han Emperor Kuang Wu [25-57 A.D.] apparently quotes
|
|||
|
from it in one of his proclamations; but the passage in question
|
|||
|
may have been inserted later on, in order to prove the
|
|||
|
genuineness of the work. We shall not be far out if we refer it
|
|||
|
to the Northern Sung period [420-478 A.D.], or somewhat earlier.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
6. LI WEI KUNG WEN TUI, in 3 sections. Written in the form
|
|||
|
of a dialogue between T`ai Tsung and his great general Li Ching,
|
|||
|
it is usually ascribed to the latter. Competent authorities
|
|||
|
consider it a forgery, though the author was evidently well
|
|||
|
versed in the art of war.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
7. LI CHING PING FA (not to be confounded with the
|
|||
|
foregoing) is a short treatise in 8 chapters, preserved in the
|
|||
|
T`ung Tien, but not published separately. This fact explains its
|
|||
|
omission from the SSU K`U CH`UAN SHU.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
8. WU CH`I CHING, in 1 CHUAN. Attributed to the legendary
|
|||
|
minister Feng Hou, with exegetical notes by Kung-sun Hung of the
|
|||
|
Han dynasty (d. 121 B.C.), and said to have been eulogized by the
|
|||
|
celebrated general Ma Lung (d. 300 A.D.). Yet the earliest
|
|||
|
mention of it is in the SUNG CHIH. Although a forgery, the work
|
|||
|
is well put together.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Considering the high popular estimation in which Chu-ko
|
|||
|
Liang has always been held, it is not surprising to find more
|
|||
|
than one work on war ascribed to his pen. Such are (1) the SHIH
|
|||
|
LIU TS`E (1 CHUAN), preserved in the YUNG LO TA TIEN; (2) CHIANG
|
|||
|
YUAN (1 CHUAN); and (3) HSIN SHU (1 CHUAN), which steals
|
|||
|
wholesale from Sun Tzu. None of these has the slightest claim to
|
|||
|
be considered genuine.
|
|||
|
Most of the large Chinese encyclopedias contain extensive
|
|||
|
sections devoted to the literature of war. The following
|
|||
|
references may be found useful: --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
T`UNG TIEN (circa 800 A.D.), ch. 148-162.
|
|||
|
T`AI P`ING YU LAN (983), ch. 270-359.
|
|||
|
WEN HSIEN TUNG K`AO (13th cent.), ch. 221.
|
|||
|
YU HAI (13th cent.), ch. 140, 141.
|
|||
|
SAN TS`AI T`U HUI (16th cent).
|
|||
|
KUANG PO WU CHIH (1607), ch. 31, 32.
|
|||
|
CH`IEN CH`IO LEI SHU (1632), ch. 75.
|
|||
|
YUAN CHIEN LEI HAN (1710), ch. 206-229.
|
|||
|
KU CHIN T`U SHU CHI CH`ENG (1726), section XXX, esp. ch. 81-
|
|||
|
90.
|
|||
|
HSU WEN HSIEN T`UNG K`AO (1784), ch. 121-134.
|
|||
|
HUANG CH`AO CHING SHIH WEN PIEN (1826), ch. 76, 77.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The bibliographical sections of certain historical works
|
|||
|
also deserve mention: --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CH`IEN HAN SHU, ch. 30.
|
|||
|
SUI SHU, ch. 32-35.
|
|||
|
CHIU T`ANG SHU, ch. 46, 47.
|
|||
|
HSIN T`ANG SHU, ch. 57,60.
|
|||
|
SUNG SHIH, ch. 202-209.
|
|||
|
T`UNG CHIH (circa 1150), ch. 68.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
To these of course must be added the great Catalogue of the
|
|||
|
Imperial Library: --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SSU K`U CH`UAN SHU TSUNG MU T`I YAO (1790), ch. 99, 100.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Footnotes
|
|||
|
---------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. SHI CHI, ch. 65.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2. He reigned from 514 to 496 B.C.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
3. SHI CHI, ch. 130.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
4. The appellation of Nang Wa.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
5. SHI CHI, ch. 31.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
6. SHI CHI, ch. 25.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
7. The appellation of Hu Yen, mentioned in ch. 39 under the year
|
|||
|
637.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
8. Wang-tzu Ch`eng-fu, ch. 32, year 607.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
9. The mistake is natural enough. Native critics refer to a
|
|||
|
work of the Han dynasty, which says: "Ten LI outside the WU gate
|
|||
|
[of the city of Wu, now Soochow in Kiangsu] there is a great
|
|||
|
mound, raised to commemorate the entertainment of Sun Wu of Ch`i,
|
|||
|
who excelled in the art of war, by the King of Wu."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
10. "They attached strings to wood to make bows, and sharpened
|
|||
|
wood to make arrows. The use of bows and arrows is to keep the
|
|||
|
Empire in awe."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
11. The son and successor of Ho Lu. He was finally defeated and
|
|||
|
overthrown by Kou chien, King of Yueh, in 473 B.C. See post.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
12. King Yen of Hsu, a fabulous being, of whom Sun Hsing-yen
|
|||
|
says in his preface: "His humanity brought him to destruction."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
13. The passage I have put in brackets is omitted in the T`U
|
|||
|
SHU, and may be an interpolation. It was known, however to Chang
|
|||
|
Shou-chieh of the T`ang dynasty, and appears in the T`AI P`ING YU
|
|||
|
LAN.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
14. Ts`ao Kung seems to be thinking of the first part of chap.
|
|||
|
II, perhaps especially of ss. 8.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
15. See chap. XI.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
16. On the other hand, it is noteworthy that WU TZU, which is
|
|||
|
not in 6 chapters, has 48 assigned to it in the HAN CHIH.
|
|||
|
Likewise, the CHUNG YUNG is credited with 49 chapters, though now
|
|||
|
only in one only. In the case of very short works, one is
|
|||
|
tempted to think that P`IEN might simply mean "leaves."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
17. Yeh Shih of the Sung dynasty [1151-1223].
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
18. He hardly deserves to be bracketed with assassins.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
19. See Chapter 7, ss. 27 and Chapter 11, ss. 28.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
20. See Chapter 11, ss. 28. Chuan Chu is the abbreviated form
|
|||
|
of his name.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
21. I.e. Po P`ei. See ante.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
22. The nucleus of this work is probably genuine, though large
|
|||
|
additions have been made by later hands. Kuan chung died in 645
|
|||
|
B.C.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
23. See infra, beginning of INTRODUCTION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
24. I do not know what this work, unless it be the last chapter
|
|||
|
of another work. Why that chapter should be singled out,
|
|||
|
however, is not clear.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
25. About 480 B.C.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
26. That is, I suppose, the age of Wu Wang and Chou Kung.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
27. In the 3rd century B.C.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
28. Ssu-ma Jang-chu, whose family name was T`ien, lived in the
|
|||
|
latter half of the 6th century B.C., and is also believed to have
|
|||
|
written a work on war. See SHIH CHI, ch. 64, and infra at the
|
|||
|
beginning of the INTRODUCTION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
29. See Legge's Classics, vol. V, Prolegomena p. 27. Legge
|
|||
|
thinks that the TSO CHUAN must have been written in the 5th
|
|||
|
century, but not before 424 B.C.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
30. See MENCIUS III. 1. iii. 13-20.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
31. When Wu first appears in the CH`UN CH`IU in 584, it is
|
|||
|
already at variance with its powerful neighbor. The CH`UN CH`IU
|
|||
|
first mentions Yueh in 537, the TSO CHUAN in 601.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
32. This is explicitly stated in the TSO CHUAN, XXXII, 2.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
33. There is this to be said for the later period, that the feud
|
|||
|
would tend to grow more bitter after each encounter, and thus
|
|||
|
more fully justify the language used in XI. ss. 30.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
34. With Wu Yuan himself the case is just the reverse: -- a
|
|||
|
spurious treatise on war has been fathered on him simply because
|
|||
|
he was a great general. Here we have an obvious inducement to
|
|||
|
forgery. Sun Wu, on the other hand, cannot have been widely
|
|||
|
known to fame in the 5th century.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
35. From TSO CHUAN: "From the date of King Chao's accession
|
|||
|
[515] there was no year in which Ch`u was not attacked by Wu."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
36. Preface ad fin: "My family comes from Lo-an, and we are
|
|||
|
really descended from Sun Tzu. I am ashamed to say that I only
|
|||
|
read my ancestor's work from a literary point of view, without
|
|||
|
comprehending the military technique. So long have we been
|
|||
|
enjoying the blessings of peace!"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
37. Hoa-yin is about 14 miles from T`ung-kuan on the eastern
|
|||
|
border of Shensi. The temple in question is still visited by
|
|||
|
those about the ascent of the Western Sacred Mountain. It is
|
|||
|
mentioned in a text as being "situated five LI east of the
|
|||
|
district city of Hua-yin. The temple contains the Hua-shan
|
|||
|
tablet inscribed by the T`ang Emperor Hsuan Tsung [713-755]."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
38. See my "Catalogue of Chinese Books" (Luzac & Co., 1908), no.
|
|||
|
40.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
39. This is a discussion of 29 difficult passages in Sun Tzu.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
40. Cf. Catalogue of the library of Fan family at Ningpo: "His
|
|||
|
commentary is frequently obscure; it furnishes a clue, but does
|
|||
|
not fully develop the meaning."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
41. WEN HSIEN T`UNG K`AO, ch. 221.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
42. It is interesting to note that M. Pelliot has recently
|
|||
|
discovered chapters 1, 4 and 5 of this lost work in the "Grottos
|
|||
|
of the Thousand Buddhas." See B.E.F.E.O., t. VIII, nos. 3-4, p.
|
|||
|
525.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
43. The Hsia, the Shang and the Chou. Although the last-named
|
|||
|
was nominally existent in Sun Tzu's day, it retained hardly a
|
|||
|
vestige of power, and the old military organization had
|
|||
|
practically gone by the board. I can suggest no other
|
|||
|
explanation of the passage.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
44. See CHOU LI, xxix. 6-10.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
45. T`UNG K`AO, ch. 221.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
46. This appears to be still extant. See Wylie's "Notes," p. 91
|
|||
|
(new edition).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
47. T`UNG K`AO, loc. cit.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
48. A notable person in his day. His biography is given in the
|
|||
|
SAN KUO CHIH, ch. 10.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
49. See XI. ss. 58, note.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
50. HOU HAN SHU, ch. 17 ad init.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
51. SAN KUO CHIH, ch. 54.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
52. SUNG SHIH, ch. 365 ad init.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
53. The few Europeans who have yet had an opportunity of
|
|||
|
acquainting themselves with Sun Tzu are not behindhand in their
|
|||
|
praise. In this connection, I may perhaps be excused for quoting
|
|||
|
from a letter from Lord Roberts, to whom the sheets of the
|
|||
|
present work were submitted previous to publication: "Many of
|
|||
|
Sun Wu's maxims are perfectly applicable to the present day, and
|
|||
|
no. 11 [in Chapter VIII] is one that the people of this country
|
|||
|
would do well to take to heart."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
54. Ch. 140.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
55. See IV. ss. 3.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
56. The allusion may be to Mencius VI. 2. ix. 2.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
57. The TSO CHUAN.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
58. SHIH CHI, ch. 25, fol. I.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
59. Cf. SHIH CHI, ch 47.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
60. See SHU CHING, preface ss. 55.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
61. See SHIH CHI, ch. 47.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
62. Lun Yu, XV. 1.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
63. I failed to trace this utterance.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
64. Supra.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
65. Supra.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
66. The other four being worship, mourning, entertainment of
|
|||
|
guests, and festive rites. See SHU CHING, ii. 1. III. 8, and
|
|||
|
CHOU LI, IX. fol. 49.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
67. See XIII. ss. 11, note.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
68. This is a rather obscure allusion to the TSO CHUAN, where
|
|||
|
Tzu-ch`an says: "If you have a piece of beautiful brocade, you
|
|||
|
will not employ a mere learner to make it up."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
69. Cf. TAO TE CHING, ch. 31.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
70. Sun Hsing-yen might have quoted Confucius again. See LUN
|
|||
|
YU, XIII. 29, 30.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
71. Better known as Hsiang Yu [233-202 B.C.].
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
72. SHIH CHI, ch. 47.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
73. SHIH CHI, ch. 38.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
74. See XIII. ss. 27, note. Further details on T`ai Kung will
|
|||
|
be found in the SHIH CHI, ch. 32 ad init. Besides the tradition
|
|||
|
which makes him a former minister of Chou Hsin, two other
|
|||
|
accounts of him are there given, according to which he would
|
|||
|
appear to have been first raised from a humble private station by
|
|||
|
Wen Wang.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I. LAYING PLANS
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ts`ao Kung, in defining the meaning of the Chinese for the
|
|||
|
title of this chapter, says it refers to the deliberations in the
|
|||
|
temple selected by the general for his temporary use, or as we
|
|||
|
should say, in his tent. See. ss. 26.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. Sun Tzu said: The art of war is of vital importance to
|
|||
|
the State.
|
|||
|
2. It is a matter of life and death, a road either to
|
|||
|
safety or to ruin. Hence it is a subject of inquiry which can on
|
|||
|
no account be neglected.
|
|||
|
3. The art of war, then, is governed by five constant
|
|||
|
factors, to be taken into account in one's deliberations, when
|
|||
|
seeking to determine the conditions obtaining in the field.
|
|||
|
4. These are: (1) The Moral Law; (2) Heaven; (3) Earth;
|
|||
|
(4) The Commander; (5) Method and discipline.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[It appears from what follows that Sun Tzu means by "Moral
|
|||
|
Law" a principle of harmony, not unlike the Tao of Lao Tzu in its
|
|||
|
moral aspect. One might be tempted to render it by "morale,"
|
|||
|
were it not considered as an attribute of the ruler in ss. 13.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
5, 6. The MORAL LAW causes the people to be in complete
|
|||
|
accord with their ruler, so that they will follow him regardless
|
|||
|
of their lives, undismayed by any danger.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Yu quotes Wang Tzu as saying: "Without constant
|
|||
|
practice, the officers will be nervous and undecided when
|
|||
|
mustering for battle; without constant practice, the general will
|
|||
|
be wavering and irresolute when the crisis is at hand."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
7. HEAVEN signifies night and day, cold and heat, times and
|
|||
|
seasons.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The commentators, I think, make an unnecessary mystery of
|
|||
|
two words here. Meng Shih refers to "the hard and the soft,
|
|||
|
waxing and waning" of Heaven. Wang Hsi, however, may be right in
|
|||
|
saying that what is meant is "the general economy of Heaven,"
|
|||
|
including the five elements, the four seasons, wind and clouds,
|
|||
|
and other phenomena.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
8. EARTH comprises distances, great and small; danger and
|
|||
|
security; open ground and narrow passes; the chances of life and
|
|||
|
death.
|
|||
|
9. The COMMANDER stands for the virtues of wisdom,
|
|||
|
sincerely, benevolence, courage and strictness.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The five cardinal virtues of the Chinese are (1) humanity
|
|||
|
or benevolence; (2) uprightness of mind; (3) self-respect, self-
|
|||
|
control, or "proper feeling;" (4) wisdom; (5) sincerity or good
|
|||
|
faith. Here "wisdom" and "sincerity" are put before "humanity or
|
|||
|
benevolence," and the two military virtues of "courage" and
|
|||
|
"strictness" substituted for "uprightness of mind" and "self-
|
|||
|
respect, self-control, or 'proper feeling.'"]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
10. By METHOD AND DISCIPLINE are to be understood the
|
|||
|
marshaling of the army in its proper subdivisions, the
|
|||
|
graduations of rank among the officers, the maintenance of roads
|
|||
|
by which supplies may reach the army, and the control of military
|
|||
|
expenditure.
|
|||
|
11. These five heads should be familiar to every general:
|
|||
|
he who knows them will be victorious; he who knows them not will
|
|||
|
fail.
|
|||
|
12. Therefore, in your deliberations, when seeking to
|
|||
|
determine the military conditions, let them be made the basis of
|
|||
|
a comparison, in this wise: --
|
|||
|
13. (1) Which of the two sovereigns is imbued with the
|
|||
|
Moral law?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[I.e., "is in harmony with his subjects." Cf. ss. 5.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(2) Which of the two generals has most ability?
|
|||
|
(3) With whom lie the advantages derived from Heaven and
|
|||
|
Earth?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[See ss. 7,8]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(4) On which side is discipline most rigorously enforced?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu alludes to the remarkable story of Ts`ao Ts`ao (A.D.
|
|||
|
155-220), who was such a strict disciplinarian that once, in
|
|||
|
accordance with his own severe regulations against injury to
|
|||
|
standing crops, he condemned himself to death for having allowed
|
|||
|
him horse to shy into a field of corn! However, in lieu of
|
|||
|
losing his head, he was persuaded to satisfy his sense of justice
|
|||
|
by cutting off his hair. Ts`ao Ts`ao's own comment on the
|
|||
|
present passage is characteristically curt: "when you lay down a
|
|||
|
law, see that it is not disobeyed; if it is disobeyed the
|
|||
|
offender must be put to death."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(5) Which army is stronger?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Morally as well as physically. As Mei Yao-ch`en puts it,
|
|||
|
freely rendered, "ESPIRIT DE CORPS and 'big battalions.'"]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(6) On which side are officers and men more highly trained?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Yu quotes Wang Tzu as saying: "Without constant
|
|||
|
practice, the officers will be nervous and undecided when
|
|||
|
mustering for battle; without constant practice, the general will
|
|||
|
be wavering and irresolute when the crisis is at hand."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(7) In which army is there the greater constancy both in
|
|||
|
reward and punishment?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[On which side is there the most absolute certainty that
|
|||
|
merit will be properly rewarded and misdeeds summarily punished?]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
14. By means of these seven considerations I can forecast
|
|||
|
victory or defeat.
|
|||
|
15. The general that hearkens to my counsel and acts upon
|
|||
|
it, will conquer: --let such a one be retained in command! The
|
|||
|
general that hearkens not to my counsel nor acts upon it, will
|
|||
|
suffer defeat: --let such a one be dismissed!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The form of this paragraph reminds us that Sun Tzu's
|
|||
|
treatise was composed expressly for the benefit of his patron Ho
|
|||
|
Lu, king of the Wu State.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
16. While heading the profit of my counsel, avail yourself
|
|||
|
also of any helpful circumstances over and beyond the ordinary
|
|||
|
rules.
|
|||
|
17. According as circumstances are favorable, one should
|
|||
|
modify one's plans.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Sun Tzu, as a practical soldier, will have none of the
|
|||
|
"bookish theoric." He cautions us here not to pin our faith to
|
|||
|
abstract principles; "for," as Chang Yu puts it, "while the main
|
|||
|
laws of strategy can be stated clearly enough for the benefit of
|
|||
|
all and sundry, you must be guided by the actions of the enemy in
|
|||
|
attempting to secure a favorable position in actual warfare." On
|
|||
|
the eve of the battle of Waterloo, Lord Uxbridge, commanding the
|
|||
|
cavalry, went to the Duke of Wellington in order to learn what
|
|||
|
his plans and calculations were for the morrow, because, as he
|
|||
|
explained, he might suddenly find himself Commander-in-chief and
|
|||
|
would be unable to frame new plans in a critical moment. The
|
|||
|
Duke listened quietly and then said: "Who will attack the first
|
|||
|
tomorrow -- I or Bonaparte?" "Bonaparte," replied Lord Uxbridge.
|
|||
|
"Well," continued the Duke, "Bonaparte has not given me any idea
|
|||
|
of his projects; and as my plans will depend upon his, how can
|
|||
|
you expect me to tell you what mine are?" [1] ]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
18. All warfare is based on deception.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The truth of this pithy and profound saying will be
|
|||
|
admitted by every soldier. Col. Henderson tells us that
|
|||
|
Wellington, great in so many military qualities, was especially
|
|||
|
distinguished by "the extraordinary skill with which he concealed
|
|||
|
his movements and deceived both friend and foe."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
19. Hence, when able to attack, we must seem unable; when
|
|||
|
using our forces, we must seem inactive; when we are near, we
|
|||
|
must make the enemy believe we are far away; when far away, we
|
|||
|
must make him believe we are near.
|
|||
|
20. Hold out baits to entice the enemy. Feign disorder,
|
|||
|
and crush him.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[All commentators, except Chang Yu, say, "When he is in
|
|||
|
disorder, crush him." It is more natural to suppose that Sun Tzu
|
|||
|
is still illustrating the uses of deception in war.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
21. If he is secure at all points, be prepared for him. If
|
|||
|
he is in superior strength, evade him.
|
|||
|
22. If your opponent is of choleric temper, seek to
|
|||
|
irritate him. Pretend to be weak, that he may grow arrogant.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Wang Tzu, quoted by Tu Yu, says that the good tactician
|
|||
|
plays with his adversary as a cat plays with a mouse, first
|
|||
|
feigning weakness and immobility, and then suddenly pouncing upon
|
|||
|
him.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
23. If he is taking his ease, give him no rest.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[This is probably the meaning though Mei Yao-ch`en has the
|
|||
|
note: "while we are taking our ease, wait for the enemy to tire
|
|||
|
himself out." The YU LAN has "Lure him on and tire him out."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If his forces are united, separate them.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Less plausible is the interpretation favored by most of the
|
|||
|
commentators: "If sovereign and subject are in accord, put
|
|||
|
division between them."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
24. Attack him where he is unprepared, appear where you are
|
|||
|
not expected.
|
|||
|
25. These military devices, leading to victory, must not be
|
|||
|
divulged beforehand.
|
|||
|
26. Now the general who wins a battle makes many
|
|||
|
calculations in his temple ere the battle is fought.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu tells us that in ancient times it was customary
|
|||
|
for a temple to be set apart for the use of a general who was
|
|||
|
about to take the field, in order that he might there elaborate
|
|||
|
his plan of campaign.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The general who loses a battle makes but few calculations
|
|||
|
beforehand. Thus do many calculations lead to victory, and few
|
|||
|
calculations to defeat: how much more no calculation at all! It
|
|||
|
is by attention to this point that I can foresee who is likely to
|
|||
|
win or lose.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[1] "Words on Wellington," by Sir. W. Fraser.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
II. WAGING WAR
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ts`ao Kung has the note: "He who wishes to fight must
|
|||
|
first count the cost," which prepares us for the discovery that
|
|||
|
the subject of the chapter is not what we might expect from the
|
|||
|
title, but is primarily a consideration of ways and means.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. Sun Tzu said: In the operations of war, where there are
|
|||
|
in the field a thousand swift chariots, as many heavy chariots,
|
|||
|
and a hundred thousand mail-clad soldiers,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The "swift chariots" were lightly built and, according to
|
|||
|
Chang Yu, used for the attack; the "heavy chariots" were heavier,
|
|||
|
and designed for purposes of defense. Li Ch`uan, it is true,
|
|||
|
says that the latter were light, but this seems hardly probable.
|
|||
|
It is interesting to note the analogies between early Chinese
|
|||
|
warfare and that of the Homeric Greeks. In each case, the war-
|
|||
|
chariot was the important factor, forming as it did the nucleus
|
|||
|
round which was grouped a certain number of foot-soldiers. With
|
|||
|
regard to the numbers given here, we are informed that each swift
|
|||
|
chariot was accompanied by 75 footmen, and each heavy chariot by
|
|||
|
25 footmen, so that the whole army would be divided up into a
|
|||
|
thousand battalions, each consisting of two chariots and a
|
|||
|
hundred men.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
with provisions enough to carry them a thousand LI,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[2.78 modern LI go to a mile. The length may have varied
|
|||
|
slightly since Sun Tzu's time.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
the expenditure at home and at the front, including entertainment
|
|||
|
of guests, small items such as glue and paint, and sums spent on
|
|||
|
chariots and armor, will reach the total of a thousand ounces of
|
|||
|
silver per day. Such is the cost of raising an army of 100,000
|
|||
|
men.
|
|||
|
2. When you engage in actual fighting, if victory is long
|
|||
|
in coming, then men's weapons will grow dull and their ardor will
|
|||
|
be damped. If you lay siege to a town, you will exhaust your
|
|||
|
strength.
|
|||
|
3. Again, if the campaign is protracted, the resources of
|
|||
|
the State will not be equal to the strain.
|
|||
|
4. Now, when your weapons are dulled, your ardor damped,
|
|||
|
your strength exhausted and your treasure spent, other chieftains
|
|||
|
will spring up to take advantage of your extremity. Then no man,
|
|||
|
however wise, will be able to avert the consequences that must
|
|||
|
ensue.
|
|||
|
5. Thus, though we have heard of stupid haste in war,
|
|||
|
cleverness has never been seen associated with long delays.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[This concise and difficult sentence is not well explained
|
|||
|
by any of the commentators. Ts`ao Kung, Li Ch`uan, Meng Shih, Tu
|
|||
|
Yu, Tu Mu and Mei Yao-ch`en have notes to the effect that a
|
|||
|
general, though naturally stupid, may nevertheless conquer
|
|||
|
through sheer force of rapidity. Ho Shih says: "Haste may be
|
|||
|
stupid, but at any rate it saves expenditure of energy and
|
|||
|
treasure; protracted operations may be very clever, but they
|
|||
|
bring calamity in their train." Wang Hsi evades the difficulty
|
|||
|
by remarking: "Lengthy operations mean an army growing old,
|
|||
|
wealth being expended, an empty exchequer and distress among the
|
|||
|
people; true cleverness insures against the occurrence of such
|
|||
|
calamities." Chang Yu says: "So long as victory can be
|
|||
|
attained, stupid haste is preferable to clever dilatoriness."
|
|||
|
Now Sun Tzu says nothing whatever, except possibly by
|
|||
|
implication, about ill-considered haste being better than
|
|||
|
ingenious but lengthy operations. What he does say is something
|
|||
|
much more guarded, namely that, while speed may sometimes be
|
|||
|
injudicious, tardiness can never be anything but foolish -- if
|
|||
|
only because it means impoverishment to the nation. In
|
|||
|
considering the point raised here by Sun Tzu, the classic example
|
|||
|
of Fabius Cunctator will inevitably occur to the mind. That
|
|||
|
general deliberately measured the endurance of Rome against that
|
|||
|
of Hannibals's isolated army, because it seemed to him that the
|
|||
|
latter was more likely to suffer from a long campaign in a
|
|||
|
strange country. But it is quite a moot question whether his
|
|||
|
tactics would have proved successful in the long run. Their
|
|||
|
reversal it is true, led to Cannae; but this only establishes a
|
|||
|
negative presumption in their favor.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
6. There is no instance of a country having benefited from
|
|||
|
prolonged warfare.
|
|||
|
7. It is only one who is thoroughly acquainted with the
|
|||
|
evils of war that can thoroughly understand the profitable way of
|
|||
|
carrying it on.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[That is, with rapidity. Only one who knows the disastrous
|
|||
|
effects of a long war can realize the supreme importance of
|
|||
|
rapidity in bringing it to a close. Only two commentators seem
|
|||
|
to favor this interpretation, but it fits well into the logic of
|
|||
|
the context, whereas the rendering, "He who does not know the
|
|||
|
evils of war cannot appreciate its benefits," is distinctly
|
|||
|
pointless.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
8. The skillful soldier does not raise a second levy,
|
|||
|
neither are his supply-wagons loaded more than twice.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Once war is declared, he will not waste precious time in
|
|||
|
waiting for reinforcements, nor will he return his army back for
|
|||
|
fresh supplies, but crosses the enemy's frontier without delay.
|
|||
|
This may seem an audacious policy to recommend, but with all
|
|||
|
great strategists, from Julius Caesar to Napoleon Bonaparte, the
|
|||
|
value of time -- that is, being a little ahead of your opponent --
|
|||
|
has counted for more than either numerical superiority or the
|
|||
|
nicest calculations with regard to commissariat.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
9. Bring war material with you from home, but forage on the
|
|||
|
enemy. Thus the army will have food enough for its needs.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The Chinese word translated here as "war material"
|
|||
|
literally means "things to be used", and is meant in the widest
|
|||
|
sense. It includes all the impedimenta of an army, apart from
|
|||
|
provisions.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
10. Poverty of the State exchequer causes an army to be
|
|||
|
maintained by contributions from a distance. Contributing to
|
|||
|
maintain an army at a distance causes the people to be
|
|||
|
impoverished.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The beginning of this sentence does not balance properly
|
|||
|
with the next, though obviously intended to do so. The
|
|||
|
arrangement, moreover, is so awkward that I cannot help
|
|||
|
suspecting some corruption in the text. It never seems to occur
|
|||
|
to Chinese commentators that an emendation may be necessary for
|
|||
|
the sense, and we get no help from them there. The Chinese words
|
|||
|
Sun Tzu used to indicate the cause of the people's impoverishment
|
|||
|
clearly have reference to some system by which the husbandmen
|
|||
|
sent their contributions of corn to the army direct. But why
|
|||
|
should it fall on them to maintain an army in this way, except
|
|||
|
because the State or Government is too poor to do so?]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
11. On the other hand, the proximity of an army causes
|
|||
|
prices to go up; and high prices cause the people's substance to
|
|||
|
be drained away.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Wang Hsi says high prices occur before the army has left
|
|||
|
its own territory. Ts`ao Kung understands it of an army that has
|
|||
|
already crossed the frontier.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
12. When their substance is drained away, the peasantry
|
|||
|
will be afflicted by heavy exactions.
|
|||
|
13, 14. With this loss of substance and exhaustion of
|
|||
|
strength, the homes of the people will be stripped bare, and
|
|||
|
three-tenths of their income will be dissipated;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu and Wang Hsi agree that the people are not mulcted
|
|||
|
not of 3/10, but of 7/10, of their income. But this is hardly to
|
|||
|
be extracted from our text. Ho Shih has a characteristic tag:
|
|||
|
"The PEOPLE being regarded as the essential part of the State,
|
|||
|
and FOOD as the people's heaven, is it not right that those in
|
|||
|
authority should value and be careful of both?"]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
while government expenses for broken chariots, worn-out horses,
|
|||
|
breast-plates and helmets, bows and arrows, spears and shields,
|
|||
|
protective mantles, draught-oxen and heavy wagons, will amount to
|
|||
|
four-tenths of its total revenue.
|
|||
|
15. Hence a wise general makes a point of foraging on the
|
|||
|
enemy. One cartload of the enemy's provisions is equivalent to
|
|||
|
twenty of one's own, and likewise a single PICUL of his provender
|
|||
|
is equivalent to twenty from one's own store.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Because twenty cartloads will be consumed in the process of
|
|||
|
transporting one cartload to the front. A PICUL is a unit of
|
|||
|
measure equal to 133.3 pounds (65.5 kilograms).]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
16. Now in order to kill the enemy, our men must be roused
|
|||
|
to anger; that there may be advantage from defeating the enemy,
|
|||
|
they must have their rewards.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu says: "Rewards are necessary in order to make the
|
|||
|
soldiers see the advantage of beating the enemy; thus, when you
|
|||
|
capture spoils from the enemy, they must be used as rewards, so
|
|||
|
that all your men may have a keen desire to fight, each on his
|
|||
|
own account."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
17. Therefore in chariot fighting, when ten or more
|
|||
|
chariots have been taken, those should be rewarded who took the
|
|||
|
first. Our own flags should be substituted for those of the
|
|||
|
enemy, and the chariots mingled and used in conjunction with
|
|||
|
ours. The captured soldiers should be kindly treated and kept.
|
|||
|
18. This is called, using the conquered foe to augment
|
|||
|
one's own strength.
|
|||
|
19. In war, then, let your great object be victory, not
|
|||
|
lengthy campaigns.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[As Ho Shih remarks: "War is not a thing to be trifled
|
|||
|
with." Sun Tzu here reiterates the main lesson which this
|
|||
|
chapter is intended to enforce."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
20. Thus it may be known that the leader of armies is the
|
|||
|
arbiter of the people's fate, the man on whom it depends whether
|
|||
|
the nation shall be in peace or in peril.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
III. ATTACK BY STRATAGEM
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. Sun Tzu said: In the practical art of war, the best
|
|||
|
thing of all is to take the enemy's country whole and intact; to
|
|||
|
shatter and destroy it is not so good. So, too, it is better to
|
|||
|
recapture an army entire than to destroy it, to capture a
|
|||
|
regiment, a detachment or a company entire than to destroy them.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The equivalent to an army corps, according to Ssu-ma Fa,
|
|||
|
consisted nominally of 12500 men; according to Ts`ao Kung, the
|
|||
|
equivalent of a regiment contained 500 men, the equivalent to a
|
|||
|
detachment consists from any number between 100 and 500, and the
|
|||
|
equivalent of a company contains from 5 to 100 men. For the last
|
|||
|
two, however, Chang Yu gives the exact figures of 100 and 5
|
|||
|
respectively.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2. Hence to fight and conquer in all your battles is not
|
|||
|
supreme excellence; supreme excellence consists in breaking the
|
|||
|
enemy's resistance without fighting.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Here again, no modern strategist but will approve the words
|
|||
|
of the old Chinese general. Moltke's greatest triumph, the
|
|||
|
capitulation of the huge French army at Sedan, was won
|
|||
|
practically without bloodshed.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
3. Thus the highest form of generalship is to balk the
|
|||
|
enemy's plans;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Perhaps the word "balk" falls short of expressing the full
|
|||
|
force of the Chinese word, which implies not an attitude of
|
|||
|
defense, whereby one might be content to foil the enemy's
|
|||
|
stratagems one after another, but an active policy of counter-
|
|||
|
attack. Ho Shih puts this very clearly in his note: "When the
|
|||
|
enemy has made a plan of attack against us, we must anticipate
|
|||
|
him by delivering our own attack first."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
the next best is to prevent the junction of the enemy's forces;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Isolating him from his allies. We must not forget that Sun
|
|||
|
Tzu, in speaking of hostilities, always has in mind the numerous
|
|||
|
states or principalities into which the China of his day was
|
|||
|
split up.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
the next in order is to attack the enemy's army in the field;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[When he is already at full strength.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and the worst policy of all is to besiege walled cities.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
4. The rule is, not to besiege walled cities if it can
|
|||
|
possibly be avoided.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Another sound piece of military theory. Had the Boers
|
|||
|
acted upon it in 1899, and refrained from dissipating their
|
|||
|
strength before Kimberley, Mafeking, or even Ladysmith, it is
|
|||
|
more than probable that they would have been masters of the
|
|||
|
situation before the British were ready seriously to oppose
|
|||
|
them.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The preparation of mantlets, movable shelters, and various
|
|||
|
implements of war, will take up three whole months;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[It is not quite clear what the Chinese word, here
|
|||
|
translated as "mantlets", described. Ts`ao Kung simply defines
|
|||
|
them as "large shields," but we get a better idea of them from Li
|
|||
|
Ch`uan, who says they were to protect the heads of those who were
|
|||
|
assaulting the city walls at close quarters. This seems to
|
|||
|
suggest a sort of Roman TESTUDO, ready made. Tu Mu says they
|
|||
|
were wheeled vehicles used in repelling attacks, but this is
|
|||
|
denied by Ch`en Hao. See supra II. 14. The name is also applied
|
|||
|
to turrets on city walls. Of the "movable shelters" we get a
|
|||
|
fairly clear description from several commentators. They were
|
|||
|
wooden missile-proof structures on four wheels, propelled from
|
|||
|
within, covered over with raw hides, and used in sieges to convey
|
|||
|
parties of men to and from the walls, for the purpose of filling
|
|||
|
up the encircling moat with earth. Tu Mu adds that they are now
|
|||
|
called "wooden donkeys."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and the piling up of mounds over against the walls will take
|
|||
|
three months more.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[These were great mounds or ramparts of earth heaped up to
|
|||
|
the level of the enemy's walls in order to discover the weak
|
|||
|
points in the defense, and also to destroy the fortified turrets
|
|||
|
mentioned in the preceding note.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
5. The general, unable to control his irritation, will
|
|||
|
launch his men to the assault like swarming ants,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[This vivid simile of Ts`ao Kung is taken from the spectacle
|
|||
|
of an army of ants climbing a wall. The meaning is that the
|
|||
|
general, losing patience at the long delay, may make a premature
|
|||
|
attempt to storm the place before his engines of war are ready.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
with the result that one-third of his men are slain, while the
|
|||
|
town still remains untaken. Such are the disastrous effects of a
|
|||
|
siege.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[We are reminded of the terrible losses of the Japanese
|
|||
|
before Port Arthur, in the most recent siege which history has to
|
|||
|
record.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
6. Therefore the skillful leader subdues the enemy's troops
|
|||
|
without any fighting; he captures their cities without laying
|
|||
|
siege to them; he overthrows their kingdom without lengthy
|
|||
|
operations in the field.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chia Lin notes that he only overthrows the Government, but
|
|||
|
does no harm to individuals. The classical instance is Wu Wang,
|
|||
|
who after having put an end to the Yin dynasty was acclaimed
|
|||
|
"Father and mother of the people."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
7. With his forces intact he will dispute the mastery of
|
|||
|
the Empire, and thus, without losing a man, his triumph will be
|
|||
|
complete.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Owing to the double meanings in the Chinese text, the
|
|||
|
latter part of the sentence is susceptible of quite a different
|
|||
|
meaning: "And thus, the weapon not being blunted by use, its
|
|||
|
keenness remains perfect."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This is the method of attacking by stratagem.
|
|||
|
8. It is the rule in war, if our forces are ten to the
|
|||
|
enemy's one, to surround him; if five to one, to attack him;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Straightway, without waiting for any further advantage.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
if twice as numerous, to divide our army into two.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu takes exception to the saying; and at first sight,
|
|||
|
indeed, it appears to violate a fundamental principle of war.
|
|||
|
Ts'ao Kung, however, gives a clue to Sun Tzu's meaning: "Being
|
|||
|
two to the enemy's one, we may use one part of our army in the
|
|||
|
regular way, and the other for some special diversion." Chang Yu
|
|||
|
thus further elucidates the point: "If our force is twice as
|
|||
|
numerous as that of the enemy, it should be split up into two
|
|||
|
divisions, one to meet the enemy in front, and one to fall upon
|
|||
|
his rear; if he replies to the frontal attack, he may be crushed
|
|||
|
from behind; if to the rearward attack, he may be crushed in
|
|||
|
front." This is what is meant by saying that 'one part may be
|
|||
|
used in the regular way, and the other for some special
|
|||
|
diversion.' Tu Mu does not understand that dividing one's army
|
|||
|
is simply an irregular, just as concentrating it is the regular,
|
|||
|
strategical method, and he is too hasty in calling this a
|
|||
|
mistake."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
9. If equally matched, we can offer battle;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Li Ch`uan, followed by Ho Shih, gives the following
|
|||
|
paraphrase: "If attackers and attacked are equally matched in
|
|||
|
strength, only the able general will fight."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
if slightly inferior in numbers, we can avoid the enemy;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The meaning, "we can WATCH the enemy," is certainly a great
|
|||
|
improvement on the above; but unfortunately there appears to be
|
|||
|
no very good authority for the variant. Chang Yu reminds us that
|
|||
|
the saying only applies if the other factors are equal; a small
|
|||
|
difference in numbers is often more than counterbalanced by
|
|||
|
superior energy and discipline.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
if quite unequal in every way, we can flee from him.
|
|||
|
10. Hence, though an obstinate fight may be made by a small
|
|||
|
force, in the end it must be captured by the larger force.
|
|||
|
11. Now the general is the bulwark of the State; if the
|
|||
|
bulwark is complete at all points; the State will be strong; if
|
|||
|
the bulwark is defective, the State will be weak.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[As Li Ch`uan tersely puts it: "Gap indicates deficiency;
|
|||
|
if the general's ability is not perfect (i.e. if he is not
|
|||
|
thoroughly versed in his profession), his army will lack
|
|||
|
strength."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
12. There are three ways in which a ruler can bring
|
|||
|
misfortune upon his army:--
|
|||
|
13. (1) By commanding the army to advance or to retreat,
|
|||
|
being ignorant of the fact that it cannot obey. This is called
|
|||
|
hobbling the army.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Li Ch`uan adds the comment: "It is like tying together the
|
|||
|
legs of a thoroughbred, so that it is unable to gallop." One
|
|||
|
would naturally think of "the ruler" in this passage as being at
|
|||
|
home, and trying to direct the movements of his army from a
|
|||
|
distance. But the commentators understand just the reverse, and
|
|||
|
quote the saying of T`ai Kung: "A kingdom should not be
|
|||
|
governed from without, and army should not be directed from
|
|||
|
within." Of course it is true that, during an engagement, or
|
|||
|
when in close touch with the enemy, the general should not be in
|
|||
|
the thick of his own troops, but a little distance apart.
|
|||
|
Otherwise, he will be liable to misjudge the position as a whole,
|
|||
|
and give wrong orders.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
14. (2) By attempting to govern an army in the same way as
|
|||
|
he administers a kingdom, being ignorant of the conditions which
|
|||
|
obtain in an army. This causes restlessness in the soldier's
|
|||
|
minds.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ts`ao Kung's note is, freely translated: "The military
|
|||
|
sphere and the civil sphere are wholly distinct; you can't handle
|
|||
|
an army in kid gloves." And Chang Yu says: "Humanity and
|
|||
|
justice are the principles on which to govern a state, but not an
|
|||
|
army; opportunism and flexibility, on the other hand, are
|
|||
|
military rather than civil virtues to assimilate the governing of
|
|||
|
an army"--to that of a State, understood.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
15. (3) By employing the officers of his army without
|
|||
|
discrimination,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[That is, he is not careful to use the right man in the
|
|||
|
right place.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
through ignorance of the military principle of adaptation to
|
|||
|
circumstances. This shakes the confidence of the soldiers.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[I follow Mei Yao-ch`en here. The other commentators refer
|
|||
|
not to the ruler, as in SS. 13, 14, but to the officers he
|
|||
|
employs. Thus Tu Yu says: "If a general is ignorant of the
|
|||
|
principle of adaptability, he must not be entrusted with a
|
|||
|
position of authority." Tu Mu quotes: "The skillful employer of
|
|||
|
men will employ the wise man, the brave man, the covetous man,
|
|||
|
and the stupid man. For the wise man delights in establishing
|
|||
|
his merit, the brave man likes to show his courage in action, the
|
|||
|
covetous man is quick at seizing advantages, and the stupid man
|
|||
|
has no fear of death."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
16. But when the army is restless and distrustful, trouble
|
|||
|
is sure to come from the other feudal princes. This is simply
|
|||
|
bringing anarchy into the army, and flinging victory away.
|
|||
|
17. Thus we may know that there are five essentials for
|
|||
|
victory: (1) He will win who knows when to fight and when not to
|
|||
|
fight.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu says: If he can fight, he advances and takes the
|
|||
|
offensive; if he cannot fight, he retreats and remains on the
|
|||
|
defensive. He will invariably conquer who knows whether it is
|
|||
|
right to take the offensive or the defensive.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(2) He will win who knows how to handle both superior and
|
|||
|
inferior forces.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[This is not merely the general's ability to estimate
|
|||
|
numbers correctly, as Li Ch`uan and others make out. Chang Yu
|
|||
|
expounds the saying more satisfactorily: "By applying the art of
|
|||
|
war, it is possible with a lesser force to defeat a greater, and
|
|||
|
vice versa. The secret lies in an eye for locality, and in not
|
|||
|
letting the right moment slip. Thus Wu Tzu says: 'With a
|
|||
|
superior force, make for easy ground; with an inferior one, make
|
|||
|
for difficult ground.'"]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(3) He will win whose army is animated by the same spirit
|
|||
|
throughout all its ranks.
|
|||
|
(4) He will win who, prepared himself, waits to take the
|
|||
|
enemy unprepared.
|
|||
|
(5) He will win who has military capacity and is not
|
|||
|
interfered with by the sovereign.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Yu quotes Wang Tzu as saying: "It is the sovereign's
|
|||
|
function to give broad instructions, but to decide on battle it
|
|||
|
is the function of the general." It is needless to dilate on the
|
|||
|
military disasters which have been caused by undue interference
|
|||
|
with operations in the field on the part of the home government.
|
|||
|
Napoleon undoubtedly owed much of his extraordinary success to
|
|||
|
the fact that he was not hampered by central authority.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
18. Hence the saying: If you know the enemy and know
|
|||
|
yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles. If
|
|||
|
you know yourself but not the enemy, for every victory gained you
|
|||
|
will also suffer a defeat.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Li Ch`uan cites the case of Fu Chien, prince of Ch`in, who
|
|||
|
in 383 A.D. marched with a vast army against the Chin Emperor.
|
|||
|
When warned not to despise an enemy who could command the
|
|||
|
services of such men as Hsieh An and Huan Ch`ung, he boastfully
|
|||
|
replied: "I have the population of eight provinces at my back,
|
|||
|
infantry and horsemen to the number of one million; why, they
|
|||
|
could dam up the Yangtsze River itself by merely throwing their
|
|||
|
whips into the stream. What danger have I to fear?"
|
|||
|
Nevertheless, his forces were soon after disastrously routed at
|
|||
|
the Fei River, and he was obliged to beat a hasty retreat.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you know neither the enemy nor yourself, you will succumb in
|
|||
|
every battle.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu said: "Knowing the enemy enables you to take the
|
|||
|
offensive, knowing yourself enables you to stand on the
|
|||
|
defensive." He adds: "Attack is the secret of defense; defense
|
|||
|
is the planning of an attack." It would be hard to find a better
|
|||
|
epitome of the root-principle of war.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IV. TACTICAL DISPOSITIONS
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ts`ao Kung explains the Chinese meaning of the words for
|
|||
|
the title of this chapter: "marching and countermarching on the
|
|||
|
part of the two armies with a view to discovering each other's
|
|||
|
condition." Tu Mu says: "It is through the dispositions of an
|
|||
|
army that its condition may be discovered. Conceal your
|
|||
|
dispositions, and your condition will remain secret, which leads
|
|||
|
to victory,; show your dispositions, and your condition will
|
|||
|
become patent, which leads to defeat." Wang Hsi remarks that the
|
|||
|
good general can "secure success by modifying his tactics to meet
|
|||
|
those of the enemy."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. Sun Tzu said: The good fighters of old first put
|
|||
|
themselves beyond the possibility of defeat, and then waited for
|
|||
|
an opportunity of defeating the enemy.
|
|||
|
2. To secure ourselves against defeat lies in our own
|
|||
|
hands, but the opportunity of defeating the enemy is provided by
|
|||
|
the enemy himself.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[That is, of course, by a mistake on the enemy's part.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
3. Thus the good fighter is able to secure himself against
|
|||
|
defeat,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu says this is done, "By concealing the disposition
|
|||
|
of his troops, covering up his tracks, and taking unremitting
|
|||
|
precautions."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
but cannot make certain of defeating the enemy.
|
|||
|
4. Hence the saying: One may KNOW how to conquer without
|
|||
|
being able to DO it.
|
|||
|
5. Security against defeat implies defensive tactics;
|
|||
|
ability to defeat the enemy means taking the offensive.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[I retain the sense found in a similar passage in ss. 1-3,
|
|||
|
in spite of the fact that the commentators are all against me.
|
|||
|
The meaning they give, "He who cannot conquer takes the
|
|||
|
defensive," is plausible enough.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
6. Standing on the defensive indicates insufficient
|
|||
|
strength; attacking, a superabundance of strength.
|
|||
|
7. The general who is skilled in defense hides in the most
|
|||
|
secret recesses of the earth;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Literally, "hides under the ninth earth," which is a
|
|||
|
metaphor indicating the utmost secrecy and concealment, so that
|
|||
|
the enemy may not know his whereabouts."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
he who is skilled in attack flashes forth from the topmost
|
|||
|
heights of heaven.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Another metaphor, implying that he falls on his adversary
|
|||
|
like a thunderbolt, against which there is no time to prepare.
|
|||
|
This is the opinion of most of the commentators.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Thus on the one hand we have ability to protect ourselves; on the
|
|||
|
other, a victory that is complete.
|
|||
|
8. To see victory only when it is within the ken of the
|
|||
|
common herd is not the acme of excellence.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[As Ts`ao Kung remarks, "the thing is to see the plant
|
|||
|
before it has germinated," to foresee the event before the action
|
|||
|
has begun. Li Ch`uan alludes to the story of Han Hsin who, when
|
|||
|
about to attack the vastly superior army of Chao, which was
|
|||
|
strongly entrenched in the city of Ch`eng-an, said to his
|
|||
|
officers: "Gentlemen, we are going to annihilate the enemy, and
|
|||
|
shall meet again at dinner." The officers hardly took his words
|
|||
|
seriously, and gave a very dubious assent. But Han Hsin had
|
|||
|
already worked out in his mind the details of a clever stratagem,
|
|||
|
whereby, as he foresaw, he was able to capture the city and
|
|||
|
inflict a crushing defeat on his adversary."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
9. Neither is it the acme of excellence if you fight and
|
|||
|
conquer and the whole Empire says, "Well done!"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[True excellence being, as Tu Mu says: "To plan secretly,
|
|||
|
to move surreptitiously, to foil the enemy's intentions and balk
|
|||
|
his schemes, so that at last the day may be won without shedding
|
|||
|
a drop of blood." Sun Tzu reserves his approbation for things
|
|||
|
that
|
|||
|
"the world's coarse thumb
|
|||
|
And finger fail to plumb."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
10. To lift an autumn hair is no sign of great strength;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["Autumn" hair" is explained as the fur of a hare, which is
|
|||
|
finest in autumn, when it begins to grow afresh. The phrase is a
|
|||
|
very common one in Chinese writers.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
to see the sun and moon is no sign of sharp sight; to hear the
|
|||
|
noise of thunder is no sign of a quick ear.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ho Shih gives as real instances of strength, sharp sight
|
|||
|
and quick hearing: Wu Huo, who could lift a tripod weighing 250
|
|||
|
stone; Li Chu, who at a distance of a hundred paces could see
|
|||
|
objects no bigger than a mustard seed; and Shih K`uang, a blind
|
|||
|
musician who could hear the footsteps of a mosquito.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
11. What the ancients called a clever fighter is one who
|
|||
|
not only wins, but excels in winning with ease.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The last half is literally "one who, conquering, excels in
|
|||
|
easy conquering." Mei Yao-ch`en says: "He who only sees the
|
|||
|
obvious, wins his battles with difficulty; he who looks below the
|
|||
|
surface of things, wins with ease."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
12. Hence his victories bring him neither reputation for
|
|||
|
wisdom nor credit for courage.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu explains this very well: "Inasmuch as his victories
|
|||
|
are gained over circumstances that have not come to light, the
|
|||
|
world as large knows nothing of them, and he wins no reputation
|
|||
|
for wisdom; inasmuch as the hostile state submits before there
|
|||
|
has been any bloodshed, he receives no credit for courage."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
13. He wins his battles by making no mistakes.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ch`en Hao says: "He plans no superfluous marches, he
|
|||
|
devises no futile attacks." The connection of ideas is thus
|
|||
|
explained by Chang Yu: "One who seeks to conquer by sheer
|
|||
|
strength, clever though he may be at winning pitched battles, is
|
|||
|
also liable on occasion to be vanquished; whereas he who can look
|
|||
|
into the future and discern conditions that are not yet manifest,
|
|||
|
will never make a blunder and therefore invariably win."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Making no mistakes is what establishes the certainty of victory,
|
|||
|
for it means conquering an enemy that is already defeated.
|
|||
|
14. Hence the skillful fighter puts himself into a position
|
|||
|
which makes defeat impossible, and does not miss the moment for
|
|||
|
defeating the enemy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[A "counsel of perfection" as Tu Mu truly observes.
|
|||
|
"Position" need not be confined to the actual ground occupied by
|
|||
|
the troops. It includes all the arrangements and preparations
|
|||
|
which a wise general will make to increase the safety of his
|
|||
|
army.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
15. Thus it is that in war the victorious strategist only
|
|||
|
seeks battle after the victory has been won, whereas he who is
|
|||
|
destined to defeat first fights and afterwards looks for victory.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ho Shih thus expounds the paradox: "In warfare, first lay
|
|||
|
plans which will ensure victory, and then lead your army to
|
|||
|
battle; if you will not begin with stratagem but rely on brute
|
|||
|
strength alone, victory will no longer be assured."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
16. The consummate leader cultivates the moral law, and
|
|||
|
strictly adheres to method and discipline; thus it is in his
|
|||
|
power to control success.
|
|||
|
17. In respect of military method, we have, firstly,
|
|||
|
Measurement; secondly, Estimation of quantity; thirdly,
|
|||
|
Calculation; fourthly, Balancing of chances; fifthly, Victory.
|
|||
|
18. Measurement owes its existence to Earth; Estimation of
|
|||
|
quantity to Measurement; Calculation to Estimation of quantity;
|
|||
|
Balancing of chances to Calculation; and Victory to Balancing of
|
|||
|
chances.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[It is not easy to distinguish the four terms very clearly
|
|||
|
in the Chinese. The first seems to be surveying and measurement
|
|||
|
of the ground, which enable us to form an estimate of the enemy's
|
|||
|
strength, and to make calculations based on the data thus
|
|||
|
obtained; we are thus led to a general weighing-up, or comparison
|
|||
|
of the enemy's chances with our own; if the latter turn the
|
|||
|
scale, then victory ensues. The chief difficulty lies in third
|
|||
|
term, which in the Chinese some commentators take as a
|
|||
|
calculation of NUMBERS, thereby making it nearly synonymous with
|
|||
|
the second term. Perhaps the second term should be thought of as
|
|||
|
a consideration of the enemy's general position or condition,
|
|||
|
while the third term is the estimate of his numerical strength.
|
|||
|
On the other hand, Tu Mu says: "The question of relative
|
|||
|
strength having been settled, we can bring the varied resources
|
|||
|
of cunning into play." Ho Shih seconds this interpretation, but
|
|||
|
weakens it. However, it points to the third term as being a
|
|||
|
calculation of numbers.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
19. A victorious army opposed to a routed one, is as a
|
|||
|
pound's weight placed in the scale against a single grain.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Literally, "a victorious army is like an I (20 oz.) weighed
|
|||
|
against a SHU (1/24 oz.); a routed army is a SHU weighed against
|
|||
|
an I." The point is simply the enormous advantage which a
|
|||
|
disciplined force, flushed with victory, has over one demoralized
|
|||
|
by defeat." Legge, in his note on Mencius, I. 2. ix. 2, makes
|
|||
|
the I to be 24 Chinese ounces, and corrects Chu Hsi's statement
|
|||
|
that it equaled 20 oz. only. But Li Ch`uan of the T`ang dynasty
|
|||
|
here gives the same figure as Chu Hsi.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
20. The onrush of a conquering force is like the bursting
|
|||
|
of pent-up waters into a chasm a thousand fathoms deep.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
V. ENERGY
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. Sun Tzu said: The control of a large force is the same
|
|||
|
principle as the control of a few men: it is merely a question
|
|||
|
of dividing up their numbers.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[That is, cutting up the army into regiments, companies,
|
|||
|
etc., with subordinate officers in command of each. Tu Mu
|
|||
|
reminds us of Han Hsin's famous reply to the first Han Emperor,
|
|||
|
who once said to him: "How large an army do you think I could
|
|||
|
lead?" "Not more than 100,000 men, your Majesty." "And you?"
|
|||
|
asked the Emperor. "Oh!" he answered, "the more the better."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2. Fighting with a large army under your command is nowise
|
|||
|
different from fighting with a small one: it is merely a
|
|||
|
question of instituting signs and signals.
|
|||
|
3. To ensure that your whole host may withstand the brunt
|
|||
|
of the enemy's attack and remain unshaken - this is effected by
|
|||
|
maneuvers direct and indirect.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[We now come to one of the most interesting parts of Sun
|
|||
|
Tzu's treatise, the discussion of the CHENG and the CH`I." As it
|
|||
|
is by no means easy to grasp the full significance of these two
|
|||
|
terms, or to render them consistently by good English
|
|||
|
equivalents; it may be as well to tabulate some of the
|
|||
|
commentators' remarks on the subject before proceeding further.
|
|||
|
Li Ch`uan: "Facing the enemy is CHENG, making lateral diversion
|
|||
|
is CH`I. Chia Lin: "In presence of the enemy, your troops
|
|||
|
should be arrayed in normal fashion, but in order to secure
|
|||
|
victory abnormal maneuvers must be employed." Mei Yao-ch`en:
|
|||
|
"CH`I is active, CHENG is passive; passivity means waiting for an
|
|||
|
opportunity, activity beings the victory itself." Ho Shih: "We
|
|||
|
must cause the enemy to regard our straightforward attack as one
|
|||
|
that is secretly designed, and vice versa; thus CHENG may also be
|
|||
|
CH`I, and CH`I may also be CHENG." He instances the famous
|
|||
|
exploit of Han Hsin, who when marching ostensibly against Lin-
|
|||
|
chin (now Chao-i in Shensi), suddenly threw a large force across
|
|||
|
the Yellow River in wooden tubs, utterly disconcerting his
|
|||
|
opponent. [Ch`ien Han Shu, ch. 3.] Here, we are told, the march
|
|||
|
on Lin-chin was CHENG, and the surprise maneuver was CH`I."
|
|||
|
Chang Yu gives the following summary of opinions on the words:
|
|||
|
"Military writers do not agree with regard to the meaning of CH`I
|
|||
|
and CHENG. Wei Liao Tzu [4th cent. B.C.] says: 'Direct warfare
|
|||
|
favors frontal attacks, indirect warfare attacks from the rear.'
|
|||
|
Ts`ao Kung says: 'Going straight out to join battle is a direct
|
|||
|
operation; appearing on the enemy's rear is an indirect
|
|||
|
maneuver.' Li Wei-kung [6th and 7th cent. A.D.] says: 'In war,
|
|||
|
to march straight ahead is CHENG; turning movements, on the other
|
|||
|
hand, are CH`I.' These writers simply regard CHENG as CHENG, and
|
|||
|
CH`I as CH`I; they do not note that the two are mutually
|
|||
|
interchangeable and run into each other like the two sides of a
|
|||
|
circle [see infra, ss. 11]. A comment on the T`ang Emperor T`ai
|
|||
|
Tsung goes to the root of the matter: 'A CH`I maneuver may be
|
|||
|
CHENG, if we make the enemy look upon it as CHENG; then our real
|
|||
|
attack will be CH`I, and vice versa. The whole secret lies in
|
|||
|
confusing the enemy, so that he cannot fathom our real intent.'"
|
|||
|
To put it perhaps a little more clearly: any attack or other
|
|||
|
operation is CHENG, on which the enemy has had his attention
|
|||
|
fixed; whereas that is CH`I," which takes him by surprise or
|
|||
|
comes from an unexpected quarter. If the enemy perceives a
|
|||
|
movement which is meant to be CH`I," it immediately becomes
|
|||
|
CHENG."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
4. That the impact of your army may be like a grindstone
|
|||
|
dashed against an egg - this is effected by the science of weak
|
|||
|
points and strong.
|
|||
|
5. In all fighting, the direct method may be used for
|
|||
|
joining battle, but indirect methods will be needed in order to
|
|||
|
secure victory.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu says: "Steadily develop indirect tactics, either
|
|||
|
by pounding the enemy's flanks or falling on his rear." A
|
|||
|
brilliant example of "indirect tactics" which decided the
|
|||
|
fortunes of a campaign was Lord Roberts' night march round the
|
|||
|
Peiwar Kotal in the second Afghan war. [1]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
6. Indirect tactics, efficiently applied, are inexhausible
|
|||
|
as Heaven and Earth, unending as the flow of rivers and streams;
|
|||
|
like the sun and moon, they end but to begin anew; like the four
|
|||
|
seasons, they pass away to return once more.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Yu and Chang Yu understand this of the permutations of
|
|||
|
CH`I and CHENG." But at present Sun Tzu is not speaking of CHENG
|
|||
|
at all, unless, indeed, we suppose with Cheng Yu-hsien that a
|
|||
|
clause relating to it has fallen out of the text. Of course, as
|
|||
|
has already been pointed out, the two are so inextricably
|
|||
|
interwoven in all military operations, that they cannot really be
|
|||
|
considered apart. Here we simply have an expression, in
|
|||
|
figurative language, of the almost infinite resource of a great
|
|||
|
leader.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
7. There are not more than five musical notes, yet the
|
|||
|
combinations of these five give rise to more melodies than can
|
|||
|
ever be heard.
|
|||
|
8. There are not more than five primary colors (blue,
|
|||
|
yellow, red, white, and black), yet in combination they produce
|
|||
|
more hues than can ever been seen.
|
|||
|
9 There are not more than five cardinal tastes (sour,
|
|||
|
acrid, salt, sweet, bitter), yet combinations of them yield more
|
|||
|
flavors than can ever be tasted.
|
|||
|
10. In battle, there are not more than two methods of
|
|||
|
attack - the direct and the indirect; yet these two in
|
|||
|
combination give rise to an endless series of maneuvers.
|
|||
|
11. The direct and the indirect lead on to each other in
|
|||
|
turn. It is like moving in a circle - you never come to an end.
|
|||
|
Who can exhaust the possibilities of their combination?
|
|||
|
12. The onset of troops is like the rush of a torrent which
|
|||
|
will even roll stones along in its course.
|
|||
|
13. The quality of decision is like the well-timed swoop of
|
|||
|
a falcon which enables it to strike and destroy its victim.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The Chinese here is tricky and a certain key word in the
|
|||
|
context it is used defies the best efforts of the translator. Tu
|
|||
|
Mu defines this word as "the measurement or estimation of
|
|||
|
distance." But this meaning does not quite fit the illustrative
|
|||
|
simile in ss. 15. Applying this definition to the falcon, it
|
|||
|
seems to me to denote that instinct of SELF RESTRAINT which keeps
|
|||
|
the bird from swooping on its quarry until the right moment,
|
|||
|
together with the power of judging when the right moment has
|
|||
|
arrived. The analogous quality in soldiers is the highly
|
|||
|
important one of being able to reserve their fire until the very
|
|||
|
instant at which it will be most effective. When the "Victory"
|
|||
|
went into action at Trafalgar at hardly more than drifting pace,
|
|||
|
she was for several minutes exposed to a storm of shot and shell
|
|||
|
before replying with a single gun. Nelson coolly waited until he
|
|||
|
was within close range, when the broadside he brought to bear
|
|||
|
worked fearful havoc on the enemy's nearest ships.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
14. Therefore the good fighter will be terrible in his
|
|||
|
onset, and prompt in his decision.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The word "decision" would have reference to the measurement
|
|||
|
of distance mentioned above, letting the enemy get near before
|
|||
|
striking. But I cannot help thinking that Sun Tzu meant to use
|
|||
|
the word in a figurative sense comparable to our own idiom "short
|
|||
|
and sharp." Cf. Wang Hsi's note, which after describing the
|
|||
|
falcon's mode of attack, proceeds: "This is just how the
|
|||
|
'psychological moment' should be seized in war."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
15. Energy may be likened to the bending of a crossbow;
|
|||
|
decision, to the releasing of a trigger.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[None of the commentators seem to grasp the real point of
|
|||
|
the simile of energy and the force stored up in the bent cross-
|
|||
|
bow until released by the finger on the trigger.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
16. Amid the turmoil and tumult of battle, there may be
|
|||
|
seeming disorder and yet no real disorder at all; amid confusion
|
|||
|
and chaos, your array may be without head or tail, yet it will be
|
|||
|
proof against defeat.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Mei Yao-ch`en says: "The subdivisions of the army having
|
|||
|
been previously fixed, and the various signals agreed upon, the
|
|||
|
separating and joining, the dispersing and collecting which will
|
|||
|
take place in the course of a battle, may give the appearance of
|
|||
|
disorder when no real disorder is possible. Your formation may
|
|||
|
be without head or tail, your dispositions all topsy-turvy, and
|
|||
|
yet a rout of your forces quite out of the question."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
17. Simulated disorder postulates perfect discipline,
|
|||
|
simulated fear postulates courage; simulated weakness postulates
|
|||
|
strength.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[In order to make the translation intelligible, it is
|
|||
|
necessary to tone down the sharply paradoxical form of the
|
|||
|
original. Ts`ao Kung throws out a hint of the meaning in his
|
|||
|
brief note: "These things all serve to destroy formation and
|
|||
|
conceal one's condition." But Tu Mu is the first to put it quite
|
|||
|
plainly: "If you wish to feign confusion in order to lure the
|
|||
|
enemy on, you must first have perfect discipline; if you wish to
|
|||
|
display timidity in order to entrap the enemy, you must have
|
|||
|
extreme courage; if you wish to parade your weakness in order to
|
|||
|
make the enemy over-confident, you must have exceeding
|
|||
|
strength."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
18. Hiding order beneath the cloak of disorder is simply a
|
|||
|
question of subdivision;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[See supra, ss. 1.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
concealing courage under a show of timidity presupposes a fund of
|
|||
|
latent energy;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The commentators strongly understand a certain Chinese word
|
|||
|
here differently than anywhere else in this chapter. Thus Tu Mu
|
|||
|
says: "seeing that we are favorably circumstanced and yet make
|
|||
|
no move, the enemy will believe that we are really afraid."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
masking strength with weakness is to be effected by tactical
|
|||
|
dispositions.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu relates the following anecdote of Kao Tsu, the
|
|||
|
first Han Emperor: "Wishing to crush the Hsiung-nu, he sent out
|
|||
|
spies to report on their condition. But the Hsiung-nu,
|
|||
|
forewarned, carefully concealed all their able-bodied men and
|
|||
|
well-fed horses, and only allowed infirm soldiers and emaciated
|
|||
|
cattle to be seen. The result was that spies one and all
|
|||
|
recommended the Emperor to deliver his attack. Lou Ching alone
|
|||
|
opposed them, saying: "When two countries go to war, they are
|
|||
|
naturally inclined to make an ostentatious display of their
|
|||
|
strength. Yet our spies have seen nothing but old age and
|
|||
|
infirmity. This is surely some ruse on the part of the enemy,
|
|||
|
and it would be unwise for us to attack." The Emperor, however,
|
|||
|
disregarding this advice, fell into the trap and found himself
|
|||
|
surrounded at Po-teng."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
19. Thus one who is skillful at keeping the enemy on the
|
|||
|
move maintains deceitful appearances, according to which the
|
|||
|
enemy will act.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ts`ao Kung's note is "Make a display of weakness and want."
|
|||
|
Tu Mu says: "If our force happens to be superior to the enemy's,
|
|||
|
weakness may be simulated in order to lure him on; but if
|
|||
|
inferior, he must be led to believe that we are strong, in order
|
|||
|
that he may keep off. In fact, all the enemy's movements should
|
|||
|
be determined by the signs that we choose to give him." Note the
|
|||
|
following anecdote of Sun Pin, a descendent of Sun Wu: In 341
|
|||
|
B.C., the Ch`i State being at war with Wei, sent T`ien Chi and
|
|||
|
Sun Pin against the general P`ang Chuan, who happened to be a
|
|||
|
deadly personal enemy of the later. Sun Pin said: "The Ch`i
|
|||
|
State has a reputation for cowardice, and therefore our adversary
|
|||
|
despises us. Let us turn this circumstance to account."
|
|||
|
Accordingly, when the army had crossed the border into Wei
|
|||
|
territory, he gave orders to show 100,000 fires on the first
|
|||
|
night, 50,000 on the next, and the night after only 20,000.
|
|||
|
P`ang Chuan pursued them hotly, saying to himself: "I knew these
|
|||
|
men of Ch`i were cowards: their numbers have already fallen away
|
|||
|
by more than half." In his retreat, Sun Pin came to a narrow
|
|||
|
defile, with he calculated that his pursuers would reach after
|
|||
|
dark. Here he had a tree stripped of its bark, and inscribed
|
|||
|
upon it the words: "Under this tree shall P`ang Chuan die."
|
|||
|
Then, as night began to fall, he placed a strong body of archers
|
|||
|
in ambush near by, with orders to shoot directly they saw a
|
|||
|
light. Later on, P`ang Chuan arrived at the spot, and noticing
|
|||
|
the tree, struck a light in order to read what was written on it.
|
|||
|
His body was immediately riddled by a volley of arrows, and his
|
|||
|
whole army thrown into confusion. [The above is Tu Mu's version
|
|||
|
of the story; the SHIH CHI, less dramatically but probably with
|
|||
|
more historical truth, makes P`ang Chuan cut his own throat with
|
|||
|
an exclamation of despair, after the rout of his army.] ]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
He sacrifices something, that the enemy may snatch at it.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
20. By holding out baits, he keeps him on the march; then
|
|||
|
with a body of picked men he lies in wait for him.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[With an emendation suggested by Li Ching, this then reads,
|
|||
|
"He lies in wait with the main body of his troops."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
21. The clever combatant looks to the effect of combined
|
|||
|
energy, and does not require too much from individuals.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu says: "He first of all considers the power of his
|
|||
|
army in the bulk; afterwards he takes individual talent into
|
|||
|
account, and uses each men according to his capabilities. He
|
|||
|
does not demand perfection from the untalented."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hence his ability to pick out the right men and utilize combined
|
|||
|
energy.
|
|||
|
22. When he utilizes combined energy, his fighting men
|
|||
|
become as it were like unto rolling logs or stones. For it is
|
|||
|
the nature of a log or stone to remain motionless on level
|
|||
|
ground, and to move when on a slope; if four-cornered, to come to
|
|||
|
a standstill, but if round-shaped, to go rolling down.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ts`au Kung calls this "the use of natural or inherent
|
|||
|
power."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
23. Thus the energy developed by good fighting men is as
|
|||
|
the momentum of a round stone rolled down a mountain thousands
|
|||
|
of feet in height. So much on the subject of energy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The chief lesson of this chapter, in Tu Mu's opinion, is
|
|||
|
the paramount importance in war of rapid evolutions and sudden
|
|||
|
rushes. "Great results," he adds, "can thus be achieved with
|
|||
|
small forces."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[1] "Forty-one Years in India," chapter 46.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
VI. WEAK POINTS AND STRONG
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu attempts to explain the sequence of chapters as
|
|||
|
follows: "Chapter IV, on Tactical Dispositions, treated of the
|
|||
|
offensive and the defensive; chapter V, on Energy, dealt with
|
|||
|
direct and indirect methods. The good general acquaints himself
|
|||
|
first with the theory of attack and defense, and then turns his
|
|||
|
attention to direct and indirect methods. He studies the art of
|
|||
|
varying and combining these two methods before proceeding to the
|
|||
|
subject of weak and strong points. For the use of direct or
|
|||
|
indirect methods arises out of attack and defense, and the
|
|||
|
perception of weak and strong points depends again on the above
|
|||
|
methods. Hence the present chapter comes immediately after the
|
|||
|
chapter on Energy."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. Sun Tzu said: Whoever is first in the field and awaits
|
|||
|
the coming of the enemy, will be fresh for the fight; whoever is
|
|||
|
second in the field and has to hasten to battle will arrive
|
|||
|
exhausted.
|
|||
|
2. Therefore the clever combatant imposes his will on the
|
|||
|
enemy, but does not allow the enemy's will to be imposed on him.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[One mark of a great soldier is that he fight on his own
|
|||
|
terms or fights not at all. [1] ]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
3. By holding out advantages to him, he can cause the enemy
|
|||
|
to approach of his own accord; or, by inflicting damage, he can
|
|||
|
make it impossible for the enemy to draw near.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[In the first case, he will entice him with a bait; in the
|
|||
|
second, he will strike at some important point which the enemy
|
|||
|
will have to defend.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
4. If the enemy is taking his ease, he can harass him;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[This passage may be cited as evidence against Mei Yao-
|
|||
|
Ch`en's interpretation of I. ss. 23.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
if well supplied with food, he can starve him out; if quietly
|
|||
|
encamped, he can force him to move.
|
|||
|
5. Appear at points which the enemy must hasten to defend;
|
|||
|
march swiftly to places where you are not expected.
|
|||
|
6. An army may march great distances without distress, if
|
|||
|
it marches through country where the enemy is not.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ts`ao Kung sums up very well: "Emerge from the void [q.d.
|
|||
|
like "a bolt from the blue"], strike at vulnerable points, shun
|
|||
|
places that are defended, attack in unexpected quarters."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
7. You can be sure of succeeding in your attacks if you
|
|||
|
only attack places which are undefended.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Wang Hsi explains "undefended places" as "weak points; that
|
|||
|
is to say, where the general is lacking in capacity, or the
|
|||
|
soldiers in spirit; where the walls are not strong enough, or the
|
|||
|
precautions not strict enough; where relief comes too late, or
|
|||
|
provisions are too scanty, or the defenders are variance amongst
|
|||
|
themselves."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
You can ensure the safety of your defense if you only hold
|
|||
|
positions that cannot be attacked.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[I.e., where there are none of the weak points mentioned
|
|||
|
above. There is rather a nice point involved in the
|
|||
|
interpretation of this later clause. Tu Mu, Ch`en Hao, and Mei
|
|||
|
Yao-ch`en assume the meaning to be: "In order to make your
|
|||
|
defense quite safe, you must defend EVEN those places that are
|
|||
|
not likely to be attacked;" and Tu Mu adds: "How much more,
|
|||
|
then, those that will be attacked." Taken thus, however, the
|
|||
|
clause balances less well with the preceding--always a
|
|||
|
consideration in the highly antithetical style which is natural
|
|||
|
to the Chinese. Chang Yu, therefore, seems to come nearer the
|
|||
|
mark in saying: "He who is skilled in attack flashes forth from
|
|||
|
the topmost heights of heaven [see IV. ss. 7], making it
|
|||
|
impossible for the enemy to guard against him. This being so,
|
|||
|
the places that I shall attack are precisely those that the enemy
|
|||
|
cannot defend.... He who is skilled in defense hides in the most
|
|||
|
secret recesses of the earth, making it impossible for the enemy
|
|||
|
to estimate his whereabouts. This being so, the places that I
|
|||
|
shall hold are precisely those that the enemy cannot attack."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
8. Hence that general is skillful in attack whose opponent
|
|||
|
does not know what to defend; and he is skillful in defense whose
|
|||
|
opponent does not know what to attack.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[An aphorism which puts the whole art of war in a nutshell.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
9. O divine art of subtlety and secrecy! Through you we
|
|||
|
learn to be invisible, through you inaudible;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Literally, "without form or sound," but it is said of
|
|||
|
course with reference to the enemy.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and hence we can hold the enemy's fate in our hands.
|
|||
|
10. You may advance and be absolutely irresistible, if you
|
|||
|
make for the enemy's weak points; you may retire and be safe from
|
|||
|
pursuit if your movements are more rapid than those of the enemy.
|
|||
|
11. If we wish to fight, the enemy can be forced to an
|
|||
|
engagement even though he be sheltered behind a high rampart and
|
|||
|
a deep ditch. All we need do is attack some other place that he
|
|||
|
will be obliged to relieve.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu says: "If the enemy is the invading party, we can
|
|||
|
cut his line of communications and occupy the roads by which he
|
|||
|
will have to return; if we are the invaders, we may direct our
|
|||
|
attack against the sovereign himself." It is clear that Sun Tzu,
|
|||
|
unlike certain generals in the late Boer war, was no believer in
|
|||
|
frontal attacks.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
12. If we do not wish to fight, we can prevent the enemy
|
|||
|
from engaging us even though the lines of our encampment be
|
|||
|
merely traced out on the ground. All we need do is to throw
|
|||
|
something odd and unaccountable in his way.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[This extremely concise expression is intelligibly
|
|||
|
paraphrased by Chia Lin: "even though we have constructed
|
|||
|
neither wall nor ditch." Li Ch`uan says: "we puzzle him by
|
|||
|
strange and unusual dispositions;" and Tu Mu finally clinches the
|
|||
|
meaning by three illustrative anecdotes--one of Chu-ko Liang, who
|
|||
|
when occupying Yang-p`ing and about to be attacked by Ssu-ma I,
|
|||
|
suddenly struck his colors, stopped the beating of the drums, and
|
|||
|
flung open the city gates, showing only a few men engaged in
|
|||
|
sweeping and sprinkling the ground. This unexpected proceeding
|
|||
|
had the intended effect; for Ssu-ma I, suspecting an ambush,
|
|||
|
actually drew off his army and retreated. What Sun Tzu is
|
|||
|
advocating here, therefore, is nothing more nor less than the
|
|||
|
timely use of "bluff."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
13. By discovering the enemy's dispositions and remaining
|
|||
|
invisible ourselves, we can keep our forces concentrated, while
|
|||
|
the enemy's must be divided.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The conclusion is perhaps not very obvious, but Chang Yu
|
|||
|
(after Mei Yao-ch`en) rightly explains it thus: "If the enemy's
|
|||
|
dispositions are visible, we can make for him in one body;
|
|||
|
whereas, our own dispositions being kept secret, the enemy will
|
|||
|
be obliged to divide his forces in order to guard against attack
|
|||
|
from every quarter."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
14. We can form a single united body, while the enemy must
|
|||
|
split up into fractions. Hence there will be a whole pitted
|
|||
|
against separate parts of a whole, which means that we shall be
|
|||
|
many to the enemy's few.
|
|||
|
15. And if we are able thus to attack an inferior force
|
|||
|
with a superior one, our opponents will be in dire straits.
|
|||
|
16. The spot where we intend to fight must not be made
|
|||
|
known; for then the enemy will have to prepare against a possible
|
|||
|
attack at several different points;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Sheridan once explained the reason of General Grant's
|
|||
|
victories by saying that "while his opponents were kept fully
|
|||
|
employed wondering what he was going to do, HE was thinking most
|
|||
|
of what he was going to do himself."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and his forces being thus distributed in many directions, the
|
|||
|
numbers we shall have to face at any given point will be
|
|||
|
proportionately few.
|
|||
|
17. For should the enemy strengthen his van, he will weaken
|
|||
|
his rear; should he strengthen his rear, he will weaken his van;
|
|||
|
should he strengthen his left, he will weaken his right; should
|
|||
|
he strengthen his right, he will weaken his left. If he sends
|
|||
|
reinforcements everywhere, he will everywhere be weak.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[In Frederick the Great's INSTRUCTIONS TO HIS GENERALS we
|
|||
|
read: "A defensive war is apt to betray us into too frequent
|
|||
|
detachment. Those generals who have had but little experience
|
|||
|
attempt to protect every point, while those who are better
|
|||
|
acquainted with their profession, having only the capital object
|
|||
|
in view, guard against a decisive blow, and acquiesce in small
|
|||
|
misfortunes to avoid greater."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
18. Numerical weakness comes from having to prepare against
|
|||
|
possible attacks; numerical strength, from compelling our
|
|||
|
adversary to make these preparations against us.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The highest generalship, in Col. Henderson's words, is "to
|
|||
|
compel the enemy to disperse his army, and then to concentrate
|
|||
|
superior force against each fraction in turn."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
19. Knowing the place and the time of the coming battle, we
|
|||
|
may concentrate from the greatest distances in order to fight.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[What Sun Tzu evidently has in mind is that nice calculation
|
|||
|
of distances and that masterly employment of strategy which
|
|||
|
enable a general to divide his army for the purpose of a long and
|
|||
|
rapid march, and afterwards to effect a junction at precisely the
|
|||
|
right spot and the right hour in order to confront the enemy in
|
|||
|
overwhelming strength. Among many such successful junctions
|
|||
|
which military history records, one of the most dramatic and
|
|||
|
decisive was the appearance of Blucher just at the critical
|
|||
|
moment on the field of Waterloo.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
20. But if neither time nor place be known, then the left
|
|||
|
wing will be impotent to succor the right, the right equally
|
|||
|
impotent to succor the left, the van unable to relieve the rear,
|
|||
|
or the rear to support the van. How much more so if the furthest
|
|||
|
portions of the army are anything under a hundred LI apart, and
|
|||
|
even the nearest are separated by several LI!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The Chinese of this last sentence is a little lacking in
|
|||
|
precision, but the mental picture we are required to draw is
|
|||
|
probably that of an army advancing towards a given rendezvous in
|
|||
|
separate columns, each of which has orders to be there on a fixed
|
|||
|
date. If the general allows the various detachments to proceed
|
|||
|
at haphazard, without precise instructions as to the time and
|
|||
|
place of meeting, the enemy will be able to annihilate the army
|
|||
|
in detail. Chang Yu's note may be worth quoting here: "If we do
|
|||
|
not know the place where our opponents mean to concentrate or the
|
|||
|
day on which they will join battle, our unity will be forfeited
|
|||
|
through our preparations for defense, and the positions we hold
|
|||
|
will be insecure. Suddenly happening upon a powerful foe, we
|
|||
|
shall be brought to battle in a flurried condition, and no mutual
|
|||
|
support will be possible between wings, vanguard or rear,
|
|||
|
especially if there is any great distance between the foremost
|
|||
|
and hindmost divisions of the army."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
21. Though according to my estimate the soldiers of Yueh
|
|||
|
exceed our own in number, that shall advantage them nothing in
|
|||
|
the matter of victory. I say then that victory can be achieved.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Alas for these brave words! The long feud between the two
|
|||
|
states ended in 473 B.C. with the total defeat of Wu by Kou Chien
|
|||
|
and its incorporation in Yueh. This was doubtless long after Sun
|
|||
|
Tzu's death. With his present assertion compare IV. ss. 4.
|
|||
|
Chang Yu is the only one to point out the seeming discrepancy,
|
|||
|
which he thus goes on to explain: "In the chapter on Tactical
|
|||
|
Dispositions it is said, 'One may KNOW how to conquer without
|
|||
|
being able to DO it,' whereas here we have the statement that
|
|||
|
'victory' can be achieved.' The explanation is, that in the
|
|||
|
former chapter, where the offensive and defensive are under
|
|||
|
discussion, it is said that if the enemy is fully prepared, one
|
|||
|
cannot make certain of beating him. But the present passage
|
|||
|
refers particularly to the soldiers of Yueh who, according to Sun
|
|||
|
Tzu's calculations, will be kept in ignorance of the time and
|
|||
|
place of the impending struggle. That is why he says here that
|
|||
|
victory can be achieved."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
22. Though the enemy be stronger in numbers, we may prevent
|
|||
|
him from fighting. Scheme so as to discover his plans and the
|
|||
|
likelihood of their success.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[An alternative reading offered by Chia Lin is: "Know
|
|||
|
beforehand all plans conducive to our success and to the enemy's
|
|||
|
failure."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
23. Rouse him, and learn the principle of his activity or
|
|||
|
inactivity.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu tells us that by noting the joy or anger shown by
|
|||
|
the enemy on being thus disturbed, we shall be able to conclude
|
|||
|
whether his policy is to lie low or the reverse. He instances
|
|||
|
the action of Cho-ku Liang, who sent the scornful present of a
|
|||
|
woman's head-dress to Ssu-ma I, in order to goad him out of his
|
|||
|
Fabian tactics.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Force him to reveal himself, so as to find out his vulnerable
|
|||
|
spots.
|
|||
|
24. Carefully compare the opposing army with your own, so
|
|||
|
that you may know where strength is superabundant and where it is
|
|||
|
deficient.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Cf. IV. ss. 6.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
25. In making tactical dispositions, the highest pitch you
|
|||
|
can attain is to conceal them;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The piquancy of the paradox evaporates in translation.
|
|||
|
Concealment is perhaps not so much actual invisibility (see supra
|
|||
|
ss. 9) as "showing no sign" of what you mean to do, of the plans
|
|||
|
that are formed in your brain.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
conceal your dispositions, and you will be safe from the prying
|
|||
|
of the subtlest spies, from the machinations of the wisest
|
|||
|
brains.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu explains: "Though the enemy may have clever and
|
|||
|
capable officers, they will not be able to lay any plans against
|
|||
|
us."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
26. How victory may be produced for them out of the enemy's
|
|||
|
own tactics--that is what the multitude cannot comprehend.
|
|||
|
27. All men can see the tactics whereby I conquer, but what
|
|||
|
none can see is the strategy out of which victory is evolved.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[I.e., everybody can see superficially how a battle is won;
|
|||
|
what they cannot see is the long series of plans and combinations
|
|||
|
which has preceded the battle.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
28. Do not repeat the tactics which have gained you one
|
|||
|
victory, but let your methods be regulated by the infinite
|
|||
|
variety of circumstances.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[As Wang Hsi sagely remarks: "There is but one root-
|
|||
|
principle underlying victory, but the tactics which lead up to it
|
|||
|
are infinite in number." With this compare Col. Henderson: "The
|
|||
|
rules of strategy are few and simple. They may be learned in a
|
|||
|
week. They may be taught by familiar illustrations or a dozen
|
|||
|
diagrams. But such knowledge will no more teach a man to lead an
|
|||
|
army like Napoleon than a knowledge of grammar will teach him to
|
|||
|
write like Gibbon."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
29. Military tactics are like unto water; for water in its
|
|||
|
natural course runs away from high places and hastens downwards.
|
|||
|
30. So in war, the way is to avoid what is strong and to
|
|||
|
strike at what is weak.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Like water, taking the line of least resistance.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
31. Water shapes its course according to the nature of the
|
|||
|
ground over which it flows; the soldier works out his victory in
|
|||
|
relation to the foe whom he is facing.
|
|||
|
32. Therefore, just as water retains no constant shape, so
|
|||
|
in warfare there are no constant conditions.
|
|||
|
33. He who can modify his tactics in relation to his
|
|||
|
opponent and thereby succeed in winning, may be called a heaven-
|
|||
|
born captain.
|
|||
|
34. The five elements (water, fire, wood, metal, earth) are
|
|||
|
not always equally predominant;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[That is, as Wang Hsi says: "they predominate
|
|||
|
alternately."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
the four seasons make way for each other in turn.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Literally, "have no invariable seat."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There are short days and long; the moon has its periods of waning
|
|||
|
and waxing.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Cf. V. ss. 6. The purport of the passage is simply to
|
|||
|
illustrate the want of fixity in war by the changes constantly
|
|||
|
taking place in Nature. The comparison is not very happy,
|
|||
|
however, because the regularity of the phenomena which Sun Tzu
|
|||
|
mentions is by no means paralleled in war.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[1] See Col. Henderson's biography of Stonewall Jackson, 1902
|
|||
|
ed., vol. II, p. 490.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
VII. MANEUVERING
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. Sun Tzu said: In war, the general receives his commands
|
|||
|
from the sovereign.
|
|||
|
2. Having collected an army and concentrated his forces, he
|
|||
|
must blend and harmonize the different elements thereof before
|
|||
|
pitching his camp.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["Chang Yu says: "the establishment of harmony and
|
|||
|
confidence between the higher and lower ranks before venturing
|
|||
|
into the field;" and he quotes a saying of Wu Tzu (chap. 1 ad
|
|||
|
init.): "Without harmony in the State, no military expedition
|
|||
|
can be undertaken; without harmony in the army, no battle array
|
|||
|
can be formed." In an historical romance Sun Tzu is represented
|
|||
|
as saying to Wu Yuan: "As a general rule, those who are waging
|
|||
|
war should get rid of all the domestic troubles before proceeding
|
|||
|
to attack the external foe."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
3. After that, comes tactical maneuvering, than which there
|
|||
|
is nothing more difficult.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[I have departed slightly from the traditional
|
|||
|
interpretation of Ts`ao Kung, who says: "From the time of
|
|||
|
receiving the sovereign's instructions until our encampment over
|
|||
|
against the enemy, the tactics to be pursued are most difficult."
|
|||
|
It seems to me that the tactics or maneuvers can hardly be said
|
|||
|
to begin until the army has sallied forth and encamped, and
|
|||
|
Ch`ien Hao's note gives color to this view: "For levying,
|
|||
|
concentrating, harmonizing and entrenching an army, there are
|
|||
|
plenty of old rules which will serve. The real difficulty comes
|
|||
|
when we engage in tactical operations." Tu Yu also observes that
|
|||
|
"the great difficulty is to be beforehand with the enemy in
|
|||
|
seizing favorable position."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The difficulty of tactical maneuvering consists in turning the
|
|||
|
devious into the direct, and misfortune into gain.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[This sentence contains one of those highly condensed and
|
|||
|
somewhat enigmatical expressions of which Sun Tzu is so fond.
|
|||
|
This is how it is explained by Ts`ao Kung: "Make it appear that
|
|||
|
you are a long way off, then cover the distance rapidly and
|
|||
|
arrive on the scene before your opponent." Tu Mu says:
|
|||
|
"Hoodwink the enemy, so that he may be remiss and leisurely while
|
|||
|
you are dashing along with utmost speed." Ho Shih gives a
|
|||
|
slightly different turn: "Although you may have difficult ground
|
|||
|
to traverse and natural obstacles to encounter this is a drawback
|
|||
|
which can be turned into actual advantage by celerity of
|
|||
|
movement." Signal examples of this saying are afforded by the
|
|||
|
two famous passages across the Alps--that of Hannibal, which laid
|
|||
|
Italy at his mercy, and that of Napoleon two thousand years
|
|||
|
later, which resulted in the great victory of Marengo.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
4. Thus, to take a long and circuitous route, after
|
|||
|
enticing the enemy out of the way, and though starting after him,
|
|||
|
to contrive to reach the goal before him, shows knowledge of the
|
|||
|
artifice of DEVIATION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu cites the famous march of Chao She in 270 B.C. to
|
|||
|
relieve the town of O-yu, which was closely invested by a Ch`in
|
|||
|
army. The King of Chao first consulted Lien P`o on the
|
|||
|
advisability of attempting a relief, but the latter thought the
|
|||
|
distance too great, and the intervening country too rugged and
|
|||
|
difficult. His Majesty then turned to Chao She, who fully
|
|||
|
admitted the hazardous nature of the march, but finally said:
|
|||
|
"We shall be like two rats fighting in a whole--and the pluckier
|
|||
|
one will win!" So he left the capital with his army, but had
|
|||
|
only gone a distance of 30 LI when he stopped and began
|
|||
|
throwing up entrenchments. For 28 days he continued
|
|||
|
strengthening his fortifications, and took care that spies should
|
|||
|
carry the intelligence to the enemy. The Ch`in general was
|
|||
|
overjoyed, and attributed his adversary's tardiness to the fact
|
|||
|
that the beleaguered city was in the Han State, and thus not
|
|||
|
actually part of Chao territory. But the spies had no sooner
|
|||
|
departed than Chao She began a forced march lasting for two days
|
|||
|
and one night, and arrive on the scene of action with such
|
|||
|
astonishing rapidity that he was able to occupy a commanding
|
|||
|
position on the "North hill" before the enemy had got wind of his
|
|||
|
movements. A crushing defeat followed for the Ch`in forces, who
|
|||
|
were obliged to raise the siege of O-yu in all haste and retreat
|
|||
|
across the border.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
5. Maneuvering with an army is advantageous; with an
|
|||
|
undisciplined multitude, most dangerous.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[I adopt the reading of the T`UNG TIEN, Cheng Yu-hsien and
|
|||
|
the T`U SHU, since they appear to apply the exact nuance required
|
|||
|
in order to make sense. The commentators using the standard text
|
|||
|
take this line to mean that maneuvers may be profitable, or they
|
|||
|
may be dangerous: it all depends on the ability of the general.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
6. If you set a fully equipped army in march in order to
|
|||
|
snatch an advantage, the chances are that you will be too late.
|
|||
|
On the other hand, to detach a flying column for the purpose
|
|||
|
involves the sacrifice of its baggage and stores.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Some of the Chinese text is unintelligible to the Chinese
|
|||
|
commentators, who paraphrase the sentence. I submit my own
|
|||
|
rendering without much enthusiasm, being convinced that there is
|
|||
|
some deep-seated corruption in the text. On the whole, it is
|
|||
|
clear that Sun Tzu does not approve of a lengthy march being
|
|||
|
undertaken without supplies. Cf. infra, ss. 11.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
7. Thus, if you order your men to roll up their buff-coats,
|
|||
|
and make forced marches without halting day or night, covering
|
|||
|
double the usual distance at a stretch,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The ordinary day's march, according to Tu Mu, was 30 LI;
|
|||
|
but on one occasion, when pursuing Liu Pei, Ts`ao Ts`ao is said
|
|||
|
to have covered the incredible distance of 300 _li_ within
|
|||
|
twenty-four hours.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
doing a hundred LI in order to wrest an advantage, the leaders of
|
|||
|
all your three divisions will fall into the hands of the enemy.
|
|||
|
8. The stronger men will be in front, the jaded ones will
|
|||
|
fall behind, and on this plan only one-tenth of your army will
|
|||
|
reach its destination.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The moral is, as Ts`ao Kung and others point out: Don't
|
|||
|
march a hundred LI to gain a tactical advantage, either with or
|
|||
|
without impedimenta. Maneuvers of this description should be
|
|||
|
confined to short distances. Stonewall Jackson said: "The
|
|||
|
hardships of forced marches are often more painful than the
|
|||
|
dangers of battle." He did not often call upon his troops for
|
|||
|
extraordinary exertions. It was only when he intended a
|
|||
|
surprise, or when a rapid retreat was imperative, that he
|
|||
|
sacrificed everything for speed. [1] ]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
9. If you march fifty LI in order to outmaneuver the enemy,
|
|||
|
you will lose the leader of your first division, and only half
|
|||
|
your force will reach the goal.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Literally, "the leader of the first division will be
|
|||
|
TORN AWAY."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
10. If you march thirty LI with the same object, two-thirds
|
|||
|
of your army will arrive.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[In the T`UNG TIEN is added: "From this we may know the
|
|||
|
difficulty of maneuvering."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
11. We may take it then that an army without its baggage-
|
|||
|
train is lost; without provisions it is lost; without bases of
|
|||
|
supply it is lost.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[I think Sun Tzu meant "stores accumulated in depots." But
|
|||
|
Tu Yu says "fodder and the like," Chang Yu says "Goods in
|
|||
|
general," and Wang Hsi says "fuel, salt, foodstuffs, etc."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
12. We cannot enter into alliances until we are acquainted
|
|||
|
with the designs of our neighbors.
|
|||
|
13. We are not fit to lead an army on the march unless we
|
|||
|
are familiar with the face of the country--its mountains and
|
|||
|
forests, its pitfalls and precipices, its marshes and swamps.
|
|||
|
14. We shall be unable to turn natural advantage to account
|
|||
|
unless we make use of local guides.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[ss. 12-14 are repeated in chap. XI. ss. 52.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
15. In war, practice dissimulation, and you will succeed.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[In the tactics of Turenne, deception of the enemy,
|
|||
|
especially as to the numerical strength of his troops, took a
|
|||
|
very prominent position. [2] ]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
16. Whether to concentrate or to divide your troops, must
|
|||
|
be decided by circumstances.
|
|||
|
17. Let your rapidity be that of the wind,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The simile is doubly appropriate, because the wind is not
|
|||
|
only swift but, as Mei Yao-ch`en points out, "invisible and
|
|||
|
leaves no tracks."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
your compactness that of the forest.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Meng Shih comes nearer to the mark in his note: "When
|
|||
|
slowly marching, order and ranks must be preserved"--so as to
|
|||
|
guard against surprise attacks. But natural forest do not grow
|
|||
|
in rows, whereas they do generally possess the quality of density
|
|||
|
or compactness.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
18. In raiding and plundering be like fire,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Cf. SHIH CHING, IV. 3. iv. 6: "Fierce as a blazing fire
|
|||
|
which no man can check."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
is immovability like a mountain.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[That is, when holding a position from which the enemy is
|
|||
|
trying to dislodge you, or perhaps, as Tu Yu says, when he is
|
|||
|
trying to entice you into a trap.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
19. Let your plans be dark and impenetrable as night, and
|
|||
|
when you move, fall like a thunderbolt.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Yu quotes a saying of T`ai Kung which has passed into a
|
|||
|
proverb: "You cannot shut your ears to the thunder or your eyes
|
|||
|
to the lighting--so rapid are they." Likewise, an attack should
|
|||
|
be made so quickly that it cannot be parried.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
20. When you plunder a countryside, let the spoil be
|
|||
|
divided amongst your men;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Sun Tzu wishes to lessen the abuses of indiscriminate
|
|||
|
plundering by insisting that all booty shall be thrown into a
|
|||
|
common stock, which may afterwards be fairly divided amongst
|
|||
|
all.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
when you capture new territory, cut it up into allotments for the
|
|||
|
benefit of the soldiery.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ch`en Hao says "quarter your soldiers on the land, and let
|
|||
|
them sow and plant it." It is by acting on this principle, and
|
|||
|
harvesting the lands they invaded, that the Chinese have
|
|||
|
succeeded in carrying out some of their most memorable and
|
|||
|
triumphant expeditions, such as that of Pan Ch`ao who penetrated
|
|||
|
to the Caspian, and in more recent years, those of Fu-k`ang-an
|
|||
|
and Tso Tsung-t`ang.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
21. Ponder and deliberate before you make a move.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu quotes Wei Liao Tzu as saying that we must not
|
|||
|
break camp until we have gained the resisting power of the enemy
|
|||
|
and the cleverness of the opposing general. Cf. the "seven
|
|||
|
comparisons" in I. ss. 13.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
22. He will conquer who has learnt the artifice of
|
|||
|
deviation.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[See supra, SS. 3, 4.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Such is the art of maneuvering.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[With these words, the chapter would naturally come to an
|
|||
|
end. But there now follows a long appendix in the shape of an
|
|||
|
extract from an earlier book on War, now lost, but apparently
|
|||
|
extant at the time when Sun Tzu wrote. The style of this
|
|||
|
fragment is not noticeable different from that of Sun Tzu
|
|||
|
himself, but no commentator raises a doubt as to its
|
|||
|
genuineness.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
23. The Book of Army Management says:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[It is perhaps significant that none of the earlier
|
|||
|
commentators give us any information about this work. Mei Yao-
|
|||
|
Ch`en calls it "an ancient military classic," and Wang Hsi, "an
|
|||
|
old book on war." Considering the enormous amount of fighting
|
|||
|
that had gone on for centuries before Sun Tzu's time between the
|
|||
|
various kingdoms and principalities of China, it is not in itself
|
|||
|
improbable that a collection of military maxims should have been
|
|||
|
made and written down at some earlier period.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On the field of battle,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Implied, though not actually in the Chinese.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
the spoken word does not carry far enough: hence the institution
|
|||
|
of gongs and drums. Nor can ordinary objects be seen clearly
|
|||
|
enough: hence the institution of banners and flags.
|
|||
|
24. Gongs and drums, banners and flags, are means whereby
|
|||
|
the ears and eyes of the host may be focused on one particular
|
|||
|
point.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu says: "If sight and hearing converge
|
|||
|
simultaneously on the same object, the evolutions of as many as a
|
|||
|
million soldiers will be like those of a single man."!]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
25. The host thus forming a single united body, is it
|
|||
|
impossible either for the brave to advance alone, or for the
|
|||
|
cowardly to retreat alone.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chuang Yu quotes a saying: "Equally guilty are those who
|
|||
|
advance against orders and those who retreat against orders." Tu
|
|||
|
Mu tells a story in this connection of Wu Ch`i, when he was
|
|||
|
fighting against the Ch`in State. Before the battle had begun,
|
|||
|
one of his soldiers, a man of matchless daring, sallied forth by
|
|||
|
himself, captured two heads from the enemy, and returned to camp.
|
|||
|
Wu Ch`i had the man instantly executed, whereupon an officer
|
|||
|
ventured to remonstrate, saying: "This man was a good soldier,
|
|||
|
and ought not to have been beheaded." Wu Ch`i replied: "I fully
|
|||
|
believe he was a good soldier, but I had him beheaded because he
|
|||
|
acted without orders."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This is the art of handling large masses of men.
|
|||
|
26. In night-fighting, then, make much use of signal-fires
|
|||
|
and drums, and in fighting by day, of flags and banners, as a
|
|||
|
means of influencing the ears and eyes of your army.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ch`en Hao alludes to Li Kuang-pi's night ride to Ho-yang at
|
|||
|
the head of 500 mounted men; they made such an imposing display
|
|||
|
with torches, that though the rebel leader Shih Ssu-ming had a
|
|||
|
large army, he did not dare to dispute their passage.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
27. A whole army may be robbed of its spirit;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["In war," says Chang Yu, "if a spirit of anger can be made
|
|||
|
to pervade all ranks of an army at one and the same time, its
|
|||
|
onset will be irresistible. Now the spirit of the enemy's
|
|||
|
soldiers will be keenest when they have newly arrived on the
|
|||
|
scene, and it is therefore our cue not to fight at once, but to
|
|||
|
wait until their ardor and enthusiasm have worn off, and then
|
|||
|
strike. It is in this way that they may be robbed of their keen
|
|||
|
spirit." Li Ch`uan and others tell an anecdote (to be found in
|
|||
|
the TSO CHUAN, year 10, ss. 1) of Ts`ao Kuei, a protege of Duke
|
|||
|
Chuang of Lu. The latter State was attacked by Ch`i, and the
|
|||
|
duke was about to join battle at Ch`ang-cho, after the first roll
|
|||
|
of the enemy's drums, when Ts`ao said: "Not just yet." Only
|
|||
|
after their drums had beaten for the third time, did he give the
|
|||
|
word for attack. Then they fought, and the men of Ch`i were
|
|||
|
utterly defeated. Questioned afterwards by the Duke as to the
|
|||
|
meaning of his delay, Ts`ao Kuei replied: "In battle, a
|
|||
|
courageous spirit is everything. Now the first roll of the drum
|
|||
|
tends to create this spirit, but with the second it is already on
|
|||
|
the wane, and after the third it is gone altogether. I attacked
|
|||
|
when their spirit was gone and ours was at its height. Hence our
|
|||
|
victory." Wu Tzu (chap. 4) puts "spirit" first among the "four
|
|||
|
important influences" in war, and continues: "The value of a
|
|||
|
whole army--a mighty host of a million men--is dependent on one
|
|||
|
man alone: such is the influence of spirit!"]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
a commander-in-chief may be robbed of his presence of mind.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu says: "Presence of mind is the general's most
|
|||
|
important asset. It is the quality which enables him to
|
|||
|
discipline disorder and to inspire courage into the panic-
|
|||
|
stricken." The great general Li Ching (A.D. 571-649) has a
|
|||
|
saying: "Attacking does not merely consist in assaulting walled
|
|||
|
cities or striking at an army in battle array; it must include
|
|||
|
the art of assailing the enemy's mental equilibrium."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
28. Now a solider's spirit is keenest in the morning;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Always provided, I suppose, that he has had breakfast. At
|
|||
|
the battle of the Trebia, the Romans were foolishly allowed to
|
|||
|
fight fasting, whereas Hannibal's men had breakfasted at
|
|||
|
their leisure. See Livy, XXI, liv. 8, lv. 1 and 8.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
by noonday it has begun to flag; and in the evening, his mind is
|
|||
|
bent only on returning to camp.
|
|||
|
29. A clever general, therefore, avoids an army when its
|
|||
|
spirit is keen, but attacks it when it is sluggish and inclined
|
|||
|
to return. This is the art of studying moods.
|
|||
|
30. Disciplined and calm, to await the appearance of
|
|||
|
disorder and hubbub amongst the enemy:--this is the art of
|
|||
|
retaining self-possession.
|
|||
|
31. To be near the goal while the enemy is still far from
|
|||
|
it, to wait at ease while the enemy is toiling and struggling, to
|
|||
|
be well-fed while the enemy is famished:--this is the art of
|
|||
|
husbanding one's strength.
|
|||
|
32. To refrain from intercepting an enemy whose banners are
|
|||
|
in perfect order, to refrain from attacking an army drawn up in
|
|||
|
calm and confident array:--this is the art of studying
|
|||
|
circumstances.
|
|||
|
33. It is a military axiom not to advance uphill against
|
|||
|
the enemy, nor to oppose him when he comes downhill.
|
|||
|
34. Do not pursue an enemy who simulates flight; do not
|
|||
|
attack soldiers whose temper is keen.
|
|||
|
35. Do not swallow bait offered by the enemy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Li Ch`uan and Tu Mu, with extraordinary inability to see a
|
|||
|
metaphor, take these words quite literally of food and drink that
|
|||
|
have been poisoned by the enemy. Ch`en Hao and Chang Yu
|
|||
|
carefully point out that the saying has a wider application.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Do not interfere with an army that is returning home.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The commentators explain this rather singular piece of
|
|||
|
advice by saying that a man whose heart is set on returning home
|
|||
|
will fight to the death against any attempt to bar his way, and
|
|||
|
is therefore too dangerous an opponent to be tackled. Chang Yu
|
|||
|
quotes the words of Han Hsin: "Invincible is the soldier who
|
|||
|
hath his desire and returneth homewards." A marvelous tale is
|
|||
|
told of Ts`ao Ts`ao's courage and resource in ch. 1 of the SAN
|
|||
|
KUO CHI: In 198 A.D., he was besieging Chang Hsiu in Jang, when
|
|||
|
Liu Piao sent reinforcements with a view to cutting off Ts`ao's
|
|||
|
retreat. The latter was obligbed to draw off his troops, only to
|
|||
|
find himself hemmed in between two enemies, who were guarding
|
|||
|
each outlet of a narrow pass in which he had engaged himself. In
|
|||
|
this desperate plight Ts`ao waited until nightfall, when he bored
|
|||
|
a tunnel into the mountain side and laid an ambush in it. As
|
|||
|
soon as the whole army had passed by, the hidden troops fell on
|
|||
|
his rear, while Ts`ao himself turned and met his pursuers in
|
|||
|
front, so that they were thrown into confusion and annihilated.
|
|||
|
Ts`ao Ts`ao said afterwards: "The brigands tried to check my
|
|||
|
army in its retreat and brought me to battle in a desperate
|
|||
|
position: hence I knew how to overcome them."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
36. When you surround an army, leave an outlet free.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[This does not mean that the enemy is to be allowed to
|
|||
|
escape. The object, as Tu Mu puts it, is "to make him believe
|
|||
|
that there is a road to safety, and thus prevent his fighting
|
|||
|
with the courage of despair." Tu Mu adds pleasantly: "After
|
|||
|
that, you may crush him."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Do not press a desperate foe too hard.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ch`en Hao quotes the saying: "Birds and beasts when
|
|||
|
brought to bay will use their claws and teeth." Chang Yu says:
|
|||
|
"If your adversary has burned his boats and destroyed his
|
|||
|
cooking-pots, and is ready to stake all on the issue of a battle,
|
|||
|
he must not be pushed to extremities." Ho Shih illustrates the
|
|||
|
meaning by a story taken from the life of Yen-ch`ing. That
|
|||
|
general, together with his colleague Tu Chung-wei was surrounded
|
|||
|
by a vastly superior army of Khitans in the year 945 A.D. The
|
|||
|
country was bare and desert-like, and the little Chinese force
|
|||
|
was soon in dire straits for want of water. The wells they bored
|
|||
|
ran dry, and the men were reduced to squeezing lumps of mud and
|
|||
|
sucking out the moisture. Their ranks thinned rapidly, until at
|
|||
|
last Fu Yen-ch`ing exclaimed: "We are desperate men. Far better
|
|||
|
to die for our country than to go with fettered hands into
|
|||
|
captivity!" A strong gale happened to be blowing from the
|
|||
|
northeast and darkening the air with dense clouds of sandy dust.
|
|||
|
To Chung-wei was for waiting until this had abated before
|
|||
|
deciding on a final attack; but luckily another officer, Li Shou-
|
|||
|
cheng by name, was quicker to see an opportunity, and said:
|
|||
|
"They are many and we are few, but in the midst of this sandstorm
|
|||
|
our numbers will not be discernible; victory will go to the
|
|||
|
strenuous fighter, and the wind will be our best ally."
|
|||
|
Accordingly, Fu Yen-ch`ing made a sudden and wholly unexpected
|
|||
|
onslaught with his cavalry, routed the barbarians and succeeded
|
|||
|
in breaking through to safety.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
37. Such is the art of warfare.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[1] See Col. Henderson, op. cit. vol. I. p. 426.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[2] For a number of maxims on this head, see "Marshal Turenne"
|
|||
|
(Longmans, 1907), p. 29.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
VIII. VARIATION IN TACTICS
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The heading means literally "The Nine Variations," but as
|
|||
|
Sun Tzu does not appear to enumerate these, and as, indeed, he
|
|||
|
has already told us (V SS. 6-11) that such deflections from the
|
|||
|
ordinary course are practically innumerable, we have little
|
|||
|
option but to follow Wang Hsi, who says that "Nine" stands for an
|
|||
|
indefinitely large number. "All it means is that in warfare we
|
|||
|
ought to very our tactics to the utmost degree.... I do not know
|
|||
|
what Ts`ao Kung makes these Nine Variations out to be, but it has
|
|||
|
been suggested that they are connected with the Nine Situations"
|
|||
|
- of chapt. XI. This is the view adopted by Chang Yu. The only
|
|||
|
other alternative is to suppose that something has been lost--a
|
|||
|
supposition to which the unusual shortness of the chapter lends
|
|||
|
some weight.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. Sun Tzu said: In war, the general receives his
|
|||
|
commands from the sovereign, collects his army and concentrates
|
|||
|
his forces.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Repeated from VII. ss. 1, where it is certainly more in
|
|||
|
place. It may have been interpolated here merely in order to
|
|||
|
supply a beginning to the chapter.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2. When in difficult country, do not encamp. In country
|
|||
|
where high roads intersect, join hands with your allies. Do not
|
|||
|
linger in dangerously isolated positions.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The last situation is not one of the Nine Situations as
|
|||
|
given in the beginning of chap. XI, but occurs later on (ibid.
|
|||
|
ss. 43. q.v.). Chang Yu defines this situation as being situated
|
|||
|
across the frontier, in hostile territory. Li Ch`uan says it is
|
|||
|
"country in which there are no springs or wells, flocks or herds,
|
|||
|
vegetables or firewood;" Chia Lin, "one of gorges, chasms and
|
|||
|
precipices, without a road by which to advance."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In hemmed-in situations, you must resort to stratagem. In
|
|||
|
desperate position, you must fight.
|
|||
|
3. There are roads which must not be followed,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["Especially those leading through narrow defiles," says Li
|
|||
|
Ch`uan, "where an ambush is to be feared."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
armies which must be not attacked,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[More correctly, perhaps, "there are times when an army must
|
|||
|
not be attacked." Ch`en Hao says: "When you see your way to
|
|||
|
obtain a rival advantage, but are powerless to inflict a real
|
|||
|
defeat, refrain from attacking, for fear of overtaxing your men's
|
|||
|
strength."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
towns which must be besieged,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Cf. III. ss. 4 Ts`ao Kung gives an interesting
|
|||
|
illustration from his own experience. When invading the
|
|||
|
territory of Hsu-chou, he ignored the city of Hua-pi, which lay
|
|||
|
directly in his path, and pressed on into the heart of the
|
|||
|
country. This excellent strategy was rewarded by the subsequent
|
|||
|
capture of no fewer than fourteen important district cities.
|
|||
|
Chang Yu says: "No town should be attacked which, if taken,
|
|||
|
cannot be held, or if left alone, will not cause any trouble."
|
|||
|
Hsun Ying, when urged to attack Pi-yang, replied: "The city is
|
|||
|
small and well-fortified; even if I succeed intaking it, it will
|
|||
|
be no great feat of arms; whereas if I fail, I shall make myself
|
|||
|
a laughing-stock." In the seventeenth century, sieges still
|
|||
|
formed a large proportion of war. It was Turenne who directed
|
|||
|
attention to the importance of marches, countermarches and
|
|||
|
maneuvers. He said: "It is a great mistake to waste men in
|
|||
|
taking a town when the same expenditure of soldiers will gain a
|
|||
|
province." [1] ]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
positions which must not be contested, commands of the sovereign
|
|||
|
which must not be obeyed.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[This is a hard saying for the Chinese, with their reverence
|
|||
|
for authority, and Wei Liao Tzu (quoted by Tu Mu) is moved to
|
|||
|
exclaim: "Weapons are baleful instruments, strife is
|
|||
|
antagonistic to virtue, a military commander is the negation of
|
|||
|
civil order!" The unpalatable fact remains, however, that even
|
|||
|
Imperial wishes must be subordinated to military necessity.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
4. The general who thoroughly understands the advantages
|
|||
|
that accompany variation of tactics knows how to handle his
|
|||
|
troops.
|
|||
|
5. The general who does not understand these, may be well
|
|||
|
acquainted with the configuration of the country, yet he will not
|
|||
|
be able to turn his knowledge to practical account.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Literally, "get the advantage of the ground," which means
|
|||
|
not only securing good positions, but availing oneself of natural
|
|||
|
advantages in every possible way. Chang Yu says: "Every kind of
|
|||
|
ground is characterized by certain natural features, and also
|
|||
|
gives scope for a certain variability of plan. How it is
|
|||
|
possible to turn these natural features to account unless
|
|||
|
topographical knowledge is supplemented by versatility of mind?"]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
6. So, the student of war who is unversed in the art of war
|
|||
|
of varying his plans, even though he be acquainted with the Five
|
|||
|
Advantages, will fail to make the best use of his men.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chia Lin tells us that these imply five obvious and
|
|||
|
generally advantageous lines of action, namely: "if a certain
|
|||
|
road is short, it must be followed; if an army is isolated, it
|
|||
|
must be attacked; if a town is in a parlous condition, it must be
|
|||
|
besieged; if a position can be stormed, it must be attempted; and
|
|||
|
if consistent with military operations, the ruler's commands must
|
|||
|
be obeyed." But there are circumstances which sometimes forbid a
|
|||
|
general to use these advantages. For instance, "a certain road
|
|||
|
may be the shortest way for him, but if he knows that it abounds
|
|||
|
in natural obstacles, or that the enemy has laid an ambush on it,
|
|||
|
he will not follow that road. A hostile force may be open to
|
|||
|
attack, but if he knows that it is hard-pressed and likely to
|
|||
|
fight with desperation, he will refrain from striking," and so
|
|||
|
on.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
7. Hence in the wise leader's plans, considerations of
|
|||
|
advantage and of disadvantage will be blended together.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["Whether in an advantageous position or a disadvantageous
|
|||
|
one," says Ts`ao Kung, "the opposite state should be always
|
|||
|
present to your mind."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
8. If our expectation of advantage be tempered in this way,
|
|||
|
we may succeed in accomplishing the essential part of our
|
|||
|
schemes.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu says: "If we wish to wrest an advantage from the
|
|||
|
enemy, we must not fix our minds on that alone, but allow for the
|
|||
|
possibility of the enemy also doing some harm to us, and let this
|
|||
|
enter as a factor into our calculations."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
9. If, on the other hand, in the midst of difficulties we
|
|||
|
are always ready to seize an advantage, we may extricate
|
|||
|
ourselves from misfortune.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu says: "If I wish to extricate myself from a
|
|||
|
dangerous position, I must consider not only the enemy's ability
|
|||
|
to injure me, but also my own ability to gain an advantage over
|
|||
|
the enemy. If in my counsels these two considerations are
|
|||
|
properly blended, I shall succeed in liberating myself.... For
|
|||
|
instance; if I am surrounded by the enemy and only think of
|
|||
|
effecting an escape, the nervelessness of my policy will incite
|
|||
|
my adversary to pursue and crush me; it would be far better to
|
|||
|
encourage my men to deliver a bold counter-attack, and use the
|
|||
|
advantage thus gained to free myself from the enemy's toils."
|
|||
|
See the story of Ts`ao Ts`ao, VII. ss. 35, note.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
10. Reduce the hostile chiefs by inflicting damage on them;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chia Lin enumerates several ways of inflicting this injury,
|
|||
|
some of which would only occur to the Oriental mind:--"Entice
|
|||
|
away the enemy's best and wisest men, so that he may be left
|
|||
|
without counselors. Introduce traitors into his country, that
|
|||
|
the government policy may be rendered futile. Foment intrigue
|
|||
|
and deceit, and thus sow dissension between the ruler and his
|
|||
|
ministers. By means of every artful contrivance, cause
|
|||
|
deterioration amongst his men and waste of his treasure. Corrupt
|
|||
|
his morals by insidious gifts leading him into excess. Disturb
|
|||
|
and unsettle his mind by presenting him with lovely women."
|
|||
|
Chang Yu (after Wang Hsi) makes a different interpretation of Sun
|
|||
|
Tzu here: "Get the enemy into a position where he must suffer
|
|||
|
injury, and he will submit of his own accord."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and make trouble for them,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu, in this phrase, in his interpretation indicates that
|
|||
|
trouble should be make for the enemy affecting their
|
|||
|
"possessions," or, as we might say, "assets," which he considers
|
|||
|
to be "a large army, a rich exchequer, harmony amongst the
|
|||
|
soldiers, punctual fulfillment of commands." These give us a
|
|||
|
whip-hand over the enemy.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and keep them constantly engaged;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Literally, "make servants of them." Tu Yu says "prevent
|
|||
|
the from having any rest."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
hold out specious allurements, and make them rush to any given
|
|||
|
point.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Meng Shih's note contains an excellent example of the
|
|||
|
idiomatic use of: "cause them to forget PIEN (the reasons for
|
|||
|
acting otherwise than on their first impulse), and hasten in our
|
|||
|
direction."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
11. The art of war teaches us to rely not on the likelihood
|
|||
|
of the enemy's not coming, but on our own readiness to receive
|
|||
|
him; not on the chance of his not attacking, but rather on the
|
|||
|
fact that we have made our position unassailable.
|
|||
|
12. There are five dangerous faults which may affect a
|
|||
|
general: (1) Recklessness, which leads to destruction;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["Bravery without forethought," as Ts`ao Kung analyzes it,
|
|||
|
which causes a man to fight blindly and desperately like a mad
|
|||
|
bull. Such an opponent, says Chang Yu, "must not be encountered
|
|||
|
with brute force, but may be lured into an ambush and slain."
|
|||
|
Cf. Wu Tzu, chap. IV. ad init.: "In estimating the character of
|
|||
|
a general, men are wont to pay exclusive attention to his
|
|||
|
courage, forgetting that courage is only one out of many
|
|||
|
qualities which a general should possess. The merely brave man
|
|||
|
is prone to fight recklessly; and he who fights recklessly,
|
|||
|
without any perception of what is expedient, must be condemned."
|
|||
|
Ssu-ma Fa, too, make the incisive remark: "Simply going to one's
|
|||
|
death does not bring about victory."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(2) cowardice, which leads to capture;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ts`ao Kung defines the Chinese word translated here as
|
|||
|
"cowardice" as being of the man "whom timidity prevents from
|
|||
|
advancing to seize an advantage," and Wang Hsi adds "who is quick
|
|||
|
to flee at the sight of danger." Meng Shih gives the closer
|
|||
|
paraphrase "he who is bent on returning alive," this is, the man
|
|||
|
who will never take a risk. But, as Sun Tzu knew, nothing is to
|
|||
|
be achieved in war unless you are willing to take risks. T`ai
|
|||
|
Kung said: "He who lets an advantage slip will subsequently
|
|||
|
bring upon himself real disaster." In 404 A.D., Liu Yu pursued
|
|||
|
the rebel Huan Hsuan up the Yangtsze and fought a naval battle
|
|||
|
with him at the island of Ch`eng-hung. The loyal troops numbered
|
|||
|
only a few thousands, while their opponents were in great force.
|
|||
|
But Huan Hsuan, fearing the fate which was in store for him
|
|||
|
should be be overcome, had a light boat made fast to the side of
|
|||
|
his war-junk, so that he might escape, if necessary, at a
|
|||
|
moment's notice. The natural result was that the fighting spirit
|
|||
|
of his soldiers was utterly quenched, and when the loyalists made
|
|||
|
an attack from windward with fireships, all striving with the
|
|||
|
utmost ardor to be first in the fray, Huan Hsuan's forces were
|
|||
|
routed, had to burn all their baggage and fled for two days and
|
|||
|
nights without stopping. Chang Yu tells a somewhat similar story
|
|||
|
of Chao Ying-ch`i, a general of the Chin State who during a
|
|||
|
battle with the army of Ch`u in 597 B.C. had a boat kept in
|
|||
|
readiness for him on the river, wishing in case of defeat to be
|
|||
|
the first to get across.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(3) a hasty temper, which can be provoked by insults;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu tells us that Yao Hsing, when opposed in 357 A.D. by
|
|||
|
Huang Mei, Teng Ch`iang and others shut himself up behind his
|
|||
|
walls and refused to fight. Teng Ch`iang said: "Our adversary
|
|||
|
is of a choleric temper and easily provoked; let us make constant
|
|||
|
sallies and break down his walls, then he will grow angry and
|
|||
|
come out. Once we can bring his force to battle, it is doomed to
|
|||
|
be our prey." This plan was acted upon, Yao Hsiang came out to
|
|||
|
fight, was lured as far as San-yuan by the enemy's pretended
|
|||
|
flight, and finally attacked and slain.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(4) a delicacy of honor which is sensitive to shame;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[This need not be taken to mean that a sense of honor is
|
|||
|
really a defect in a general. What Sun Tzu condemns is rather an
|
|||
|
exaggerated sensitiveness to slanderous reports, the thin-skinned
|
|||
|
man who is stung by opprobrium, however undeserved. Mei Yao-
|
|||
|
ch`en truly observes, though somewhat paradoxically: "The seek
|
|||
|
after glory should be careless of public opinion."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(5) over-solicitude for his men, which exposes him to worry
|
|||
|
and trouble.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Here again, Sun Tzu does not mean that the general is to be
|
|||
|
careless of the welfare of his troops. All he wishes to
|
|||
|
emphasize is the danger of sacrificing any important military
|
|||
|
advantage to the immediate comfort of his men. This is a
|
|||
|
shortsighted policy, because in the long run the troops will
|
|||
|
suffer more from the defeat, or, at best, the prolongation of the
|
|||
|
war, which will be the consequence. A mistaken feeling of pity
|
|||
|
will often induce a general to relieve a beleaguered city, or to
|
|||
|
reinforce a hard-pressed detachment, contrary to his military
|
|||
|
instincts. It is now generally admitted that our repeated
|
|||
|
efforts to relieve Ladysmith in the South African War were so
|
|||
|
many strategical blunders which defeated their own purpose. And
|
|||
|
in the end, relief came through the very man who started out with
|
|||
|
the distinct resolve no longer to subordinate the interests of
|
|||
|
the whole to sentiment in favor of a part. An old soldier of one
|
|||
|
of our generals who failed most conspicuously in this war, tried
|
|||
|
once, I remember, to defend him to me on the ground that he was
|
|||
|
always "so good to his men." By this plea, had he but known it,
|
|||
|
he was only condemning him out of Sun Tzu's mouth.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
13. These are the five besetting sins of a general, ruinous
|
|||
|
to the conduct of war.
|
|||
|
14. When an army is overthrown and its leader slain, the
|
|||
|
cause will surely be found among these five dangerous faults.
|
|||
|
Let them be a subject of meditation.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[1] "Marshal Turenne," p. 50.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IX. THE ARMY ON THE MARCH
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The contents of this interesting chapter are better
|
|||
|
indicated in ss. 1 than by this heading.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. Sun Tzu said: We come now to the question of encamping
|
|||
|
the army, and observing signs of the enemy. Pass quickly over
|
|||
|
mountains, and keep in the neighborhood of valleys.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The idea is, not to linger among barren uplands, but to
|
|||
|
keep close to supplies of water and grass. Cf. Wu Tzu, ch. 3:
|
|||
|
"Abide not in natural ovens," i.e. "the openings of valleys."
|
|||
|
Chang Yu tells the following anecdote: Wu-tu Ch`iang was a
|
|||
|
robber captain in the time of the Later Han, and Ma Yuan was sent
|
|||
|
to exterminate his gang. Ch`iang having found a refuge in the
|
|||
|
hills, Ma Yuan made no attempt to force a battle, but seized all
|
|||
|
the favorable positions commanding supplies of water and forage.
|
|||
|
Ch`iang was soon in such a desperate plight for want of
|
|||
|
provisions that he was forced to make a total surrender. He did
|
|||
|
not know the advantage of keeping in the neighborhood of
|
|||
|
valleys."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2. Camp in high places,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Not on high hills, but on knolls or hillocks elevated above
|
|||
|
the surrounding country.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
facing the sun.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu takes this to mean "facing south," and Ch`en Hao
|
|||
|
"facing east." Cf. infra, SS. 11, 13.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Do not climb heights in order to fight. So much for mountain
|
|||
|
warfare.
|
|||
|
3. After crossing a river, you should get far away from it.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["In order to tempt the enemy to cross after you," according
|
|||
|
to Ts`ao Kung, and also, says Chang Yu, "in order not to be
|
|||
|
impeded in your evolutions." The T`UNG TIEN reads, "If THE ENEMY
|
|||
|
crosses a river," etc. But in view of the next sentence, this is
|
|||
|
almost certainly an interpolation.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
4. When an invading force crosses a river in its onward
|
|||
|
march, do not advance to meet it in mid-stream. It will be best
|
|||
|
to let half the army get across, and then deliver your attack.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Li Ch`uan alludes to the great victory won by Han Hsin over
|
|||
|
Lung Chu at the Wei River. Turning to the CH`IEN HAN SHU, ch.
|
|||
|
34, fol. 6 verso, we find the battle described as follows: "The
|
|||
|
two armies were drawn up on opposite sides of the river. In the
|
|||
|
night, Han Hsin ordered his men to take some ten thousand sacks
|
|||
|
filled with sand and construct a dam higher up. Then, leading
|
|||
|
half his army across, he attacked Lung Chu; but after a time,
|
|||
|
pretending to have failed in his attempt, he hastily withdrew to
|
|||
|
the other bank. Lung Chu was much elated by this unlooked-for
|
|||
|
success, and exclaiming: "I felt sure that Han Hsin was really a
|
|||
|
coward!" he pursued him and began crossing the river in his turn.
|
|||
|
Han Hsin now sent a party to cut open the sandbags, thus
|
|||
|
releasing a great volume of water, which swept down and prevented
|
|||
|
the greater portion of Lung Chu's army from getting across. He
|
|||
|
then turned upon the force which had been cut off, and
|
|||
|
annihilated it, Lung Chu himself being amongst the slain. The
|
|||
|
rest of the army, on the further bank, also scattered and fled in
|
|||
|
all directions.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
5. If you are anxious to fight, you should not go to meet
|
|||
|
the invader near a river which he has to cross.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[For fear of preventing his crossing.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
6. Moor your craft higher up than the enemy, and facing the
|
|||
|
sun.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[See supra, ss. 2. The repetition of these words in
|
|||
|
connection with water is very awkward. Chang Yu has the note:
|
|||
|
"Said either of troops marshaled on the river-bank, or of boats
|
|||
|
anchored in the stream itself; in either case it is essential to
|
|||
|
be higher than the enemy and facing the sun." The other
|
|||
|
commentators are not at all explicit.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Do not move up-stream to meet the enemy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu says: "As water flows downwards, we must not pitch
|
|||
|
our camp on the lower reaches of a river, for fear the enemy
|
|||
|
should open the sluices and sweep us away in a flood. Chu-ko Wu-
|
|||
|
hou has remarked that 'in river warfare we must not advance
|
|||
|
against the stream,' which is as much as to say that our fleet
|
|||
|
must not be anchored below that of the enemy, for then they would
|
|||
|
be able to take advantage of the current and make short work of
|
|||
|
us." There is also the danger, noted by other commentators, that
|
|||
|
the enemy may throw poison on the water to be carried down to
|
|||
|
us.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So much for river warfare.
|
|||
|
7. In crossing salt-marshes, your sole concern should be to
|
|||
|
get over them quickly, without any delay.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Because of the lack of fresh water, the poor quality of the
|
|||
|
herbage, and last but not least, because they are low, flat, and
|
|||
|
exposed to attack.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
8. If forced to fight in a salt-marsh, you should have
|
|||
|
water and grass near you, and get your back to a clump of trees.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Li Ch`uan remarks that the ground is less likely to be
|
|||
|
treacherous where there are trees, while Tu Mu says that they
|
|||
|
will serve to protect the rear.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So much for operations in salt-marches.
|
|||
|
9. In dry, level country, take up an easily accessible
|
|||
|
position with rising ground to your right and on your rear,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu quotes T`ai Kung as saying: "An army should have a
|
|||
|
stream or a marsh on its left, and a hill or tumulus on its
|
|||
|
right."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
so that the danger may be in front, and safety lie behind. So
|
|||
|
much for campaigning in flat country.
|
|||
|
10. These are the four useful branches of military
|
|||
|
knowledge
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Those, namely, concerned with (1) mountains, (2) rivers,
|
|||
|
(3) marshes, and (4) plains. Compare Napoleon's "Military
|
|||
|
Maxims," no. 1.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
which enabled the Yellow Emperor to vanquish four several
|
|||
|
sovereigns.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Regarding the "Yellow Emperor": Mei Yao-ch`en asks, with
|
|||
|
some plausibility, whether there is an error in the text as
|
|||
|
nothing is known of Huang Ti having conquered four other
|
|||
|
Emperors. The SHIH CHI (ch. 1 ad init.) speaks only of his
|
|||
|
victories over Yen Ti and Ch`ih Yu. In the LIU T`AO it is
|
|||
|
mentioned that he "fought seventy battles and pacified the
|
|||
|
Empire." Ts`ao Kung's explanation is, that the Yellow Emperor
|
|||
|
was the first to institute the feudal system of vassals princes,
|
|||
|
each of whom (to the number of four) originally bore the title of
|
|||
|
Emperor. Li Ch`uan tells us that the art of war originated under
|
|||
|
Huang Ti, who received it from his Minister Feng Hou.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
11. All armies prefer high ground to low.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["High Ground," says Mei Yao-ch`en, "is not only more
|
|||
|
agreement and salubrious, but more convenient from a military
|
|||
|
point of view; low ground is not only damp and unhealthy, but
|
|||
|
also disadvantageous for fighting."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and sunny places to dark.
|
|||
|
12. If you are careful of your men,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ts`ao Kung says: "Make for fresh water and pasture, where
|
|||
|
you can turn out your animals to graze."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and camp on hard ground, the army will be free from disease of
|
|||
|
every kind,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu says: "The dryness of the climate will prevent
|
|||
|
the outbreak of illness."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and this will spell victory.
|
|||
|
13. When you come to a hill or a bank, occupy the sunny
|
|||
|
side, with the slope on your right rear. Thus you will at once
|
|||
|
act for the benefit of your soldiers and utilize the natural
|
|||
|
advantages of the ground.
|
|||
|
14. When, in consequence of heavy rains up-country, a river
|
|||
|
which you wish to ford is swollen and flecked with foam, you must
|
|||
|
wait until it subsides.
|
|||
|
15. Country in which there are precipitous cliffs with
|
|||
|
torrents running between, deep natural hollows,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The latter defined as "places enclosed on every side by
|
|||
|
steep banks, with pools of water at the bottom.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
confined places,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Defined as "natural pens or prisons" or "places surrounded
|
|||
|
by precipices on three sides--easy to get into, but hard to get
|
|||
|
out of."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
tangled thickets,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Defined as "places covered with such dense undergrowth that
|
|||
|
spears cannot be used."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
quagmires
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Defined as "low-lying places, so heavy with mud as to be
|
|||
|
impassable for chariots and horsemen."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and crevasses,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Defined by Mei Yao-ch`en as "a narrow difficult way between
|
|||
|
beetling cliffs." Tu Mu's note is "ground covered with trees and
|
|||
|
rocks, and intersected by numerous ravines and pitfalls." This
|
|||
|
is very vague, but Chia Lin explains it clearly enough as a
|
|||
|
defile or narrow pass, and Chang Yu takes much the same view. On
|
|||
|
the whole, the weight of the commentators certainly inclines to
|
|||
|
the rendering "defile." But the ordinary meaning of the Chinese
|
|||
|
in one place is "a crack or fissure" and the fact that the
|
|||
|
meaning of the Chinese elsewhere in the sentence indicates
|
|||
|
something in the nature of a defile, make me think that Sun Tzu
|
|||
|
is here speaking of crevasses.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
should be left with all possible speed and not approached.
|
|||
|
16. While we keep away from such places, we should get the
|
|||
|
enemy to approach them; while we face them, we should let the
|
|||
|
enemy have them on his rear.
|
|||
|
17. If in the neighborhood of your camp there should be any
|
|||
|
hilly country, ponds surrounded by aquatic grass, hollow basins
|
|||
|
filled with reeds, or woods with thick undergrowth, they must be
|
|||
|
carefully routed out and searched; for these are places where men
|
|||
|
in ambush or insidious spies are likely to be lurking.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu has the note: "We must also be on our guard
|
|||
|
against traitors who may lie in close covert, secretly spying out
|
|||
|
our weaknesses and overhearing our instructions."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
18. When the enemy is close at hand and remains quiet, he
|
|||
|
is relying on the natural strength of his position.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Here begin Sun Tzu's remarks on the reading of signs, much
|
|||
|
of which is so good that it could almost be included in a modern
|
|||
|
manual like Gen. Baden-Powell's "Aids to Scouting."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
19. When he keeps aloof and tries to provoke a battle, he
|
|||
|
is anxious for the other side to advance.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Probably because we are in a strong position from which he
|
|||
|
wishes to dislodge us. "If he came close up to us, says Tu Mu,
|
|||
|
"and tried to force a battle, he would seem to despise us, and
|
|||
|
there would be less probability of our responding to the
|
|||
|
challenge."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
20. If his place of encampment is easy of access, he is
|
|||
|
tendering a bait.
|
|||
|
21. Movement amongst the trees of a forest shows that the
|
|||
|
enemy is advancing.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ts`ao Kung explains this as "felling trees to clear a
|
|||
|
passage," and Chang Yu says: "Every man sends out scouts to
|
|||
|
climb high places and observe the enemy. If a scout sees that
|
|||
|
the trees of a forest are moving and shaking, he may know that
|
|||
|
they are being cut down to clear a passage for the enemy's
|
|||
|
march."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The appearance of a number of screens in the midst of thick grass
|
|||
|
means that the enemy wants to make us suspicious.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Yu's explanation, borrowed from Ts`ao Kung's, is as
|
|||
|
follows: "The presence of a number of screens or sheds in the
|
|||
|
midst of thick vegetation is a sure sign that the enemy has fled
|
|||
|
and, fearing pursuit, has constructed these hiding-places in
|
|||
|
order to make us suspect an ambush." It appears that these
|
|||
|
"screens" were hastily knotted together out of any long grass
|
|||
|
which the retreating enemy happened to come across.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
22. The rising of birds in their flight is the sign of an
|
|||
|
ambuscade.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu's explanation is doubtless right: "When birds
|
|||
|
that are flying along in a straight line suddenly shoot upwards,
|
|||
|
it means that soldiers are in ambush at the spot beneath."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Startled beasts indicate that a sudden attack is coming.
|
|||
|
23. When there is dust rising in a high column, it is the
|
|||
|
sign of chariots advancing; when the dust is low, but spread over
|
|||
|
a wide area, it betokens the approach of infantry.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["High and sharp," or rising to a peak, is of course
|
|||
|
somewhat exaggerated as applied to dust. The commentators
|
|||
|
explain the phenomenon by saying that horses and chariots, being
|
|||
|
heavier than men, raise more dust, and also follow one another in
|
|||
|
the same wheel-track, whereas foot-soldiers would be marching in
|
|||
|
ranks, many abreast. According to Chang Yu, "every army on the
|
|||
|
march must have scouts some way in advance, who on sighting dust
|
|||
|
raised by the enemy, will gallop back and report it to the
|
|||
|
commander-in-chief." Cf. Gen. Baden-Powell: "As you move along,
|
|||
|
say, in a hostile country, your eyes should be looking afar for
|
|||
|
the enemy or any signs of him: figures, dust rising, birds
|
|||
|
getting up, glitter of arms, etc." [1] ]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When it branches out in different directions, it shows that
|
|||
|
parties have been sent to collect firewood. A few clouds of dust
|
|||
|
moving to and fro signify that the army is encamping.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu says: "In apportioning the defenses for a
|
|||
|
cantonment, light horse will be sent out to survey the position
|
|||
|
and ascertain the weak and strong points all along its
|
|||
|
circumference. Hence the small quantity of dust and its
|
|||
|
motion."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
24. Humble words and increased preparations are signs that
|
|||
|
the enemy is about to advance.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["As though they stood in great fear of us," says Tu Mu.
|
|||
|
"Their object is to make us contemptuous and careless, after
|
|||
|
which they will attack us." Chang Yu alludes to the story of
|
|||
|
T`ien Tan of the Ch`i-mo against the Yen forces, led by Ch`i
|
|||
|
Chieh. In ch. 82 of the SHIH CHI we read: "T`ien Tan openly
|
|||
|
said: 'My only fear is that the Yen army may cut off the noses
|
|||
|
of their Ch`i prisoners and place them in the front rank to fight
|
|||
|
against us; that would be the undoing of our city.' The other
|
|||
|
side being informed of this speech, at once acted on the
|
|||
|
suggestion; but those within the city were enraged at seeing
|
|||
|
their fellow-countrymen thus mutilated, and fearing only lest
|
|||
|
they should fall into the enemy's hands, were nerved to defend
|
|||
|
themselves more obstinately than ever. Once again T`ien Tan sent
|
|||
|
back converted spies who reported these words to the enemy:
|
|||
|
"What I dread most is that the men of Yen may dig up the
|
|||
|
ancestral tombs outside the town, and by inflicting this
|
|||
|
indignity on our forefathers cause us to become faint-hearted.'
|
|||
|
Forthwith the besiegers dug up all the graves and burned the
|
|||
|
corpses lying in them. And the inhabitants of Chi-mo, witnessing
|
|||
|
the outrage from the city-walls, wept passionately and were all
|
|||
|
impatient to go out and fight, their fury being increased
|
|||
|
tenfold. T`ien Tan knew then that his soldiers were ready for
|
|||
|
any enterprise. But instead of a sword, he himself too a
|
|||
|
mattock in his hands, and ordered others to be distributed
|
|||
|
amongst his best warriors, while the ranks were filled up with
|
|||
|
their wives and concubines. He then served out all the remaining
|
|||
|
rations and bade his men eat their fill. The regular soldiers
|
|||
|
were told to keep out of sight, and the walls were manned with
|
|||
|
the old and weaker men and with women. This done, envoys were
|
|||
|
dispatched to the enemy's camp to arrange terms of surrender,
|
|||
|
whereupon the Yen army began shouting for joy. T`ien Tan also
|
|||
|
collected 20,000 ounces of silver from the people, and got the
|
|||
|
wealthy citizens of Chi-mo to send it to the Yen general with the
|
|||
|
prayer that, when the town capitulated, he would allow their
|
|||
|
homes to be plundered or their women to be maltreated. Ch`i
|
|||
|
Chieh, in high good humor, granted their prayer; but his army now
|
|||
|
became increasingly slack and careless. Meanwhile, T`ien Tan got
|
|||
|
together a thousand oxen, decked them with pieces of red silk,
|
|||
|
painted their bodies, dragon-like, with colored stripes, and
|
|||
|
fastened sharp blades on their horns and well-greased rushes on
|
|||
|
their tails. When night came on, he lighted the ends of the
|
|||
|
rushes, and drove the oxen through a number of holes which he had
|
|||
|
pierced in the walls, backing them up with a force of 5000 picked
|
|||
|
warriors. The animals, maddened with pain, dashed furiously
|
|||
|
into the enemy's camp where they caused the utmost confusion and
|
|||
|
dismay; for their tails acted as torches, showing up the hideous
|
|||
|
pattern on their bodies, and the weapons on their horns killed or
|
|||
|
wounded any with whom they came into contact. In the meantime,
|
|||
|
the band of 5000 had crept up with gags in their mouths, and now
|
|||
|
threw themselves on the enemy. At the same moment a frightful
|
|||
|
din arose in the city itself, all those that remained behind
|
|||
|
making as much noise as possible by banging drums and hammering
|
|||
|
on bronze vessels, until heaven and earth were convulsed by the
|
|||
|
uproar. Terror-stricken, the Yen army fled in disorder, hotly
|
|||
|
pursued by the men of Ch`i, who succeeded in slaying their
|
|||
|
general Ch`i Chien.... The result of the battle was the ultimate
|
|||
|
recovery of some seventy cities which had belonged to the Ch`i
|
|||
|
State."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Violent language and driving forward as if to the attack are
|
|||
|
signs that he will retreat.
|
|||
|
25. When the light chariots come out first and take up a
|
|||
|
position on the wings, it is a sign that the enemy is forming for
|
|||
|
battle.
|
|||
|
26. Peace proposals unaccompanied by a sworn covenant
|
|||
|
indicate a plot.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The reading here is uncertain. Li Ch`uan indicates "a
|
|||
|
treaty confirmed by oaths and hostages." Wang Hsi and Chang Yu,
|
|||
|
on the other hand, simply say "without reason," "on a frivolous
|
|||
|
pretext."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
27. When there is much running about
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Every man hastening to his proper place under his own
|
|||
|
regimental banner.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and the soldiers fall into rank, it means that the critical
|
|||
|
moment has come.
|
|||
|
28. When some are seen advancing and some retreating, it is
|
|||
|
a lure.
|
|||
|
29. When the soldiers stand leaning on their spears, they
|
|||
|
are faint from want of food.
|
|||
|
30. If those who are sent to draw water begin by drinking
|
|||
|
themselves, the army is suffering from thirst.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[As Tu Mu remarks: "One may know the condition of a whole
|
|||
|
army from the behavior of a single man."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
31. If the enemy sees an advantage to be gained and makes
|
|||
|
no effort to secure it, the soldiers are exhausted.
|
|||
|
32. If birds gather on any spot, it is unoccupied.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[A useful fact to bear in mind when, for instance, as Ch`en
|
|||
|
Hao says, the enemy has secretly abandoned his camp.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Clamor by night betokens nervousness.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
33. If there is disturbance in the camp, the general's
|
|||
|
authority is weak. If the banners and flags are shifted about,
|
|||
|
sedition is afoot. If the officers are angry, it means that the
|
|||
|
men are weary.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu understands the sentence differently: "If all the
|
|||
|
officers of an army are angry with their general, it means that
|
|||
|
they are broken with fatigue" owing to the exertions which he has
|
|||
|
demanded from them.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
34. When an army feeds its horses with grain and kills its
|
|||
|
cattle for food,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[In the ordinary course of things, the men would be fed on
|
|||
|
grain and the horses chiefly on grass.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and when the men do not hang their cooking-pots over the camp-
|
|||
|
fires, showing that they will not return to their tents, you may
|
|||
|
know that they are determined to fight to the death.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[I may quote here the illustrative passage from the HOU HAN
|
|||
|
SHU, ch. 71, given in abbreviated form by the P`EI WEN YUN FU:
|
|||
|
"The rebel Wang Kuo of Liang was besieging the town of Ch`en-
|
|||
|
ts`ang, and Huang-fu Sung, who was in supreme command, and Tung
|
|||
|
Cho were sent out against him. The latter pressed for hasty
|
|||
|
measures, but Sung turned a deaf ear to his counsel. At last the
|
|||
|
rebels were utterly worn out, and began to throw down their
|
|||
|
weapons of their own accord. Sung was not advancing to the
|
|||
|
attack, but Cho said: 'It is a principle of war not to pursue
|
|||
|
desperate men and not to press a retreating host.' Sung
|
|||
|
answered: 'That does not apply here. What I am about to attack
|
|||
|
is a jaded army, not a retreating host; with disciplined troops I
|
|||
|
am falling on a disorganized multitude, not a band of desperate
|
|||
|
men.' Thereupon he advances to the attack unsupported by his
|
|||
|
colleague, and routed the enemy, Wang Kuo being slain."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
35. The sight of men whispering together in small knots or
|
|||
|
speaking in subdued tones points to disaffection amongst the rank
|
|||
|
and file.
|
|||
|
36. Too frequent rewards signify that the enemy is at the
|
|||
|
end of his resources;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Because, when an army is hard pressed, as Tu Mu says, there
|
|||
|
is always a fear of mutiny, and lavish rewards are given to keep
|
|||
|
the men in good temper.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
too many punishments betray a condition of dire distress.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Because in such case discipline becomes relaxed, and
|
|||
|
unwonted severity is necessary to keep the men to their duty.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
37. To begin by bluster, but afterwards to take fright at
|
|||
|
the enemy's numbers, shows a supreme lack of intelligence.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[I follow the interpretation of Ts`ao Kung, also adopted by
|
|||
|
Li Ch`uan, Tu Mu, and Chang Yu. Another possible meaning set
|
|||
|
forth by Tu Yu, Chia Lin, Mei Tao-ch`en and Wang Hsi, is: "The
|
|||
|
general who is first tyrannical towards his men, and then in
|
|||
|
terror lest they should mutiny, etc." This would connect the
|
|||
|
sentence with what went before about rewards and punishments.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
38. When envoys are sent with compliments in their mouths,
|
|||
|
it is a sign that the enemy wishes for a truce.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu says: "If the enemy open friendly relations be
|
|||
|
sending hostages, it is a sign that they are anxious for an
|
|||
|
armistice, either because their strength is exhausted or for some
|
|||
|
other reason." But it hardly needs a Sun Tzu to draw such an
|
|||
|
obvious inference.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
39. If the enemy's troops march up angrily and remain
|
|||
|
facing ours for a long time without either joining battle or
|
|||
|
taking themselves off again, the situation is one that demands
|
|||
|
great vigilance and circumspection.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ts`ao Kung says a maneuver of this sort may be only a ruse
|
|||
|
to gain time for an unexpected flank attack or the laying of an
|
|||
|
ambush.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
40. If our troops are no more in number than the enemy,
|
|||
|
that is amply sufficient; it only means that no direct attack can
|
|||
|
be made.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Literally, "no martial advance." That is to say, CHENG
|
|||
|
tactics and frontal attacks must be eschewed, and stratagem
|
|||
|
resorted to instead.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What we can do is simply to concentrate all our available
|
|||
|
strength, keep a close watch on the enemy, and obtain
|
|||
|
reinforcements.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[This is an obscure sentence, and none of the commentators
|
|||
|
succeed in squeezing very good sense out of it. I follow Li
|
|||
|
Ch`uan, who appears to offer the simplest explanation: "Only the
|
|||
|
side that gets more men will win." Fortunately we have Chang Yu
|
|||
|
to expound its meaning to us in language which is lucidity
|
|||
|
itself: "When the numbers are even, and no favorable opening
|
|||
|
presents itself, although we may not be strong enough to deliver
|
|||
|
a sustained attack, we can find additional recruits amongst our
|
|||
|
sutlers and camp-followers, and then, concentrating our forces
|
|||
|
and keeping a close watch on the enemy, contrive to snatch the
|
|||
|
victory. But we must avoid borrowing foreign soldiers to help
|
|||
|
us." He then quotes from Wei Liao Tzu, ch. 3: "The nominal
|
|||
|
strength of mercenary troops may be 100,000, but their real value
|
|||
|
will be not more than half that figure."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
41. He who exercises no forethought but makes light of his
|
|||
|
opponents is sure to be captured by them.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ch`en Hao, quoting from the TSO CHUAN, says: "If bees and
|
|||
|
scorpions carry poison, how much more will a hostile state! Even
|
|||
|
a puny opponent, then, should not be treated with contempt."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
42. If soldiers are punished before they have grown
|
|||
|
attached to you, they will not prove submissive; and, unless
|
|||
|
submissive, then will be practically useless. If, when the
|
|||
|
soldiers have become attached to you, punishments are not
|
|||
|
enforced, they will still be unless.
|
|||
|
43. Therefore soldiers must be treated in the first
|
|||
|
instance with humanity, but kept under control by means of iron
|
|||
|
discipline.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Yen Tzu [B.C. 493] said of Ssu-ma Jang-chu: "His civil
|
|||
|
virtues endeared him to the people; his martial prowess kept his
|
|||
|
enemies in awe." Cf. Wu Tzu, ch. 4 init.: "The ideal commander
|
|||
|
unites culture with a warlike temper; the profession of arms
|
|||
|
requires a combination of hardness and tenderness."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This is a certain road to victory.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
44. If in training soldiers commands are habitually
|
|||
|
enforced, the army will be well-disciplined; if not, its
|
|||
|
discipline will be bad.
|
|||
|
45. If a general shows confidence in his men but always
|
|||
|
insists on his orders being obeyed,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu says: "A general ought in time of peace to show
|
|||
|
kindly confidence in his men and also make his authority
|
|||
|
respected, so that when they come to face the enemy, orders may
|
|||
|
be executed and discipline maintained, because they all trust and
|
|||
|
look up to him." What Sun Tzu has said in ss. 44, however, would
|
|||
|
lead one rather to expect something like this: "If a general is
|
|||
|
always confident that his orders will be carried out," etc."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
the gain will be mutual.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu says: "The general has confidence in the men
|
|||
|
under his command, and the men are docile, having confidence in
|
|||
|
him. Thus the gain is mutual" He quotes a pregnant sentence
|
|||
|
from Wei Liao Tzu, ch. 4: "The art of giving orders is not to
|
|||
|
try to rectify minor blunders and not to be swayed by petty
|
|||
|
doubts." Vacillation and fussiness are the surest means of
|
|||
|
sapping the confidence of an army.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[1] "Aids to Scouting," p. 26.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
X. TERRAIN
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Only about a third of the chapter, comprising ss. ss. 1-13,
|
|||
|
deals with "terrain," the subject being more fully treated in ch.
|
|||
|
XI. The "six calamities" are discussed in SS. 14-20, and the
|
|||
|
rest of the chapter is again a mere string of desultory remarks,
|
|||
|
though not less interesting, perhaps, on that account.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. Sun Tzu said: We may distinguish six kinds of terrain,
|
|||
|
to wit: (1) Accessible ground;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Mei Yao-ch`en says: "plentifully provided with roads and
|
|||
|
means of communications."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(2) entangling ground;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The same commentator says: "Net-like country, venturing
|
|||
|
into which you become entangled."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(3) temporizing ground;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ground which allows you to "stave off" or "delay."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(4) narrow passes; (5) precipitous heights; (6) positions at a
|
|||
|
great distance from the enemy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[It is hardly necessary to point out the faultiness of this
|
|||
|
classification. A strange lack of logical perception is shown in
|
|||
|
the Chinaman's unquestioning acceptance of glaring cross-
|
|||
|
divisions such as the above.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2. Ground which can be freely traversed by both sides is
|
|||
|
called ACCESSIBLE.
|
|||
|
3. With regard to ground of this nature, be before the
|
|||
|
enemy in occupying the raised and sunny spots, and carefully
|
|||
|
guard your line of supplies.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The general meaning of the last phrase is doubtlessly, as
|
|||
|
Tu Yu says, "not to allow the enemy to cut your communications."
|
|||
|
In view of Napoleon's dictum, "the secret of war lies in the
|
|||
|
communications," [1] we could wish that Sun Tzu had done more
|
|||
|
than skirt the edge of this important subject here and in I. ss.
|
|||
|
10, VII. ss. 11. Col. Henderson says: "The line of supply may
|
|||
|
be said to be as vital to the existence of an army as the heart
|
|||
|
to the life of a human being. Just as the duelist who finds his
|
|||
|
adversary's point menacing him with certain death, and his own
|
|||
|
guard astray, is compelled to conform to his adversary's
|
|||
|
movements, and to content himself with warding off his thrusts,
|
|||
|
so the commander whose communications are suddenly threatened
|
|||
|
finds himself in a false position, and he will be fortunate if he
|
|||
|
has not to change all his plans, to split up his force into more
|
|||
|
or less isolated detachments, and to fight with inferior numbers
|
|||
|
on ground which he has not had time to prepare, and where defeat
|
|||
|
will not be an ordinary failure, but will entail the ruin or
|
|||
|
surrender of his whole army." [2]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Then you will be able to fight with advantage.
|
|||
|
4. Ground which can be abandoned but is hard to re-occupy
|
|||
|
is called ENTANGLING.
|
|||
|
5. From a position of this sort, if the enemy is
|
|||
|
unprepared, you may sally forth and defeat him. But if the enemy
|
|||
|
is prepared for your coming, and you fail to defeat him, then,
|
|||
|
return being impossible, disaster will ensue.
|
|||
|
6. When the position is such that neither side will gain by
|
|||
|
making the first move, it is called TEMPORIZING ground.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu says: "Each side finds it inconvenient to move, and
|
|||
|
the situation remains at a deadlock."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
7. In a position of this sort, even though the enemy should
|
|||
|
offer us an attractive bait,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Yu says, "turning their backs on us and pretending to
|
|||
|
flee." But this is only one of the lures which might induce us
|
|||
|
to quit our position.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
it will be advisable not to stir forth, but rather to retreat,
|
|||
|
thus enticing the enemy in his turn; then, when part of his army
|
|||
|
has come out, we may deliver our attack with advantage.
|
|||
|
8. With regard to NARROW PASSES, if you can occupy them
|
|||
|
first, let them be strongly garrisoned and await the advent of
|
|||
|
the enemy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Because then, as Tu Yu observes, "the initiative will lie
|
|||
|
with us, and by making sudden and unexpected attacks we shall
|
|||
|
have the enemy at our mercy."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
9. Should the army forestall you in occupying a pass, do
|
|||
|
not go after him if the pass is fully garrisoned, but only if it
|
|||
|
is weakly garrisoned.
|
|||
|
10. With regard to PRECIPITOUS HEIGHTS, if you are
|
|||
|
beforehand with your adversary, you should occupy the raised and
|
|||
|
sunny spots, and there wait for him to come up.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ts`ao Kung says: "The particular advantage of securing
|
|||
|
heights and defiles is that your actions cannot then be dictated
|
|||
|
by the enemy." [For the enunciation of the grand principle
|
|||
|
alluded to, see VI. ss. 2]. Chang Yu tells the following
|
|||
|
anecdote of P`ei Hsing-chien (A.D. 619-682), who was sent on a
|
|||
|
punitive expedition against the Turkic tribes. "At night he
|
|||
|
pitched his camp as usual, and it had already been completely
|
|||
|
fortified by wall and ditch, when suddenly he gave orders that
|
|||
|
the army should shift its quarters to a hill near by. This was
|
|||
|
highly displeasing to his officers, who protested loudly against
|
|||
|
the extra fatigue which it would entail on the men. P`ei Hsing-
|
|||
|
chien, however, paid no heed to their remonstrances and had the
|
|||
|
camp moved as quickly as possible. The same night, a terrific
|
|||
|
storm came on, which flooded their former place of encampment to
|
|||
|
the depth of over twelve feet. The recalcitrant officers were
|
|||
|
amazed at the sight, and owned that they had been in the wrong.
|
|||
|
'How did you know what was going to happen?' they asked. P`ei
|
|||
|
Hsing-chien replied: 'From this time forward be content to obey
|
|||
|
orders without asking unnecessary questions.' From this it may
|
|||
|
be seen," Chang Yu continues, "that high and sunny places are
|
|||
|
advantageous not only for fighting, but also because they are
|
|||
|
immune from disastrous floods."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
11. If the enemy has occupied them before you, do not
|
|||
|
follow him, but retreat and try to entice him away.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The turning point of Li Shih-min's campaign in 621 A.D.
|
|||
|
against the two rebels, Tou Chien-te, King of Hsia, and Wang
|
|||
|
Shih-ch`ung, Prince of Cheng, was his seizure of the heights of
|
|||
|
Wu-lao, in spike of which Tou Chien-te persisted in his attempt
|
|||
|
to relieve his ally in Lo-yang, was defeated and taken prisoner.
|
|||
|
See CHIU T`ANG, ch. 2, fol. 5 verso, and also ch. 54.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
12. If you are situated at a great distance from the enemy,
|
|||
|
and the strength of the two armies is equal, it is not easy to
|
|||
|
provoke a battle,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The point is that we must not think of undertaking a long
|
|||
|
and wearisome march, at the end of which, as Tu Yu says, "we
|
|||
|
should be exhausted and our adversary fresh and keen."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and fighting will be to your disadvantage.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
13. These six are the principles connected with Earth.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Or perhaps, "the principles relating to ground." See,
|
|||
|
however, I. ss. 8.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The general who has attained a responsible post must be careful
|
|||
|
to study them.
|
|||
|
14. Now an army is exposed to six several calamities, not
|
|||
|
arising from natural causes, but from faults for which the
|
|||
|
general is responsible. These are: (1) Flight; (2)
|
|||
|
insubordination; (3) collapse; (4) ruin; (5) disorganization; (6)
|
|||
|
rout.
|
|||
|
15. Other conditions being equal, if one force is hurled
|
|||
|
against another ten times its size, the result will be the FLIGHT
|
|||
|
of the former.
|
|||
|
16. When the common soldiers are too strong and their
|
|||
|
officers too weak, the result is INSUBORDINATION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu cites the unhappy case of T`ien Pu [HSIN T`ANG SHU,
|
|||
|
ch. 148], who was sent to Wei in 821 A.D. with orders to lead an
|
|||
|
army against Wang T`ing-ts`ou. But the whole time he was in
|
|||
|
command, his soldiers treated him with the utmost contempt, and
|
|||
|
openly flouted his authority by riding about the camp on donkeys,
|
|||
|
several thousands at a time. T`ien Pu was powerless to put a
|
|||
|
stop to this conduct, and when, after some months had passed, he
|
|||
|
made an attempt to engage the enemy, his troops turned tail and
|
|||
|
dispersed in every direction. After that, the unfortunate man
|
|||
|
committed suicide by cutting his throat.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When the officers are too strong and the common soldiers too
|
|||
|
weak, the result is COLLAPSE.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ts`ao Kung says: "The officers are energetic and want to
|
|||
|
press on, the common soldiers are feeble and suddenly collapse."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
17. When the higher officers are angry and insubordinate,
|
|||
|
and on meeting the enemy give battle on their own account from a
|
|||
|
feeling of resentment, before the commander-in-chief can tell
|
|||
|
whether or no he is in a position to fight, the result is RUIN.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Wang Hsi`s note is: "This means, the general is angry
|
|||
|
without cause, and at the same time does not appreciate the
|
|||
|
ability of his subordinate officers; thus he arouses fierce
|
|||
|
resentment and brings an avalanche of ruin upon his head."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
18. When the general is weak and without authority; when
|
|||
|
his orders are not clear and distinct;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Wei Liao Tzu (ch. 4) says: "If the commander gives his
|
|||
|
orders with decision, the soldiers will not wait to hear them
|
|||
|
twice; if his moves are made without vacillation, the soldiers
|
|||
|
will not be in two minds about doing their duty." General Baden-
|
|||
|
Powell says, italicizing the words: "The secret of getting
|
|||
|
successful work out of your trained men lies in one nutshell--in
|
|||
|
the clearness of the instructions they receive." [3] Cf. also
|
|||
|
Wu Tzu ch. 3: "the most fatal defect in a military leader is
|
|||
|
difference; the worst calamities that befall an army arise from
|
|||
|
hesitation."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
when there are no fixes duties assigned to officers and men,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu says: "Neither officers nor men have any regular
|
|||
|
routine."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and the ranks are formed in a slovenly haphazard manner, the
|
|||
|
result is utter DISORGANIZATION.
|
|||
|
19. When a general, unable to estimate the enemy's
|
|||
|
strength, allows an inferior force to engage a larger one, or
|
|||
|
hurls a weak detachment against a powerful one, and neglects to
|
|||
|
place picked soldiers in the front rank, the result must be ROUT.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu paraphrases the latter part of the sentence and
|
|||
|
continues: "Whenever there is fighting to be done, the keenest
|
|||
|
spirits should be appointed to serve in the front ranks, both in
|
|||
|
order to strengthen the resolution of our own men and to
|
|||
|
demoralize the enemy." Cf. the primi ordines of Caesar ("De
|
|||
|
Bello Gallico," V. 28, 44, et al.).]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
20. These are six ways of courting defeat, which must be
|
|||
|
carefully noted by the general who has attained a responsible
|
|||
|
post.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[See supra, ss. 13.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
21. The natural formation of the country is the soldier's
|
|||
|
best ally;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ch`en Hao says: "The advantages of weather and season are
|
|||
|
not equal to those connected with ground."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
but a power of estimating the adversary, of controlling the
|
|||
|
forces of victory, and of shrewdly calculating difficulties,
|
|||
|
dangers and distances, constitutes the test of a great general.
|
|||
|
22. He who knows these things, and in fighting puts his
|
|||
|
knowledge into practice, will win his battles. He who knows them
|
|||
|
not, nor practices them, will surely be defeated.
|
|||
|
23. If fighting is sure to result in victory, then you must
|
|||
|
fight, even though the ruler forbid it; if fighting will not
|
|||
|
result in victory, then you must not fight even at the ruler's
|
|||
|
bidding.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Cf. VIII. ss. 3 fin. Huang Shih-kung of the Ch`in dynasty,
|
|||
|
who is said to have been the patron of Chang Liang and to have
|
|||
|
written the SAN LUEH, has these words attributed to him: "The
|
|||
|
responsibility of setting an army in motion must devolve on the
|
|||
|
general alone; if advance and retreat are controlled from the
|
|||
|
Palace, brilliant results will hardly be achieved. Hence the
|
|||
|
god-like ruler and the enlightened monarch are content to play a
|
|||
|
humble part in furthering their country's cause [lit., kneel down
|
|||
|
to push the chariot wheel]." This means that "in matters lying
|
|||
|
outside the zenana, the decision of the military commander must
|
|||
|
be absolute." Chang Yu also quote the saying: "Decrees from the
|
|||
|
Son of Heaven do not penetrate the walls of a camp."]
|
|||
|
24. The general who advances without coveting fame and
|
|||
|
retreats without fearing disgrace,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[It was Wellington, I think, who said that the hardest thing
|
|||
|
of all for a soldier is to retreat.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
whose only thought is to protect his country and do good service
|
|||
|
for his sovereign, is the jewel of the kingdom.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[A noble presentiment, in few words, of the Chinese "happy
|
|||
|
warrior." Such a man, says Ho Shih, "even if he had to suffer
|
|||
|
punishment, would not regret his conduct."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
25. Regard your soldiers as your children, and they will
|
|||
|
follow you into the deepest valleys; look upon them as your own
|
|||
|
beloved sons, and they will stand by you even unto death.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Cf. I. ss. 6. In this connection, Tu Mu draws for us an
|
|||
|
engaging picture of the famous general Wu Ch`i, from whose
|
|||
|
treatise on war I have frequently had occasion to quote: "He
|
|||
|
wore the same clothes and ate the same food as the meanest of his
|
|||
|
soldiers, refused to have either a horse to ride or a mat to
|
|||
|
sleep on, carried his own surplus rations wrapped in a parcel,
|
|||
|
and shared every hardship with his men. One of his soldiers was
|
|||
|
suffering from an abscess, and Wu Ch`i himself sucked out the
|
|||
|
virus. The soldier's mother, hearing this, began wailing and
|
|||
|
lamenting. Somebody asked her, saying: 'Why do you cry? Your
|
|||
|
son is only a common soldier, and yet the commander-in-chief
|
|||
|
himself has sucked the poison from his sore.' The woman replied,
|
|||
|
'Many years ago, Lord Wu performed a similar service for my
|
|||
|
husband, who never left him afterwards, and finally met his death
|
|||
|
at the hands of the enemy. And now that he has done the same for
|
|||
|
my son, he too will fall fighting I know not where.'" Li Ch`uan
|
|||
|
mentions the Viscount of Ch`u, who invaded the small state of
|
|||
|
Hsiao during the winter. The Duke of Shen said to him: "Many of
|
|||
|
the soldiers are suffering severely from the cold." So he made a
|
|||
|
round of the whole army, comforting and encouraging the men; and
|
|||
|
straightway they felt as if they were clothed in garments lined
|
|||
|
with floss silk.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
26. If, however, you are indulgent, but unable to make your
|
|||
|
authority felt; kind-hearted, but unable to enforce your
|
|||
|
commands; and incapable, moreover, of quelling disorder: then
|
|||
|
your soldiers must be likened to spoilt children; they are
|
|||
|
useless for any practical purpose.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Li Ching once said that if you could make your soldiers
|
|||
|
afraid of you, they would not be afraid of the enemy. Tu Mu
|
|||
|
recalls an instance of stern military discipline which occurred
|
|||
|
in 219 A.D., when Lu Meng was occupying the town of Chiang-ling.
|
|||
|
He had given stringent orders to his army not to molest the
|
|||
|
inhabitants nor take anything from them by force. Nevertheless,
|
|||
|
a certain officer serving under his banner, who happened to be a
|
|||
|
fellow-townsman, ventured to appropriate a bamboo hat belonging
|
|||
|
to one of the people, in order to wear it over his regulation
|
|||
|
helmet as a protection against the rain. Lu Meng considered that
|
|||
|
the fact of his being also a native of Ju-nan should not be
|
|||
|
allowed to palliate a clear breach of discipline, and accordingly
|
|||
|
he ordered his summary execution, the tears rolling down his
|
|||
|
face, however, as he did so. This act of severity filled the
|
|||
|
army with wholesome awe, and from that time forth even articles
|
|||
|
dropped in the highway were not picked up.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
27. If we know that our own men are in a condition to
|
|||
|
attack, but are unaware that the enemy is not open to attack, we
|
|||
|
have gone only halfway towards victory.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[That is, Ts`ao Kung says, "the issue in this case is
|
|||
|
uncertain."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
28. If we know that the enemy is open to attack, but are
|
|||
|
unaware that our own men are not in a condition to attack, we
|
|||
|
have gone only halfway towards victory.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Cf. III. ss. 13 (1).]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
29. If we know that the enemy is open to attack, and also
|
|||
|
know that our men are in a condition to attack, but are unaware
|
|||
|
that the nature of the ground makes fighting impracticable, we
|
|||
|
have still gone only halfway towards victory.
|
|||
|
30. Hence the experienced soldier, once in motion, is never
|
|||
|
bewildered; once he has broken camp, he is never at a loss.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The reason being, according to Tu Mu, that he has taken his
|
|||
|
measures so thoroughly as to ensure victory beforehand. "He does
|
|||
|
not move recklessly," says Chang Yu, "so that when he does move,
|
|||
|
he makes no mistakes."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
31. Hence the saying: If you know the enemy and know
|
|||
|
yourself, your victory will not stand in doubt; if you know
|
|||
|
Heaven and know Earth, you may make your victory complete.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Li Ch`uan sums up as follows: "Given a knowledge of three
|
|||
|
things--the affairs of men, the seasons of heaven and the natural
|
|||
|
advantages of earth--, victory will invariably crown your
|
|||
|
battles."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[1] See "Pensees de Napoleon 1er," no. 47.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[2] "The Science of War," chap. 2.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[3] "Aids to Scouting," p. xii.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
XI. THE NINE SITUATIONS
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. Sun Tzu said: The art of war recognizes nine varieties
|
|||
|
of ground: (1) Dispersive ground; (2) facile ground; (3)
|
|||
|
contentious ground; (4) open ground; (5) ground of intersecting
|
|||
|
highways; (6) serious ground; (7) difficult ground; (8) hemmed-in
|
|||
|
ground; (9) desperate ground.
|
|||
|
2. When a chieftain is fighting in his own territory, it is
|
|||
|
dispersive ground.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[So called because the soldiers, being near to their homes
|
|||
|
and anxious to see their wives and children, are likely to seize
|
|||
|
the opportunity afforded by a battle and scatter in every
|
|||
|
direction. "In their advance," observes Tu Mu, "they will lack
|
|||
|
the valor of desperation, and when they retreat, they will find
|
|||
|
harbors of refuge."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
3. When he has penetrated into hostile territory, but to no
|
|||
|
great distance, it is facile ground.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Li Ch`uan and Ho Shih say "because of the facility for
|
|||
|
retreating," and the other commentators give similar
|
|||
|
explanations. Tu Mu remarks: "When your army has crossed the
|
|||
|
border, you should burn your boats and bridges, in order to make
|
|||
|
it clear to everybody that you have no hankering after home."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
4. Ground the possession of which imports great advantage
|
|||
|
to either side, is contentious ground.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu defines the ground as ground "to be contended for."
|
|||
|
Ts`ao Kung says: "ground on which the few and the weak can
|
|||
|
defeat the many and the strong," such as "the neck of a pass,"
|
|||
|
instanced by Li Ch`uan. Thus, Thermopylae was of this
|
|||
|
classification because the possession of it, even for a few days
|
|||
|
only, meant holding the entire invading army in check and thus
|
|||
|
gaining invaluable time. Cf. Wu Tzu, ch. V. ad init.: "For
|
|||
|
those who have to fight in the ratio of one to ten, there is
|
|||
|
nothing better than a narrow pass." When Lu Kuang was returning
|
|||
|
from his triumphant expedition to Turkestan in 385 A.D., and had
|
|||
|
got as far as I-ho, laden with spoils, Liang Hsi, administrator
|
|||
|
of Liang-chou, taking advantage of the death of Fu Chien, King of
|
|||
|
Ch`in, plotted against him and was for barring his way into the
|
|||
|
province. Yang Han, governor of Kao-ch`ang, counseled him,
|
|||
|
saying: "Lu Kuang is fresh from his victories in the west, and
|
|||
|
his soldiers are vigorous and mettlesome. If we oppose him in
|
|||
|
the shifting sands of the desert, we shall be no match for him,
|
|||
|
and we must therefore try a different plan. Let us hasten to
|
|||
|
occupy the defile at the mouth of the Kao-wu pass, thus cutting
|
|||
|
him off from supplies of water, and when his troops are
|
|||
|
prostrated with thirst, we can dictate our own terms without
|
|||
|
moving. Or if you think that the pass I mention is too far off,
|
|||
|
we could make a stand against him at the I-wu pass, which is
|
|||
|
nearer. The cunning and resource of Tzu-fang himself would be
|
|||
|
expended in vain against the enormous strength of these two
|
|||
|
positions." Liang Hsi, refusing to act on this advice, was
|
|||
|
overwhelmed and swept away by the invader.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
5. Ground on which each side has liberty of movement is
|
|||
|
open ground.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[There are various interpretations of the Chinese adjective
|
|||
|
for this type of ground. Ts`ao Kung says it means "ground
|
|||
|
covered with a network of roads," like a chessboard. Ho Shih
|
|||
|
suggested: "ground on which intercommunication is easy."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
6. Ground which forms the key to three contiguous states,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ts`au Kung defines this as: "Our country adjoining the
|
|||
|
enemy's and a third country conterminous with both." Meng Shih
|
|||
|
instances the small principality of Cheng, which was bounded on
|
|||
|
the north-east by Ch`i, on the west by Chin, and on the south by
|
|||
|
Ch`u.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
so that he who occupies it first has most of the Empire at his
|
|||
|
command,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The belligerent who holds this dominating position can
|
|||
|
constrain most of them to become his allies.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
is a ground of intersecting highways.
|
|||
|
7. When an army has penetrated into the heart of a hostile
|
|||
|
country, leaving a number of fortified cities in its rear, it is
|
|||
|
serious ground.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Wang Hsi explains the name by saying that "when an army has
|
|||
|
reached such a point, its situation is serious."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
8. Mountain forests,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Or simply "forests."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
rugged steeps, marshes and fens--all country that is hard to
|
|||
|
traverse: this is difficult ground.
|
|||
|
9. Ground which is reached through narrow gorges, and from
|
|||
|
which we can only retire by tortuous paths, so that a small
|
|||
|
number of the enemy would suffice to crush a large body of our
|
|||
|
men: this is hemmed in ground.
|
|||
|
10. Ground on which we can only be saved from destruction
|
|||
|
by fighting without delay, is desperate ground.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The situation, as pictured by Ts`ao Kung, is very similar
|
|||
|
to the "hemmed-in ground" except that here escape is no longer
|
|||
|
possible: "A lofty mountain in front, a large river behind,
|
|||
|
advance impossible, retreat blocked." Ch`en Hao says: "to be on
|
|||
|
'desperate ground' is like sitting in a leaking boat or crouching
|
|||
|
in a burning house." Tu Mu quotes from Li Ching a vivid
|
|||
|
description of the plight of an army thus entrapped: "Suppose an
|
|||
|
army invading hostile territory without the aid of local guides:
|
|||
|
-- it falls into a fatal snare and is at the enemy's mercy. A
|
|||
|
ravine on the left, a mountain on the right, a pathway so
|
|||
|
perilous that the horses have to be roped together and the
|
|||
|
chariots carried in slings, no passage open in front, retreat cut
|
|||
|
off behind, no choice but to proceed in single file. Then,
|
|||
|
before there is time to range our soldiers in order of battle,
|
|||
|
the enemy is overwhelming strength suddenly appears on the scene.
|
|||
|
Advancing, we can nowhere take a breathing-space; retreating, we
|
|||
|
have no haven of refuge. We seek a pitched battle, but in vain;
|
|||
|
yet standing on the defensive, none of us has a moment's respite.
|
|||
|
If we simply maintain our ground, whole days and months will
|
|||
|
crawl by; the moment we make a move, we have to sustain the
|
|||
|
enemy's attacks on front and rear. The country is wild,
|
|||
|
destitute of water and plants; the army is lacking in the
|
|||
|
necessaries of life, the horses are jaded and the men worn-out,
|
|||
|
all the resources of strength and skill unavailing, the pass so
|
|||
|
narrow that a single man defending it can check the onset of ten
|
|||
|
thousand; all means of offense in the hands of the enemy, all
|
|||
|
points of vantage already forfeited by ourselves:--in this
|
|||
|
terrible plight, even though we had the most valiant soldiers and
|
|||
|
the keenest of weapons, how could they be employed with the
|
|||
|
slightest effect?" Students of Greek history may be reminded of
|
|||
|
the awful close to the Sicilian expedition, and the agony of the
|
|||
|
Athenians under Nicias and Demonsthenes. [See Thucydides, VII.
|
|||
|
78 sqq.].]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
11. On dispersive ground, therefore, fight not. On facile
|
|||
|
ground, halt not. On contentious ground, attack not.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[But rather let all your energies be bent on occupying the
|
|||
|
advantageous position first. So Ts`ao Kung. Li Ch`uan and
|
|||
|
others, however, suppose the meaning to be that the enemy has
|
|||
|
already forestalled us, sot that it would be sheer madness to
|
|||
|
attack. In the SUN TZU HSU LU, when the King of Wu inquires what
|
|||
|
should be done in this case, Sun Tzu replies: "The rule with
|
|||
|
regard to contentious ground is that those in possession have the
|
|||
|
advantage over the other side. If a position of this kind is
|
|||
|
secured first by the enemy, beware of attacking him. Lure him
|
|||
|
away by pretending to flee--show your banners and sound your
|
|||
|
drums--make a dash for other places that he cannot afford to
|
|||
|
lose--trail brushwood and raise a dust--confound his ears and
|
|||
|
eyes--detach a body of your best troops, and place it secretly in
|
|||
|
ambuscade. Then your opponent will sally forth to the rescue."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
12. On open ground, do not try to block the enemy's way.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Because the attempt would be futile, and would expose the
|
|||
|
blocking force itself to serious risks. There are two
|
|||
|
interpretations available here. I follow that of Chang Yu. The
|
|||
|
other is indicated in Ts`ao Kung's brief note: "Draw closer
|
|||
|
together"--i.e., see that a portion of your own army is not cut
|
|||
|
off.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On the ground of intersecting highways, join hands with your
|
|||
|
allies.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Or perhaps, "form alliances with neighboring states."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
13. On serious ground, gather in plunder.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[On this, Li Ch`uan has the following delicious note: "When
|
|||
|
an army penetrates far into the enemy's country, care must be
|
|||
|
taken not to alienate the people by unjust treatment. Follow the
|
|||
|
example of the Han Emperor Kao Tsu, whose march into Ch`in
|
|||
|
territory was marked by no violation of women or looting of
|
|||
|
valuables. [Nota bene: this was in 207 B.C., and may well cause
|
|||
|
us to blush for the Christian armies that entered Peking in 1900
|
|||
|
A.D.] Thus he won the hearts of all. In the present passage,
|
|||
|
then, I think that the true reading must be, not 'plunder,' but
|
|||
|
'do not plunder.'" Alas, I fear that in this instance the worthy
|
|||
|
commentator's feelings outran his judgment. Tu Mu, at least, has
|
|||
|
no such illusions. He says: "When encamped on 'serious ground,'
|
|||
|
there being no inducement as yet to advance further, and no
|
|||
|
possibility of retreat, one ought to take measures for a
|
|||
|
protracted resistance by bringing in provisions from all sides,
|
|||
|
and keep a close watch on the enemy."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In difficult ground, keep steadily on the march.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Or, in the words of VIII. ss. 2, "do not encamp.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
14. On hemmed-in ground, resort to stratagem.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ts`au Kung says: "Try the effect of some unusual
|
|||
|
artifice;" and Tu Yu amplifies this by saying: "In such a
|
|||
|
position, some scheme must be devised which will suit the
|
|||
|
circumstances, and if we can succeed in deluding the enemy, the
|
|||
|
peril may be escaped." This is exactly what happened on the
|
|||
|
famous occasion when Hannibal was hemmed in among the mountains
|
|||
|
on the road to Casilinum, and to all appearances entrapped by the
|
|||
|
dictator Fabius. The stratagem which Hannibal devised to baffle
|
|||
|
his foes was remarkably like that which T`ien Tan had also
|
|||
|
employed with success exactly 62 years before. [See IX. ss. 24,
|
|||
|
note.] When night came on, bundles of twigs were fastened to the
|
|||
|
horns of some 2000 oxen and set on fire, the terrified animals
|
|||
|
being then quickly driven along the mountain side towards the
|
|||
|
passes which were beset by the enemy. The strange spectacle of
|
|||
|
these rapidly moving lights so alarmed and discomfited the Romans
|
|||
|
that they withdrew from their position, and Hannibal's army
|
|||
|
passed safely through the defile. [See Polybius, III. 93, 94;
|
|||
|
Livy, XXII. 16 17.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On desperate ground, fight.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[For, as Chia Lin remarks: "if you fight with all your
|
|||
|
might, there is a chance of life; where as death is certain if
|
|||
|
you cling to your corner."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
15. Those who were called skillful leaders of old knew how
|
|||
|
to drive a wedge between the enemy's front and rear;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[More literally, "cause the front and rear to lose touch
|
|||
|
with each other."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
to prevent co-operation between his large and small divisions; to
|
|||
|
hinder the good troops from rescuing the bad, the officers from
|
|||
|
rallying their men.
|
|||
|
16. When the enemy's men were united, they managed to keep
|
|||
|
them in disorder.
|
|||
|
17. When it was to their advantage, they made a forward
|
|||
|
move; when otherwise, they stopped still.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Mei Yao-ch`en connects this with the foregoing: "Having
|
|||
|
succeeded in thus dislocating the enemy, they would push forward
|
|||
|
in order to secure any advantage to be gained; if there was no
|
|||
|
advantage to be gained, they would remain where they were."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
18. If asked how to cope with a great host of the enemy in
|
|||
|
orderly array and on the point of marching to the attack, I
|
|||
|
should say: "Begin by seizing something which your opponent
|
|||
|
holds dear; then he will be amenable to your will."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Opinions differ as to what Sun Tzu had in mind. Ts`ao Kung
|
|||
|
thinks it is "some strategical advantage on which the enemy is
|
|||
|
depending." Tu Mu says: "The three things which an enemy is
|
|||
|
anxious to do, and on the accomplishment of which his success
|
|||
|
depends, are: (1) to capture our favorable positions; (2) to
|
|||
|
ravage our cultivated land; (3) to guard his own communications."
|
|||
|
Our object then must be to thwart his plans in these three
|
|||
|
directions and thus render him helpless. [Cf. III. ss. 3.] By
|
|||
|
boldly seizing the initiative in this way, you at once throw the
|
|||
|
other side on the defensive.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
19. Rapidity is the essence of war:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[According to Tu Mu, "this is a summary of leading
|
|||
|
principles in warfare," and he adds: "These are the profoundest
|
|||
|
truths of military science, and the chief business of the
|
|||
|
general." The following anecdotes, told by Ho Shih, shows the
|
|||
|
importance attached to speed by two of China's greatest generals.
|
|||
|
In 227 A.D., Meng Ta, governor of Hsin-ch`eng under the Wei
|
|||
|
Emperor Wen Ti, was meditating defection to the House of Shu, and
|
|||
|
had entered into correspondence with Chu-ko Liang, Prime Minister
|
|||
|
of that State. The Wei general Ssu-ma I was then military
|
|||
|
governor of Wan, and getting wind of Meng Ta's treachery, he at
|
|||
|
once set off with an army to anticipate his revolt, having
|
|||
|
previously cajoled him by a specious message of friendly import.
|
|||
|
Ssu-ma's officers came to him and said: "If Meng Ta has leagued
|
|||
|
himself with Wu and Shu, the matter should be thoroughly
|
|||
|
investigated before we make a move." Ssu-ma I replied: "Meng Ta
|
|||
|
is an unprincipled man, and we ought to go and punish him at
|
|||
|
once, while he is still wavering and before he has thrown off the
|
|||
|
mask." Then, by a series of forced marches, be brought his army
|
|||
|
under the walls of Hsin-ch`eng with in a space of eight days.
|
|||
|
Now Meng Ta had previously said in a letter to Chu-ko Liang:
|
|||
|
"Wan is 1200 LI from here. When the news of my revolt reaches
|
|||
|
Ssu-ma I, he will at once inform his imperial master, but it will
|
|||
|
be a whole month before any steps can be taken, and by that time
|
|||
|
my city will be well fortified. Besides, Ssu-ma I is sure not to
|
|||
|
come himself, and the generals that will be sent against us are
|
|||
|
not worth troubling about." The next letter, however, was filled
|
|||
|
with consternation: "Though only eight days have passed since I
|
|||
|
threw off my allegiance, an army is already at the city-gates.
|
|||
|
What miraculous rapidity is this!" A fortnight later, Hsin-
|
|||
|
ch`eng had fallen and Meng Ta had lost his head. [See
|
|||
|
CHIN SHU, ch. 1, f. 3.] In 621 A.D., Li Ching was sent from
|
|||
|
K`uei-chou in Ssu-ch`uan to reduce the successful rebel Hsiao
|
|||
|
Hsien, who had set up as Emperor at the modern Ching-chou Fu in
|
|||
|
Hupeh. It was autumn, and the Yangtsze being then in flood,
|
|||
|
Hsiao Hsien never dreamt that his adversary would venture to come
|
|||
|
down through the gorges, and consequently made no preparations.
|
|||
|
But Li Ching embarked his army without loss of time, and was just
|
|||
|
about to start when the other generals implored him to postpone
|
|||
|
his departure until the river was in a less dangerous state for
|
|||
|
navigation. Li Ching replied: "To the soldier, overwhelming
|
|||
|
speed is of paramount importance, and he must never miss
|
|||
|
opportunities. Now is the time to strike, before Hsiao Hsien
|
|||
|
even knows that we have got an army together. If we seize the
|
|||
|
present moment when the river is in flood, we shall appear before
|
|||
|
his capital with startling suddenness, like the thunder which is
|
|||
|
heard before you have time to stop your ears against it. [See
|
|||
|
VII. ss. 19, note.] This is the great principle in war. Even if
|
|||
|
he gets to know of our approach, he will have to levy his
|
|||
|
soldiers in such a hurry that they will not be fit to oppose us.
|
|||
|
Thus the full fruits of victory will be ours." All came about as
|
|||
|
he predicted, and Hsiao Hsien was obliged to surrender, nobly
|
|||
|
stipulating that his people should be spared and he alone suffer
|
|||
|
the penalty of death.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
take advantage of the enemy's unreadiness, make your way by
|
|||
|
unexpected routes, and attack unguarded spots.
|
|||
|
20. The following are the principles to be observed by an
|
|||
|
invading force: The further you penetrate into a country, the
|
|||
|
greater will be the solidarity of your troops, and thus the
|
|||
|
defenders will not prevail against you.
|
|||
|
21. Make forays in fertile country in order to supply your
|
|||
|
army with food.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Cf. supra, ss. 13. Li Ch`uan does not venture on a note
|
|||
|
here.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
22. Carefully study the well-being of your men,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[For "well-being", Wang Hsi means, "Pet them, humor them,
|
|||
|
give them plenty of food and drink, and look after them
|
|||
|
generally."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and do not overtax them. Concentrate your energy and hoard your
|
|||
|
strength.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ch`en recalls the line of action adopted in 224 B.C. by the
|
|||
|
famous general Wang Chien, whose military genius largely
|
|||
|
contributed to the success of the First Emperor. He had invaded
|
|||
|
the Ch`u State, where a universal levy was made to oppose him.
|
|||
|
But, being doubtful of the temper of his troops, he declined all
|
|||
|
invitations to fight and remained strictly on the defensive. In
|
|||
|
vain did the Ch`u general try to force a battle: day after day
|
|||
|
Wang Chien kept inside his walls and would not come out, but
|
|||
|
devoted his whole time and energy to winning the affection and
|
|||
|
confidence of his men. He took care that they should be well
|
|||
|
fed, sharing his own meals with them, provided facilities for
|
|||
|
bathing, and employed every method of judicious indulgence to
|
|||
|
weld them into a loyal and homogenous body. After some time had
|
|||
|
elapsed, he told off certain persons to find out how the men were
|
|||
|
amusing themselves. The answer was, that they were contending
|
|||
|
with one another in putting the weight and long-jumping. When
|
|||
|
Wang Chien heard that they were engaged in these athletic
|
|||
|
pursuits, he knew that their spirits had been strung up to the
|
|||
|
required pitch and that they were now ready for fighting. By
|
|||
|
this time the Ch`u army, after repeating their challenge again
|
|||
|
and again, had marched away eastwards in disgust. The Ch`in
|
|||
|
general immediately broke up his camp and followed them, and in
|
|||
|
the battle that ensued they were routed with great slaughter.
|
|||
|
Shortly afterwards, the whole of Ch`u was conquered by Ch`in, and
|
|||
|
the king Fu-ch`u led into captivity.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Keep your army continually on the move,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[In order that the enemy may never know exactly where you
|
|||
|
are. It has struck me, however, that the true reading might be
|
|||
|
"link your army together."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and devise unfathomable plans.
|
|||
|
23. Throw your soldiers into positions whence there is no
|
|||
|
escape, and they will prefer death to flight. If they will face
|
|||
|
death, there is nothing they may not achieve.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu quotes his favorite Wei Liao Tzu (ch. 3): "If one
|
|||
|
man were to run amok with a sword in the market-place, and
|
|||
|
everybody else tried to get our of his way, I should not allow
|
|||
|
that this man alone had courage and that all the rest were
|
|||
|
contemptible cowards. The truth is, that a desperado and a man
|
|||
|
who sets some value on his life do not meet on even terms."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Officers and men alike will put forth their uttermost strength.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu says: "If they are in an awkward place together,
|
|||
|
they will surely exert their united strength to get out of it."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
24. Soldiers when in desperate straits lose the sense of
|
|||
|
fear. If there is no place of refuge, they will stand firm. If
|
|||
|
they are in hostile country, they will show a stubborn front. If
|
|||
|
there is no help for it, they will fight hard.
|
|||
|
25. Thus, without waiting to be marshaled, the soldiers
|
|||
|
will be constantly on the qui vive; without waiting to be asked,
|
|||
|
they will do your will;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Literally, "without asking, you will get."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
without restrictions, they will be faithful; without giving
|
|||
|
orders, they can be trusted.
|
|||
|
26. Prohibit the taking of omens, and do away with
|
|||
|
superstitious doubts. Then, until death itself comes, no
|
|||
|
calamity need be feared.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The superstitious, "bound in to saucy doubts and fears,"
|
|||
|
degenerate into cowards and "die many times before their deaths."
|
|||
|
Tu Mu quotes Huang Shih-kung: "'Spells and incantations should
|
|||
|
be strictly forbidden, and no officer allowed to inquire by
|
|||
|
divination into the fortunes of an army, for fear the soldiers'
|
|||
|
minds should be seriously perturbed.' The meaning is," he
|
|||
|
continues, "that if all doubts and scruples are discarded, your
|
|||
|
men will never falter in their resolution until they die."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
27. If our soldiers are not overburdened with money, it is
|
|||
|
not because they have a distaste for riches; if their lives are
|
|||
|
not unduly long, it is not because they are disinclined to
|
|||
|
longevity.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu has the best note on this passage: "Wealth and
|
|||
|
long life are things for which all men have a natural
|
|||
|
inclination. Hence, if they burn or fling away valuables, and
|
|||
|
sacrifice their own lives, it is not that they dislike them, but
|
|||
|
simply that they have no choice." Sun Tzu is slyly insinuating
|
|||
|
that, as soldiers are but human, it is for the general to see
|
|||
|
that temptations to shirk fighting and grow rich are not thrown
|
|||
|
in their way.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
28. On the day they are ordered out to battle, your
|
|||
|
soldiers may weep,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The word in the Chinese is "snivel." This is taken to
|
|||
|
indicate more genuine grief than tears alone.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
those sitting up bedewing their garments, and those lying down
|
|||
|
letting the tears run down their cheeks.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Not because they are afraid, but because, as Ts`ao Kung
|
|||
|
says, "all have embraced the firm resolution to do or die." We
|
|||
|
may remember that the heroes of the Iliad were equally childlike
|
|||
|
in showing their emotion. Chang Yu alludes to the mournful
|
|||
|
parting at the I River between Ching K`o and his friends, when
|
|||
|
the former was sent to attempt the life of the King of Ch`in
|
|||
|
(afterwards First Emperor) in 227 B.C. The tears of all flowed
|
|||
|
down like rain as he bade them farewell and uttered the following
|
|||
|
lines: "The shrill blast is blowing, Chilly the burn; Your
|
|||
|
champion is going--Not to return." [1] ]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But let them once be brought to bay, and they will display the
|
|||
|
courage of a Chu or a Kuei.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chu was the personal name of Chuan Chu, a native of the Wu
|
|||
|
State and contemporary with Sun Tzu himself, who was employed by
|
|||
|
Kung-tzu Kuang, better known as Ho Lu Wang, to assassinate his
|
|||
|
sovereign Wang Liao with a dagger which he secreted in the belly
|
|||
|
of a fish served up at a banquet. He succeeded in his attempt,
|
|||
|
but was immediately hacked to pieced by the king's bodyguard.
|
|||
|
This was in 515 B.C. The other hero referred to, Ts`ao Kuei (or
|
|||
|
Ts`ao Mo), performed the exploit which has made his name famous
|
|||
|
166 years earlier, in 681 B.C. Lu had been thrice defeated by
|
|||
|
Ch`i, and was just about to conclude a treaty surrendering a
|
|||
|
large slice of territory, when Ts`ao Kuei suddenly seized Huan
|
|||
|
Kung, the Duke of Ch`i, as he stood on the altar steps and held a
|
|||
|
dagger against his chest. None of the duke's retainers dared to
|
|||
|
move a muscle, and Ts`ao Kuei proceeded to demand full
|
|||
|
restitution, declaring the Lu was being unjustly treated because
|
|||
|
she was a smaller and a weaker state. Huan Kung, in peril of his
|
|||
|
life, was obliged to consent, whereupon Ts`ao Kuei flung away his
|
|||
|
dagger and quietly resumed his place amid the terrified
|
|||
|
assemblage without having so much as changed color. As was to be
|
|||
|
expected, the Duke wanted afterwards to repudiate the bargain,
|
|||
|
but his wise old counselor Kuan Chung pointed out to him the
|
|||
|
impolicy of breaking his word, and the upshot was that this bold
|
|||
|
stroke regained for Lu the whole of what she had lost in three
|
|||
|
pitched battles.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
29. The skillful tactician may be likened to the SHUAI-JAN.
|
|||
|
Now the SHUAI-JAN is a snake that is found in the Ch`ang
|
|||
|
mountains.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["Shuai-jan" means "suddenly" or "rapidly," and the snake in
|
|||
|
question was doubtless so called owing to the rapidity of its
|
|||
|
movements. Through this passage, the term in the Chinese has now
|
|||
|
come to be used in the sense of "military maneuvers."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Strike at its head, and you will be attacked by its tail; strike
|
|||
|
at its tail, and you will be attacked by its head; strike at its
|
|||
|
middle, and you will be attacked by head and tail both.
|
|||
|
30. Asked if an army can be made to imitate the SHUAI-JAN,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[That is, as Mei Yao-ch`en says, "Is it possible to make the
|
|||
|
front and rear of an army each swiftly responsive to attack on
|
|||
|
the other, just as though they were part of a single living
|
|||
|
body?"]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I should answer, Yes. For the men of Wu and the men of Yueh are
|
|||
|
enemies;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Cf. VI. ss. 21.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
yet if they are crossing a river in the same boat and are caught
|
|||
|
by a storm, they will come to each other's assistance just as the
|
|||
|
left hand helps the right.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The meaning is: If two enemies will help each other in a
|
|||
|
time of common peril, how much more should two parts of the same
|
|||
|
army, bound together as they are by every tie of interest and
|
|||
|
fellow-feeling. Yet it is notorious that many a campaign has
|
|||
|
been ruined through lack of cooperation, especially in the case
|
|||
|
of allied armies.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
31. Hence it is not enough to put one's trust in the
|
|||
|
tethering of horses, and the burying of chariot wheels in the
|
|||
|
ground
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[These quaint devices to prevent one's army from running
|
|||
|
away recall the Athenian hero Sophanes, who carried the anchor
|
|||
|
with him at the battle of Plataea, by means of which he fastened
|
|||
|
himself firmly to one spot. [See Herodotus, IX. 74.] It is not
|
|||
|
enough, says Sun Tzu, to render flight impossible by such
|
|||
|
mechanical means. You will not succeed unless your men have
|
|||
|
tenacity and unity of purpose, and, above all, a spirit of
|
|||
|
sympathetic cooperation. This is the lesson which can be learned
|
|||
|
from the SHUAI-JAN.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
32. The principle on which to manage an army is to set up
|
|||
|
one standard of courage which all must reach.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Literally, "level the courage [of all] as though [it were
|
|||
|
that of] one." If the ideal army is to form a single organic
|
|||
|
whole, then it follows that the resolution and spirit of its
|
|||
|
component parts must be of the same quality, or at any rate must
|
|||
|
not fall below a certain standard. Wellington's seemingly
|
|||
|
ungrateful description of his army at Waterloo as "the worst he
|
|||
|
had ever commanded" meant no more than that it was deficient in
|
|||
|
this important particular--unity of spirit and courage. Had he
|
|||
|
not foreseen the Belgian defections and carefully kept those
|
|||
|
troops in the background, he would almost certainly have lost the
|
|||
|
day.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
33. How to make the best of both strong and weak--that is a
|
|||
|
question involving the proper use of ground.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Mei Yao-ch`en's paraphrase is: "The way to eliminate the
|
|||
|
differences of strong and weak and to make both serviceable is to
|
|||
|
utilize accidental features of the ground." Less reliable
|
|||
|
troops, if posted in strong positions, will hold out as long as
|
|||
|
better troops on more exposed terrain. The advantage of position
|
|||
|
neutralizes the inferiority in stamina and courage. Col.
|
|||
|
Henderson says: "With all respect to the text books, and to the
|
|||
|
ordinary tactical teaching, I am inclined to think that the study
|
|||
|
of ground is often overlooked, and that by no means sufficient
|
|||
|
importance is attached to the selection of positions... and to
|
|||
|
the immense advantages that are to be derived, whether you are
|
|||
|
defending or attacking, from the proper utilization of natural
|
|||
|
features." [2] ]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
34. Thus the skillful general conducts his army just as
|
|||
|
though he were leading a single man, willy-nilly, by the hand.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu says: "The simile has reference to the ease with
|
|||
|
which he does it."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
35. It is the business of a general to be quiet and thus
|
|||
|
ensure secrecy; upright and just, and thus maintain order.
|
|||
|
36. He must be able to mystify his officers and men by
|
|||
|
false reports and appearances,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Literally, "to deceive their eyes and ears."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and thus keep them in total ignorance.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ts`ao Kung gives us one of his excellent apophthegms: "The
|
|||
|
troops must not be allowed to share your schemes in the
|
|||
|
beginning; they may only rejoice with you over their happy
|
|||
|
outcome." "To mystify, mislead, and surprise the enemy," is one
|
|||
|
of the first principles in war, as had been frequently pointed
|
|||
|
out. But how about the other process--the mystification of one's
|
|||
|
own men? Those who may think that Sun Tzu is over-emphatic on
|
|||
|
this point would do well to read Col. Henderson's remarks on
|
|||
|
Stonewall Jackson's Valley campaign: "The infinite pains," he
|
|||
|
says, "with which Jackson sought to conceal, even from his most
|
|||
|
trusted staff officers, his movements, his intentions, and his
|
|||
|
thoughts, a commander less thorough would have pronounced
|
|||
|
useless"--etc. etc. [3] In the year 88 A.D., as we read in ch.
|
|||
|
47 of the HOU HAN SHU, "Pan Ch`ao took the field with 25,000 men
|
|||
|
from Khotan and other Central Asian states with the object of
|
|||
|
crushing Yarkand. The King of Kutcha replied by dispatching his
|
|||
|
chief commander to succor the place with an army drawn from the
|
|||
|
kingdoms of Wen-su, Ku-mo, and Wei-t`ou, totaling 50,000 men.
|
|||
|
Pan Ch`ao summoned his officers and also the King of Khotan to a
|
|||
|
council of war, and said: 'Our forces are now outnumbered and
|
|||
|
unable to make head against the enemy. The best plan, then, is
|
|||
|
for us to separate and disperse, each in a different direction.
|
|||
|
The King of Khotan will march away by the easterly route, and I
|
|||
|
will then return myself towards the west. Let us wait until the
|
|||
|
evening drum has sounded and then start.' Pan Ch`ao now secretly
|
|||
|
released the prisoners whom he had taken alive, and the King of
|
|||
|
Kutcha was thus informed of his plans. Much elated by the news,
|
|||
|
the latter set off at once at the head of 10,000 horsemen to bar
|
|||
|
Pan Ch`ao's retreat in the west, while the King of Wen-su rode
|
|||
|
eastward with 8000 horse in order to intercept the King of
|
|||
|
Khotan. As soon as Pan Ch`ao knew that the two chieftains had
|
|||
|
gone, he called his divisions together, got them well in hand,
|
|||
|
and at cock-crow hurled them against the army of Yarkand, as it
|
|||
|
lay encamped. The barbarians, panic-stricken, fled in confusion,
|
|||
|
and were closely pursued by Pan Ch`ao. Over 5000 heads were
|
|||
|
brought back as trophies, besides immense spoils in the shape of
|
|||
|
horses and cattle and valuables of every description. Yarkand
|
|||
|
then capitulating, Kutcha and the other kingdoms drew off their
|
|||
|
respective forces. From that time forward, Pan Ch`ao's prestige
|
|||
|
completely overawed the countries of the west." In this case, we
|
|||
|
see that the Chinese general not only kept his own officers in
|
|||
|
ignorance of his real plans, but actually took the bold step of
|
|||
|
dividing his army in order to deceive the enemy.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
37. By altering his arrangements and changing his plans,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Wang Hsi thinks that this means not using the same
|
|||
|
stratagem twice.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
he keeps the enemy without definite knowledge.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu, in a quotation from another work, says: "The
|
|||
|
axiom, that war is based on deception, does not apply only to
|
|||
|
deception of the enemy. You must deceive even your own soldiers.
|
|||
|
Make them follow you, but without letting them know why."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
By shifting his camp and taking circuitous routes, he prevents
|
|||
|
the enemy from anticipating his purpose.
|
|||
|
38. At the critical moment, the leader of an army acts like
|
|||
|
one who has climbed up a height and then kicks away the ladder
|
|||
|
behind him. He carries his men deep into hostile territory
|
|||
|
before he shows his hand.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Literally, "releases the spring" (see V. ss. 15), that is,
|
|||
|
takes some decisive step which makes it impossible for the army
|
|||
|
to return--like Hsiang Yu, who sunk his ships after crossing a
|
|||
|
river. Ch`en Hao, followed by Chia Lin, understands the words
|
|||
|
less well as "puts forth every artifice at his command."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
39. He burns his boats and breaks his cooking-pots; like a
|
|||
|
shepherd driving a flock of sheep, he drives his men this way and
|
|||
|
that, and nothing knows whither he is going.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu says: "The army is only cognizant of orders to
|
|||
|
advance or retreat; it is ignorant of the ulterior ends of
|
|||
|
attacking and conquering."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
40. To muster his host and bring it into danger:--this may
|
|||
|
be termed the business of the general.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Sun Tzu means that after mobilization there should be no
|
|||
|
delay in aiming a blow at the enemy's heart. Note how he returns
|
|||
|
again and again to this point. Among the warring states of
|
|||
|
ancient China, desertion was no doubt a much more present fear
|
|||
|
and serious evil than it is in the armies of today.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
41. The different measures suited to the nine varieties of
|
|||
|
ground;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu says: "One must not be hide-bound in interpreting
|
|||
|
the rules for the nine varieties of ground.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
the expediency of aggressive or defensive tactics; and the
|
|||
|
fundamental laws of human nature: these are things that must
|
|||
|
most certainly be studied.
|
|||
|
42. When invading hostile territory, the general principle
|
|||
|
is, that penetrating deeply brings cohesion; penetrating but a
|
|||
|
short way means dispersion.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Cf. supra, ss. 20.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
43. When you leave your own country behind, and take your
|
|||
|
army across neighborhood territory, you find yourself on critical
|
|||
|
ground.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[This "ground" is curiously mentioned in VIII. ss. 2, but it
|
|||
|
does not figure among the Nine Situations or the Six Calamities
|
|||
|
in chap. X. One's first impulse would be to translate it distant
|
|||
|
ground," but this, if we can trust the commentators, is precisely
|
|||
|
what is not meant here. Mei Yao-ch`en says it is "a position not
|
|||
|
far enough advanced to be called 'facile,' and not near enough to
|
|||
|
home to be 'dispersive,' but something between the two." Wang Hsi
|
|||
|
says: "It is ground separated from home by an interjacent state,
|
|||
|
whose territory we have had to cross in order to reach it.
|
|||
|
Hence, it is incumbent on us to settle our business there
|
|||
|
quickly." He adds that this position is of rare occurrence,
|
|||
|
which is the reason why it is not included among the Nine
|
|||
|
Situations.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When there are means of communication on all four sides, the
|
|||
|
ground is one of intersecting highways.
|
|||
|
44. When you penetrate deeply into a country, it is serious
|
|||
|
ground. When you penetrate but a little way, it is facile
|
|||
|
ground.
|
|||
|
45. When you have the enemy's strongholds on your rear, and
|
|||
|
narrow passes in front, it is hemmed-in ground. When there is no
|
|||
|
place of refuge at all, it is desperate ground.
|
|||
|
46. Therefore, on dispersive ground, I would inspire my men
|
|||
|
with unity of purpose.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[This end, according to Tu Mu, is best attained by remaining
|
|||
|
on the defensive, and avoiding battle. Cf. supra, ss. 11.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On facile ground, I would see that there is close connection
|
|||
|
between all parts of my army.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[As Tu Mu says, the object is to guard against two possible
|
|||
|
contingencies: "(1) the desertion of our own troops; (2) a
|
|||
|
sudden attack on the part of the enemy." Cf. VII. ss. 17. Mei
|
|||
|
Yao-ch`en says: "On the march, the regiments should be in close
|
|||
|
touch; in an encampment, there should be continuity between the
|
|||
|
fortifications."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
47. On contentious ground, I would hurry up my rear.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[This is Ts`ao Kung's interpretation. Chang Yu adopts it,
|
|||
|
saying: "We must quickly bring up our rear, so that head and
|
|||
|
tail may both reach the goal." That is, they must not be allowed
|
|||
|
to straggle up a long way apart. Mei Yao-ch`en offers another
|
|||
|
equally plausible explanation: "Supposing the enemy has not yet
|
|||
|
reached the coveted position, and we are behind him, we should
|
|||
|
advance with all speed in order to dispute its possession."
|
|||
|
Ch`en Hao, on the other hand, assuming that the enemy has had
|
|||
|
time to select his own ground, quotes VI. ss. 1, where Sun Tzu
|
|||
|
warns us against coming exhausted to the attack. His own idea of
|
|||
|
the situation is rather vaguely expressed: "If there is a
|
|||
|
favorable position lying in front of you, detach a picked body of
|
|||
|
troops to occupy it, then if the enemy, relying on their numbers,
|
|||
|
come up to make a fight for it, you may fall quickly on their
|
|||
|
rear with your main body, and victory will be assured." It was
|
|||
|
thus, he adds, that Chao She beat the army of Ch`in. (See p.
|
|||
|
57.)]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
48. On open ground, I would keep a vigilant eye on my
|
|||
|
defenses. On ground of intersecting highways, I would
|
|||
|
consolidate my alliances.
|
|||
|
49. On serious ground, I would try to ensure a continuous
|
|||
|
stream of supplies.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The commentators take this as referring to forage and
|
|||
|
plunder, not, as one might expect, to an unbroken communication
|
|||
|
with a home base.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On difficult ground, I would keep pushing on along the road.
|
|||
|
50. On hemmed-in ground, I would block any way of retreat.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Meng Shih says: "To make it seem that I meant to defend
|
|||
|
the position, whereas my real intention is to burst suddenly
|
|||
|
through the enemy's lines." Mei Yao-ch`en says: "in order to
|
|||
|
make my soldiers fight with desperation." Wang Hsi says,
|
|||
|
"fearing lest my men be tempted to run away." Tu Mu points out
|
|||
|
that this is the converse of VII. ss. 36, where it is the enemy
|
|||
|
who is surrounded. In 532 A.D., Kao Huan, afterwards Emperor and
|
|||
|
canonized as Shen-wu, was surrounded by a great army under Erh-
|
|||
|
chu Chao and others. His own force was comparatively small,
|
|||
|
consisting only of 2000 horse and something under 30,000 foot.
|
|||
|
The lines of investment had not been drawn very closely together,
|
|||
|
gaps being left at certain points. But Kao Huan, instead of
|
|||
|
trying to escape, actually made a shift to block all the
|
|||
|
remaining outlets himself by driving into them a number of oxen
|
|||
|
and donkeys roped together. As soon as his officers and men saw
|
|||
|
that there was nothing for it but to conquer or die, their
|
|||
|
spirits rose to an extraordinary pitch of exaltation, and they
|
|||
|
charged with such desperate ferocity that the opposing ranks
|
|||
|
broke and crumbled under their onslaught.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On desperate ground, I would proclaim to my soldiers the
|
|||
|
hopelessness of saving their lives.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Tu Yu says: "Burn your baggage and impedimenta, throw away
|
|||
|
your stores and provisions, choke up the wells, destroy your
|
|||
|
cooking-stoves, and make it plain to your men that they cannot
|
|||
|
survive, but must fight to the death." Mei Yao-ch`en says: "The
|
|||
|
only chance of life lies in giving up all hope of it." This
|
|||
|
concludes what Sun Tzu has to say about "grounds" and the
|
|||
|
"variations" corresponding to them. Reviewing the passages which
|
|||
|
bear on this important subject, we cannot fail to be struck by
|
|||
|
the desultory and unmethodical fashion in which it is treated.
|
|||
|
Sun Tzu begins abruptly in VIII. ss. 2 to enumerate "variations"
|
|||
|
before touching on "grounds" at all, but only mentions five,
|
|||
|
namely nos. 7, 5, 8 and 9 of the subsequent list, and one that is
|
|||
|
not included in it. A few varieties of ground are dealt with in
|
|||
|
the earlier portion of chap. IX, and then chap. X sets forth six
|
|||
|
new grounds, with six variations of plan to match. None of these
|
|||
|
is mentioned again, though the first is hardly to be
|
|||
|
distinguished from ground no. 4 in the next chapter. At last, in
|
|||
|
chap. XI, we come to the Nine Grounds par excellence, immediately
|
|||
|
followed by the variations. This takes us down to ss. 14. In
|
|||
|
SS. 43-45, fresh definitions are provided for nos. 5, 6, 2, 8 and
|
|||
|
9 (in the order given), as well as for the tenth ground noticed
|
|||
|
in chap. VIII; and finally, the nine variations are enumerated
|
|||
|
once more from beginning to end, all, with the exception of 5, 6
|
|||
|
and 7, being different from those previously given. Though it is
|
|||
|
impossible to account for the present state of Sun Tzu's text, a
|
|||
|
few suggestive facts maybe brought into prominence: (1) Chap.
|
|||
|
VIII, according to the title, should deal with nine variations,
|
|||
|
whereas only five appear. (2) It is an abnormally short chapter.
|
|||
|
(3) Chap. XI is entitled The Nine Grounds. Several of these are
|
|||
|
defined twice over, besides which there are two distinct lists of
|
|||
|
the corresponding variations. (4) The length of the chapter is
|
|||
|
disproportionate, being double that of any other except IX. I do
|
|||
|
not propose to draw any inferences from these facts, beyond the
|
|||
|
general conclusion that Sun Tzu's work cannot have come down to
|
|||
|
us in the shape in which it left his hands: chap. VIII is
|
|||
|
obviously defective and probably out of place, while XI seems to
|
|||
|
contain matter that has either been added by a later hand or
|
|||
|
ought to appear elsewhere.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
51. For it is the soldier's disposition to offer an
|
|||
|
obstinate resistance when surrounded, to fight hard when he
|
|||
|
cannot help himself, and to obey promptly when he has fallen into
|
|||
|
danger.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu alludes to the conduct of Pan Ch`ao's devoted
|
|||
|
followers in 73 A.D. The story runs thus in the HOU HAN SHU, ch.
|
|||
|
47: "When Pan Ch`ao arrived at Shan-shan, Kuang, the King of the
|
|||
|
country, received him at first with great politeness and respect;
|
|||
|
but shortly afterwards his behavior underwent a sudden change,
|
|||
|
and he became remiss and negligent. Pan Ch`ao spoke about this
|
|||
|
to the officers of his suite: 'Have you noticed,' he said, 'that
|
|||
|
Kuang's polite intentions are on the wane? This must signify
|
|||
|
that envoys have come from the Northern barbarians, and that
|
|||
|
consequently he is in a state of indecision, not knowing with
|
|||
|
which side to throw in his lot. That surely is the reason. The
|
|||
|
truly wise man, we are told, can perceive things before they have
|
|||
|
come to pass; how much more, then, those that are already
|
|||
|
manifest!' Thereupon he called one of the natives who had been
|
|||
|
assigned to his service, and set a trap for him, saying: 'Where
|
|||
|
are those envoys from the Hsiung-nu who arrived some day ago?'
|
|||
|
The man was so taken aback that between surprise and fear he
|
|||
|
presently blurted out the whole truth. Pan Ch`ao, keeping his
|
|||
|
informant carefully under lock and key, then summoned a general
|
|||
|
gathering of his officers, thirty-six in all, and began drinking
|
|||
|
with them. When the wine had mounted into their heads a little,
|
|||
|
he tried to rouse their spirit still further by addressing them
|
|||
|
thus: 'Gentlemen, here we are in the heart of an isolated
|
|||
|
region, anxious to achieve riches and honor by some great
|
|||
|
exploit. Now it happens that an ambassador from the Hsiung-no
|
|||
|
arrived in this kingdom only a few days ago, and the result is
|
|||
|
that the respectful courtesy extended towards us by our royal
|
|||
|
host has disappeared. Should this envoy prevail upon him to
|
|||
|
seize our party and hand us over to the Hsiung-no, our bones will
|
|||
|
become food for the wolves of the desert. What are we to do?'
|
|||
|
With one accord, the officers replied: 'Standing as we do in
|
|||
|
peril of our lives, we will follow our commander through life and
|
|||
|
death.' For the sequel of this adventure, see chap. XII. ss. 1,
|
|||
|
note.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
52. We cannot enter into alliance with neighboring princes
|
|||
|
until we are acquainted with their designs. We are not fit to
|
|||
|
lead an army on the march unless we are familiar with the face of
|
|||
|
the country--its mountains and forests, its pitfalls and
|
|||
|
precipices, its marshes and swamps. We shall be unable to turn
|
|||
|
natural advantages to account unless we make use of local guides.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[These three sentences are repeated from VII. SS. 12-14 --
|
|||
|
in order to emphasize their importance, the commentators seem to
|
|||
|
think. I prefer to regard them as interpolated here in order to
|
|||
|
form an antecedent to the following words. With regard to local
|
|||
|
guides, Sun Tzu might have added that there is always the risk of
|
|||
|
going wrong, either through their treachery or some
|
|||
|
misunderstanding such as Livy records (XXII. 13): Hannibal, we
|
|||
|
are told, ordered a guide to lead him into the neighborhood of
|
|||
|
Casinum, where there was an important pass to be occupied; but
|
|||
|
his Carthaginian accent, unsuited to the pronunciation of Latin
|
|||
|
names, caused the guide to understand Casilinum instead of
|
|||
|
Casinum, and turning from his proper route, he took the army in
|
|||
|
that direction, the mistake not being discovered until they had
|
|||
|
almost arrived.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
53. To be ignored of any one of the following four or five
|
|||
|
principles does not befit a warlike prince.
|
|||
|
54. When a warlike prince attacks a powerful state, his
|
|||
|
generalship shows itself in preventing the concentration of the
|
|||
|
enemy's forces. He overawes his opponents, and their allies are
|
|||
|
prevented from joining against him.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Mei Tao-ch`en constructs one of the chains of reasoning
|
|||
|
that are so much affected by the Chinese: "In attacking a
|
|||
|
powerful state, if you can divide her forces, you will have a
|
|||
|
superiority in strength; if you have a superiority in strength,
|
|||
|
you will overawe the enemy; if you overawe the enemy, the
|
|||
|
neighboring states will be frightened; and if the neighboring
|
|||
|
states are frightened, the enemy's allies will be prevented from
|
|||
|
joining her." The following gives a stronger meaning: "If the
|
|||
|
great state has once been defeated (before she has had time to
|
|||
|
summon her allies), then the lesser states will hold aloof and
|
|||
|
refrain from massing their forces." Ch`en Hao and Chang Yu take
|
|||
|
the sentence in quite another way. The former says: "Powerful
|
|||
|
though a prince may be, if he attacks a large state, he will be
|
|||
|
unable to raise enough troops, and must rely to some extent on
|
|||
|
external aid; if he dispenses with this, and with overweening
|
|||
|
confidence in his own strength, simply tries to intimidate the
|
|||
|
enemy, he will surely be defeated." Chang Yu puts his view thus:
|
|||
|
"If we recklessly attack a large state, our own people will be
|
|||
|
discontented and hang back. But if (as will then be the case)
|
|||
|
our display of military force is inferior by half to that of the
|
|||
|
enemy, the other chieftains will take fright and refuse to join
|
|||
|
us."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
55. Hence he does not strive to ally himself with all and
|
|||
|
sundry, nor does he foster the power of other states. He carries
|
|||
|
out his own secret designs, keeping his antagonists in awe.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The train of thought, as said by Li Ch`uan, appears to be
|
|||
|
this: Secure against a combination of his enemies, "he can
|
|||
|
afford to reject entangling alliances and simply pursue his own
|
|||
|
secret designs, his prestige enable him to dispense with external
|
|||
|
friendships."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Thus he is able to capture their cities and overthrow their
|
|||
|
kingdoms.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[This paragraph, though written many years before the Ch`in
|
|||
|
State became a serious menace, is not a bad summary of the policy
|
|||
|
by which the famous Six Chancellors gradually paved the way for
|
|||
|
her final triumph under Shih Huang Ti. Chang Yu, following up
|
|||
|
his previous note, thinks that Sun Tzu is condemning this
|
|||
|
attitude of cold-blooded selfishness and haughty isolation.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
56. Bestow rewards without regard to rule,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Wu Tzu (ch. 3) less wisely says: "Let advance be richly
|
|||
|
rewarded and retreat be heavily punished."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
issue orders
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Literally, "hang" or post up."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
without regard to previous arrangements;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["In order to prevent treachery," says Wang Hsi. The
|
|||
|
general meaning is made clear by Ts`ao Kung's quotation from the
|
|||
|
SSU-MA FA: "Give instructions only on sighting the enemy; give
|
|||
|
rewards when you see deserving deeds." Ts`ao Kung's paraphrase:
|
|||
|
"The final instructions you give to your army should not
|
|||
|
correspond with those that have been previously posted up."
|
|||
|
Chang Yu simplifies this into "your arrangements should not be
|
|||
|
divulged beforehand." And Chia Lin says: "there should be no
|
|||
|
fixity in your rules and arrangements." Not only is there danger
|
|||
|
in letting your plans be known, but war often necessitates the
|
|||
|
entire reversal of them at the last moment.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and you will be able to handle a whole army as though you had to
|
|||
|
do with but a single man.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Cf. supra, ss. 34.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
57. Confront your soldiers with the deed itself; never let
|
|||
|
them know your design.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Literally, "do not tell them words;" i.e. do not give your
|
|||
|
reasons for any order. Lord Mansfield once told a junior
|
|||
|
colleague to "give no reasons" for his decisions, and the maxim
|
|||
|
is even more applicable to a general than to a judge.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When the outlook is bright, bring it before their eyes; but tell
|
|||
|
them nothing when the situation is gloomy.
|
|||
|
58. Place your army in deadly peril, and it will survive;
|
|||
|
plunge it into desperate straits, and it will come off in safety.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[These words of Sun Tzu were once quoted by Han Hsin in
|
|||
|
explanation of the tactics he employed in one of his most
|
|||
|
brilliant battles, already alluded to on p. 28. In 204 B.C., he
|
|||
|
was sent against the army of Chao, and halted ten miles from the
|
|||
|
mouth of the Ching-hsing pass, where the enemy had mustered in
|
|||
|
full force. Here, at midnight, he detached a body of 2000 light
|
|||
|
cavalry, every man of which was furnished with a red flag. Their
|
|||
|
instructions were to make their way through narrow defiles and
|
|||
|
keep a secret watch on the enemy. "When the men of Chao see me
|
|||
|
in full flight," Han Hsin said, "they will abandon their
|
|||
|
fortifications and give chase. This must be the sign for you to
|
|||
|
rush in, pluck down the Chao standards and set up the red banners
|
|||
|
of Han in their stead." Turning then to his other officers, he
|
|||
|
remarked: "Our adversary holds a strong position, and is not
|
|||
|
likely to come out and attack us until he sees the standard and
|
|||
|
drums of the commander-in-chief, for fear I should turn back and
|
|||
|
escape through the mountains." So saying, he first of all sent
|
|||
|
out a division consisting of 10,000 men, and ordered them to form
|
|||
|
in line of battle with their backs to the River Ti. Seeing this
|
|||
|
maneuver, the whole army of Chao broke into loud laughter. By
|
|||
|
this time it was broad daylight, and Han Hsin, displaying the
|
|||
|
generalissimo's flag, marched out of the pass with drums beating,
|
|||
|
and was immediately engaged by the enemy. A great battle
|
|||
|
followed, lasting for some time; until at length Han Hsin and his
|
|||
|
colleague Chang Ni, leaving drums and banner on the field, fled
|
|||
|
to the division on the river bank, where another fierce battle
|
|||
|
was raging. The enemy rushed out to pursue them and to secure
|
|||
|
the trophies, thus denuding their ramparts of men; but the two
|
|||
|
generals succeeded in joining the other army, which was fighting
|
|||
|
with the utmost desperation. The time had now come for the 2000
|
|||
|
horsemen to play their part. As soon as they saw the men of Chao
|
|||
|
following up their advantage, they galloped behind the deserted
|
|||
|
walls, tore up the enemy's flags and replaced them by those of
|
|||
|
Han. When the Chao army looked back from the pursuit, the sight
|
|||
|
of these red flags struck them with terror. Convinced that the
|
|||
|
Hans had got in and overpowered their king, they broke up in wild
|
|||
|
disorder, every effort of their leader to stay the panic being in
|
|||
|
vain. Then the Han army fell on them from both sides and
|
|||
|
completed the rout, killing a number and capturing the rest,
|
|||
|
amongst whom was King Ya himself.... After the battle, some of
|
|||
|
Han Hsin's officers came to him and said: "In the ART OF WAR we
|
|||
|
are told to have a hill or tumulus on the right rear, and a river
|
|||
|
or marsh on the left front. [This appears to be a blend of Sun
|
|||
|
Tzu and T`ai Kung. See IX ss. 9, and note.] You, on the
|
|||
|
contrary, ordered us to draw up our troops with the river at our
|
|||
|
back. Under these conditions, how did you manage to gain the
|
|||
|
victory?" The general replied: "I fear you gentlemen have not
|
|||
|
studied the Art of War with sufficient care. Is it not written
|
|||
|
there: 'Plunge your army into desperate straits and it will come
|
|||
|
off in safety; place it in deadly peril and it will survive'?
|
|||
|
Had I taken the usual course, I should never have been able to
|
|||
|
bring my colleague round. What says the Military Classic--'Swoop
|
|||
|
down on the market-place and drive the men off to fight.' [This
|
|||
|
passage does not occur in the present text of Sun Tzu.] If I had
|
|||
|
not placed my troops in a position where they were obliged to
|
|||
|
fight for their lives, but had allowed each man to follow his own
|
|||
|
discretion, there would have been a general debandade, and it
|
|||
|
would have been impossible to do anything with them." The
|
|||
|
officers admitted the force of his argument, and said: "These
|
|||
|
are higher tactics than we should have been capable of." [See
|
|||
|
CH`IEN HAN SHU, ch. 34, ff. 4, 5.] ]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
59. For it is precisely when a force has fallen into harm's
|
|||
|
way that is capable of striking a blow for victory.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Danger has a bracing effect.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
60. Success in warfare is gained by carefully accommodating
|
|||
|
ourselves to the enemy's purpose.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ts`ao Kung says: "Feign stupidity"--by an appearance of
|
|||
|
yielding and falling in with the enemy's wishes. Chang Yu's note
|
|||
|
makes the meaning clear: "If the enemy shows an inclination to
|
|||
|
advance, lure him on to do so; if he is anxious to retreat, delay
|
|||
|
on purpose that he may carry out his intention." The object is
|
|||
|
to make him remiss and contemptuous before we deliver our
|
|||
|
attack.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
61. By persistently hanging on the enemy's flank,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[I understand the first four words to mean "accompanying the
|
|||
|
enemy in one direction." Ts`ao Kung says: "unite the soldiers
|
|||
|
and make for the enemy." But such a violent displacement of
|
|||
|
characters is quite indefensible.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
we shall succeed in the long run
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Literally, "after a thousand LI."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
in killing the commander-in-chief.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Always a great point with the Chinese.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
62. This is called ability to accomplish a thing by sheer
|
|||
|
cunning.
|
|||
|
63. On the day that you take up your command, block the
|
|||
|
frontier passes, destroy the official tallies,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[These were tablets of bamboo or wood, one half of which was
|
|||
|
issued as a permit or passport by the official in charge of a
|
|||
|
gate. Cf. the "border-warden" of LUN YU III. 24, who may have
|
|||
|
had similar duties. When this half was returned to him, within a
|
|||
|
fixed period, he was authorized to open the gate and let the
|
|||
|
traveler through.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and stop the passage of all emissaries.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Either to or from the enemy's country.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
64. Be stern in the council-chamber,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Show no weakness, and insist on your plans being ratified
|
|||
|
by the sovereign.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
so that you may control the situation.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Mei Yao-ch`en understands the whole sentence to mean: Take
|
|||
|
the strictest precautions to ensure secrecy in your
|
|||
|
deliberations.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
65. If the enemy leaves a door open, you must rush in.
|
|||
|
66. Forestall your opponent by seizing what he holds dear,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Cf. supra, ss. 18.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and subtly contrive to time his arrival on the ground.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ch`en Hao`s explanation: "If I manage to seize a favorable
|
|||
|
position, but the enemy does not appear on the scene, the
|
|||
|
advantage thus obtained cannot be turned to any practical
|
|||
|
account. He who intends therefore, to occupy a position of
|
|||
|
importance to the enemy, must begin by making an artful
|
|||
|
appointment, so to speak, with his antagonist, and cajole him
|
|||
|
into going there as well." Mei Yao-ch`en explains that this
|
|||
|
"artful appointment" is to be made through the medium of the
|
|||
|
enemy's own spies, who will carry back just the amount of
|
|||
|
information that we choose to give them. Then, having cunningly
|
|||
|
disclosed our intentions, "we must manage, though starting after
|
|||
|
the enemy, to arrive before him (VII. ss. 4). We must start
|
|||
|
after him in order to ensure his marching thither; we must arrive
|
|||
|
before him in order to capture the place without trouble. Taken
|
|||
|
thus, the present passage lends some support to Mei Yao-ch`en's
|
|||
|
interpretation of ss. 47.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
67. Walk in the path defined by rule,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chia Lin says: "Victory is the only thing that matters,
|
|||
|
and this cannot be achieved by adhering to conventional canons."
|
|||
|
It is unfortunate that this variant rests on very slight
|
|||
|
authority, for the sense yielded is certainly much more
|
|||
|
satisfactory. Napoleon, as we know, according to the veterans of
|
|||
|
the old school whom he defeated, won his battles by violating
|
|||
|
every accepted canon of warfare.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and accommodate yourself to the enemy until you can fight a
|
|||
|
decisive battle.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu says: "Conform to the enemy's tactics until a
|
|||
|
favorable opportunity offers; then come forth and engage in a
|
|||
|
battle that shall prove decisive."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
68. At first, then, exhibit the coyness of a maiden, until
|
|||
|
the enemy gives you an opening; afterwards emulate the rapidity
|
|||
|
of a running hare, and it will be too late for the enemy to
|
|||
|
oppose you.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[As the hare is noted for its extreme timidity, the
|
|||
|
comparison hardly appears felicitous. But of course Sun Tzu was
|
|||
|
thinking only of its speed. The words have been taken to mean:
|
|||
|
You must flee from the enemy as quickly as an escaping hare; but
|
|||
|
this is rightly rejected by Tu Mu.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[1] Giles' Biographical Dictionary, no. 399.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[2] "The Science of War," p. 333.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[3] "Stonewall Jackson," vol. I, p. 421.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
XII. THE ATTACK BY FIRE
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Rather more than half the chapter (SS. 1-13) is devoted to
|
|||
|
the subject of fire, after which the author branches off into
|
|||
|
other topics.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. Sun Tzu said: There are five ways of attacking with
|
|||
|
fire. The first is to burn soldiers in their camp;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[So Tu Mu. Li Ch`uan says: "Set fire to the camp, and kill
|
|||
|
the soldiers" (when they try to escape from the flames). Pan
|
|||
|
Ch`ao, sent on a diplomatic mission to the King of Shan-shan [see
|
|||
|
XI. ss. 51, note], found himself placed in extreme peril by the
|
|||
|
unexpected arrival of an envoy from the Hsiung-nu [the mortal
|
|||
|
enemies of the Chinese]. In consultation with his officers, he
|
|||
|
exclaimed: "Never venture, never win! [1] The only course open
|
|||
|
to us now is to make an assault by fire on the barbarians under
|
|||
|
cover of night, when they will not be able to discern our
|
|||
|
numbers. Profiting by their panic, we shall exterminate them
|
|||
|
completely; this will cool the King's courage and cover us with
|
|||
|
glory, besides ensuring the success of our mission.' the
|
|||
|
officers all replied that it would be necessary to discuss the
|
|||
|
matter first with the Intendant. Pan Ch`ao then fell into a
|
|||
|
passion: 'It is today,' he cried, 'that our fortunes must be
|
|||
|
decided! The Intendant is only a humdrum civilian, who on
|
|||
|
hearing of our project will certainly be afraid, and everything
|
|||
|
will be brought to light. An inglorious death is no worthy fate
|
|||
|
for valiant warriors.' All then agreed to do as he wished.
|
|||
|
Accordingly, as soon as night came on, he and his little band
|
|||
|
quickly made their way to the barbarian camp. A strong gale was
|
|||
|
blowing at the time. Pan Ch`ao ordered ten of the party to take
|
|||
|
drums and hide behind the enemy's barracks, it being arranged
|
|||
|
that when they saw flames shoot up, they should begin drumming
|
|||
|
and yelling with all their might. The rest of his men, armed
|
|||
|
with bows and crossbows, he posted in ambuscade at the gate of
|
|||
|
the camp. He then set fire to the place from the windward side,
|
|||
|
whereupon a deafening noise of drums and shouting arose on the
|
|||
|
front and rear of the Hsiung-nu, who rushed out pell-mell in
|
|||
|
frantic disorder. Pan Ch`ao slew three of them with his own
|
|||
|
hand, while his companions cut off the heads of the envoy and
|
|||
|
thirty of his suite. The remainder, more than a hundred in all,
|
|||
|
perished in the flames. On the following day, Pan Ch`ao,
|
|||
|
divining his thoughts, said with uplifted hand: 'Although you
|
|||
|
did not go with us last night, I should not think, Sir, of taking
|
|||
|
sole credit for our exploit.' This satisfied Kuo Hsun, and Pan
|
|||
|
Ch`ao, having sent for Kuang, King of Shan-shan, showed him the
|
|||
|
head of the barbarian envoy. The whole kingdom was seized with
|
|||
|
fear and trembling, which Pan Ch`ao took steps to allay by
|
|||
|
issuing a public proclamation. Then, taking the king's sons as
|
|||
|
hostage, he returned to make his report to Tou Ku." HOU HAN SHU,
|
|||
|
ch. 47, ff. 1, 2.] ]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
the second is to burn stores;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu says: "Provisions, fuel and fodder." In order to
|
|||
|
subdue the rebellious population of Kiangnan, Kao Keng
|
|||
|
recommended Wen Ti of the Sui dynasty to make periodical raids
|
|||
|
and burn their stores of grain, a policy which in the long run
|
|||
|
proved entirely successful.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
the third is to burn baggage trains;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[An example given is the destruction of Yuan Shao`s wagons
|
|||
|
and impedimenta by Ts`ao Ts`ao in 200 A.D.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
the fourth is to burn arsenals and magazines;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu says that the things contained in "arsenals" and
|
|||
|
"magazines" are the same. He specifies weapons and other
|
|||
|
implements, bullion and clothing. Cf. VII. ss. 11.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
the fifth is to hurl dropping fire amongst the enemy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Yu says in the T`UNG TIEN: "To drop fire into the
|
|||
|
enemy's camp. The method by which this may be done is to set the
|
|||
|
tips of arrows alight by dipping them into a brazier, and then
|
|||
|
shoot them from powerful crossbows into the enemy's lines."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2. In order to carry out an attack, we must have means
|
|||
|
available.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[T`sao Kung thinks that "traitors in the enemy's camp" are
|
|||
|
referred to. But Ch`en Hao is more likely to be right in saying:
|
|||
|
"We must have favorable circumstances in general, not merely
|
|||
|
traitors to help us." Chia Lin says: "We must avail ourselves
|
|||
|
of wind and dry weather."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
the material for raising fire should always be kept in readiness.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu suggests as material for making fire: "dry vegetable
|
|||
|
matter, reeds, brushwood, straw, grease, oil, etc." Here we have
|
|||
|
the material cause. Chang Yu says: "vessels for hoarding fire,
|
|||
|
stuff for lighting fires."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
3. There is a proper season for making attacks with fire,
|
|||
|
and special days for starting a conflagration.
|
|||
|
4. The proper season is when the weather is very dry; the
|
|||
|
special days are those when the moon is in the constellations of
|
|||
|
the Sieve, the Wall, the Wing or the Cross-bar;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[These are, respectively, the 7th, 14th, 27th, and 28th of
|
|||
|
the Twenty-eight Stellar Mansions, corresponding roughly to
|
|||
|
Sagittarius, Pegasus, Crater and Corvus.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
for these four are all days of rising wind.
|
|||
|
5. In attacking with fire, one should be prepared to meet
|
|||
|
five possible developments:
|
|||
|
6. (1) When fire breaks out inside to enemy's camp, respond
|
|||
|
at once with an attack from without.
|
|||
|
7. (2) If there is an outbreak of fire, but the enemy's
|
|||
|
soldiers remain quiet, bide your time and do not attack.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The prime object of attacking with fire is to throw the
|
|||
|
enemy into confusion. If this effect is not produced, it means
|
|||
|
that the enemy is ready to receive us. Hence the necessity for
|
|||
|
caution.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
8. (3) When the force of the flames has reached its height,
|
|||
|
follow it up with an attack, if that is practicable; if not, stay
|
|||
|
where you are.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ts`ao Kung says: "If you see a possible way, advance; but
|
|||
|
if you find the difficulties too great, retire."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
9. (4) If it is possible to make an assault with fire from
|
|||
|
without, do not wait for it to break out within, but deliver your
|
|||
|
attack at a favorable moment.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu says that the previous paragraphs had reference to
|
|||
|
the fire breaking out (either accidentally, we may suppose, or by
|
|||
|
the agency of incendiaries) inside the enemy's camp. "But," he
|
|||
|
continues, "if the enemy is settled in a waste place littered
|
|||
|
with quantities of grass, or if he has pitched his camp in a
|
|||
|
position which can be burnt out, we must carry our fire against
|
|||
|
him at any seasonable opportunity, and not await on in hopes of
|
|||
|
an outbreak occurring within, for fear our opponents should
|
|||
|
themselves burn up the surrounding vegetation, and thus render
|
|||
|
our own attempts fruitless." The famous Li Ling once baffled the
|
|||
|
leader of the Hsiung-nu in this way. The latter, taking
|
|||
|
advantage of a favorable wind, tried to set fire to the Chinese
|
|||
|
general's camp, but found that every scrap of combustible
|
|||
|
vegetation in the neighborhood had already been burnt down. On
|
|||
|
the other hand, Po-ts`ai, a general of the Yellow Turban rebels,
|
|||
|
was badly defeated in 184 A.D. through his neglect of this simple
|
|||
|
precaution. "At the head of a large army he was besieging
|
|||
|
Ch`ang-she, which was held by Huang-fu Sung. The garrison was
|
|||
|
very small, and a general feeling of nervousness pervaded the
|
|||
|
ranks; so Huang-fu Sung called his officers together and said:
|
|||
|
"In war, there are various indirect methods of attack, and
|
|||
|
numbers do not count for everything. [The commentator here
|
|||
|
quotes Sun Tzu, V. SS. 5, 6 and 10.] Now the rebels have pitched
|
|||
|
their camp in the midst of thick grass which will easily burn
|
|||
|
when the wind blows. If we set fire to it at night, they will be
|
|||
|
thrown into a panic, and we can make a sortie and attack them on
|
|||
|
all sides at once, thus emulating the achievement of T`ien Tan.'
|
|||
|
[See p. 90.] That same evening, a strong breeze sprang up; so
|
|||
|
Huang-fu Sung instructed his soldiers to bind reeds together into
|
|||
|
torches and mount guard on the city walls, after which he sent
|
|||
|
out a band of daring men, who stealthily made their way through
|
|||
|
the lines and started the fire with loud shouts and yells.
|
|||
|
Simultaneously, a glare of light shot up from the city walls, and
|
|||
|
Huang-fu Sung, sounding his drums, led a rapid charge, which
|
|||
|
threw the rebels into confusion and put them to headlong flight."
|
|||
|
[HOU HAN SHU, ch. 71.] ]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
10. (5) When you start a fire, be to windward of it. Do
|
|||
|
not attack from the leeward.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu, following Tu Yu, says: "When you make a fire,
|
|||
|
the enemy will retreat away from it; if you oppose his retreat
|
|||
|
and attack him then, he will fight desperately, which will not
|
|||
|
conduce to your success." A rather more obvious explanation is
|
|||
|
given by Tu Mu: "If the wind is in the east, begin burning to
|
|||
|
the east of the enemy, and follow up the attack yourself from
|
|||
|
that side. If you start the fire on the east side, and then
|
|||
|
attack from the west, you will suffer in the same way as your
|
|||
|
enemy."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
11. A wind that rises in the daytime lasts long, but a
|
|||
|
night breeze soon falls.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Cf. Lao Tzu's saying: "A violent wind does not last the
|
|||
|
space of a morning." (TAO TE CHING, chap. 23.) Mei Yao-ch`en
|
|||
|
and Wang Hsi say: "A day breeze dies down at nightfall, and a
|
|||
|
night breeze at daybreak. This is what happens as a general
|
|||
|
rule." The phenomenon observed may be correct enough, but how
|
|||
|
this sense is to be obtained is not apparent.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
12. In every army, the five developments connected with
|
|||
|
fire must be known, the movements of the stars calculated, and a
|
|||
|
watch kept for the proper days.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu says: "We must make calculations as to the paths of
|
|||
|
the stars, and watch for the days on which wind will rise,
|
|||
|
before making our attack with fire." Chang Yu seems to interpret
|
|||
|
the text differently: "We must not only know how to assail our
|
|||
|
opponents with fire, but also be on our guard against similar
|
|||
|
attacks from them."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
13. Hence those who use fire as an aid to the attack show
|
|||
|
intelligence; those who use water as an aid to the attack gain an
|
|||
|
accession of strength.
|
|||
|
14. By means of water, an enemy may be intercepted, but not
|
|||
|
robbed of all his belongings.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Ts`ao Kung's note is: "We can merely obstruct the enemy's
|
|||
|
road or divide his army, but not sweep away all his accumulated
|
|||
|
stores." Water can do useful service, but it lacks the terrible
|
|||
|
destructive power of fire. This is the reason, Chang Yu
|
|||
|
concludes, why the former is dismissed in a couple of sentences,
|
|||
|
whereas the attack by fire is discussed in detail. Wu Tzu (ch.
|
|||
|
4) speaks thus of the two elements: "If an army is encamped on
|
|||
|
low-lying marshy ground, from which the water cannot run off, and
|
|||
|
where the rainfall is heavy, it may be submerged by a flood. If
|
|||
|
an army is encamped in wild marsh lands thickly overgrown with
|
|||
|
weeds and brambles, and visited by frequent gales, it may be
|
|||
|
exterminated by fire."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
15. Unhappy is the fate of one who tries to win his battles
|
|||
|
and succeed in his attacks without cultivating the spirit of
|
|||
|
enterprise; for the result is waste of time and general
|
|||
|
stagnation.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[This is one of the most perplexing passages in Sun Tzu.
|
|||
|
Ts`ao Kung says: "Rewards for good service should not be
|
|||
|
deferred a single day." And Tu Mu: "If you do not take
|
|||
|
opportunity to advance and reward the deserving, your
|
|||
|
subordinates will not carry out your commands, and disaster will
|
|||
|
ensue." For several reasons, however, and in spite of the
|
|||
|
formidable array of scholars on the other side, I prefer the
|
|||
|
interpretation suggested by Mei Yao-ch`en alone, whose words I
|
|||
|
will quote: "Those who want to make sure of succeeding in their
|
|||
|
battles and assaults must seize the favorable moments when they
|
|||
|
come and not shrink on occasion from heroic measures: that is to
|
|||
|
say, they must resort to such means of attack of fire, water and
|
|||
|
the like. What they must not do, and what will prove fatal, is
|
|||
|
to sit still and simply hold to the advantages they have got."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
16. Hence the saying: The enlightened ruler lays his plans
|
|||
|
well ahead; the good general cultivates his resources.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu quotes the following from the SAN LUEH, ch. 2: "The
|
|||
|
warlike prince controls his soldiers by his authority, kits them
|
|||
|
together by good faith, and by rewards makes them serviceable.
|
|||
|
If faith decays, there will be disruption; if rewards are
|
|||
|
deficient, commands will not be respected."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
17. Move not unless you see an advantage; use not your
|
|||
|
troops unless there is something to be gained; fight not unless
|
|||
|
the position is critical.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Sun Tzu may at times appear to be over-cautious, but he
|
|||
|
never goes so far in that direction as the remarkable passage in
|
|||
|
the TAO TE CHING, ch. 69. "I dare not take the initiative, but
|
|||
|
prefer to act on the defensive; I dare not advance an inch, but
|
|||
|
prefer to retreat a foot."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
18. No ruler should put troops into the field merely to
|
|||
|
gratify his own spleen; no general should fight a battle simply
|
|||
|
out of pique.
|
|||
|
19. If it is to your advantage, make a forward move; if
|
|||
|
not, stay where you are.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[This is repeated from XI. ss. 17. Here I feel convinced
|
|||
|
that it is an interpolation, for it is evident that ss. 20 ought
|
|||
|
to follow immediately on ss. 18.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
20. Anger may in time change to gladness; vexation may be
|
|||
|
succeeded by content.
|
|||
|
21. But a kingdom that has once been destroyed can never
|
|||
|
come again into being;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[The Wu State was destined to be a melancholy example of
|
|||
|
this saying.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
nor can the dead ever be brought back to life.
|
|||
|
22. Hence the enlightened ruler is heedful, and the good
|
|||
|
general full of caution. This is the way to keep a country at
|
|||
|
peace and an army intact.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[1] "Unless you enter the tiger's lair, you cannot get hold of
|
|||
|
the tiger's cubs."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
XIII. THE USE OF SPIES
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. Sun Tzu said: Raising a host of a hundred thousand men
|
|||
|
and marching them great distances entails heavy loss on the
|
|||
|
people and a drain on the resources of the State. The daily
|
|||
|
expenditure will amount to a thousand ounces of silver.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Cf. II. ss. ss. 1, 13, 14.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There will be commotion at home and abroad, and men will drop
|
|||
|
down exhausted on the highways.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Cf. TAO TE CHING, ch. 30: "Where troops have been
|
|||
|
quartered, brambles and thorns spring up. Chang Yu has the note:
|
|||
|
"We may be reminded of the saying: 'On serious ground, gather in
|
|||
|
plunder.' Why then should carriage and transportation cause
|
|||
|
exhaustion on the highways?--The answer is, that not victuals
|
|||
|
alone, but all sorts of munitions of war have to be conveyed to
|
|||
|
the army. Besides, the injunction to 'forage on the enemy' only
|
|||
|
means that when an army is deeply engaged in hostile territory,
|
|||
|
scarcity of food must be provided against. Hence, without being
|
|||
|
solely dependent on the enemy for corn, we must forage in order
|
|||
|
that there may be an uninterrupted flow of supplies. Then,
|
|||
|
again, there are places like salt deserts where provisions being
|
|||
|
unobtainable, supplies from home cannot be dispensed with."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As many as seven hundred thousand families will be impeded in
|
|||
|
their labor.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Mei Yao-ch`en says: "Men will be lacking at the plough-
|
|||
|
tail." The allusion is to the system of dividing land into nine
|
|||
|
parts, each consisting of about 15 acres, the plot in the center
|
|||
|
being cultivated on behalf of the State by the tenants of the
|
|||
|
other eight. It was here also, so Tu Mu tells us, that their
|
|||
|
cottages were built and a well sunk, to be used by all in common.
|
|||
|
[See II. ss. 12, note.] In time of war, one of the families had
|
|||
|
to serve in the army, while the other seven contributed to its
|
|||
|
support. Thus, by a levy of 100,000 men (reckoning one able-
|
|||
|
bodied soldier to each family) the husbandry of 700,000 families
|
|||
|
would be affected.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2. Hostile armies may face each other for years, striving
|
|||
|
for the victory which is decided in a single day. This being so,
|
|||
|
to remain in ignorance of the enemy's condition simply because
|
|||
|
one grudges the outlay of a hundred ounces of silver in honors
|
|||
|
and emoluments,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
["For spies" is of course the meaning, though it would spoil
|
|||
|
the effect of this curiously elaborate exordium if spies were
|
|||
|
actually mentioned at this point.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
is the height of inhumanity.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Sun Tzu's agreement is certainly ingenious. He begins by
|
|||
|
adverting to the frightful misery and vast expenditure of blood
|
|||
|
and treasure which war always brings in its train. Now, unless
|
|||
|
you are kept informed of the enemy's condition, and are ready to
|
|||
|
strike at the right moment, a war may drag on for years. The
|
|||
|
only way to get this information is to employ spies, and it is
|
|||
|
impossible to obtain trustworthy spies unless they are properly
|
|||
|
paid for their services. But it is surely false economy to
|
|||
|
grudge a comparatively trifling amount for this purpose, when
|
|||
|
every day that the war lasts eats up an incalculably greater sum.
|
|||
|
This grievous burden falls on the shoulders of the poor, and
|
|||
|
hence Sun Tzu concludes that to neglect the use of spies is
|
|||
|
nothing less than a crime against humanity.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
3. One who acts thus is no leader of men, no present help
|
|||
|
to his sovereign, no master of victory.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[This idea, that the true object of war is peace, has its
|
|||
|
root in the national temperament of the Chinese. Even so far
|
|||
|
back as 597 B.C., these memorable words were uttered by Prince
|
|||
|
Chuang of the Ch`u State: "The [Chinese] character for 'prowess'
|
|||
|
is made up of [the characters for] 'to stay' and 'a spear'
|
|||
|
(cessation of hostilities). Military prowess is seen in the
|
|||
|
repression of cruelty, the calling in of weapons, the
|
|||
|
preservation of the appointment of Heaven, the firm establishment
|
|||
|
of merit, the bestowal of happiness on the people, putting
|
|||
|
harmony between the princes, the diffusion of wealth."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
4. Thus, what enables the wise sovereign and the good
|
|||
|
general to strike and conquer, and achieve things beyond the
|
|||
|
reach of ordinary men, is FOREKNOWLEDGE.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[That is, knowledge of the enemy's dispositions, and what he
|
|||
|
means to do.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
5. Now this foreknowledge cannot be elicited from spirits;
|
|||
|
it cannot be obtained inductively from experience,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu's note is: "[knowledge of the enemy] cannot be
|
|||
|
gained by reasoning from other analogous cases."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
nor by any deductive calculation.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Li Ch`uan says: "Quantities like length, breadth,
|
|||
|
distance and magnitude, are susceptible of exact mathematical
|
|||
|
determination; human actions cannot be so calculated."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
6. Knowledge of the enemy's dispositions can only be
|
|||
|
obtained from other men.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Mei Yao-ch`en has rather an interesting note: "Knowledge
|
|||
|
of the spirit-world is to be obtained by divination; information
|
|||
|
in natural science may be sought by inductive reasoning; the laws
|
|||
|
of the universe can be verified by mathematical calculation: but
|
|||
|
the dispositions of an enemy are ascertainable through spies and
|
|||
|
spies alone."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
7. Hence the use of spies, of whom there are five classes:
|
|||
|
(1) Local spies; (2) inward spies; (3) converted spies; (4)
|
|||
|
doomed spies; (5) surviving spies.
|
|||
|
8. When these five kinds of spy are all at work, none can
|
|||
|
discover the secret system. This is called "divine manipulation
|
|||
|
of the threads." It is the sovereign's most precious faculty.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Cromwell, one of the greatest and most practical of all
|
|||
|
cavalry leaders, had officers styled 'scout masters,' whose
|
|||
|
business it was to collect all possible information regarding the
|
|||
|
enemy, through scouts and spies, etc., and much of his success in
|
|||
|
war was traceable to the previous knowledge of the enemy's moves
|
|||
|
thus gained." [1] ]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
9. Having LOCAL SPIES means employing the services of the
|
|||
|
inhabitants of a district.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu says: "In the enemy's country, win people over by
|
|||
|
kind treatment, and use them as spies."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
10. Having INWARD SPIES, making use of officials of the
|
|||
|
enemy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu enumerates the following classes as likely to do good
|
|||
|
service in this respect: "Worthy men who have been degraded from
|
|||
|
office, criminals who have undergone punishment; also, favorite
|
|||
|
concubines who are greedy for gold, men who are aggrieved at
|
|||
|
being in subordinate positions, or who have been passed over in
|
|||
|
the distribution of posts, others who are anxious that their side
|
|||
|
should be defeated in order that they may have a chance of
|
|||
|
displaying their ability and talents, fickle turncoats who always
|
|||
|
want to have a foot in each boat. Officials of these several
|
|||
|
kinds," he continues, "should be secretly approached and bound to
|
|||
|
one's interests by means of rich presents. In this way you will
|
|||
|
be able to find out the state of affairs in the enemy's country,
|
|||
|
ascertain the plans that are being formed against you, and
|
|||
|
moreover disturb the harmony and create a breach between the
|
|||
|
sovereign and his ministers." The necessity for extreme caution,
|
|||
|
however, in dealing with "inward spies," appears from an
|
|||
|
historical incident related by Ho Shih: "Lo Shang, Governor of
|
|||
|
I-Chou, sent his general Wei Po to attack the rebel Li Hsiung of
|
|||
|
Shu in his stronghold at P`i. After each side had experienced a
|
|||
|
number of victories and defeats, Li Hsiung had recourse to the
|
|||
|
services of a certain P`o-t`ai, a native of Wu-tu. He began to
|
|||
|
have him whipped until the blood came, and then sent him off to
|
|||
|
Lo Shang, whom he was to delude by offering to cooperate with him
|
|||
|
from inside the city, and to give a fire signal at the right
|
|||
|
moment for making a general assault. Lo Shang, confiding in
|
|||
|
these promises, march out all his best troops, and placed Wei Po
|
|||
|
and others at their head with orders to attack at P`o-t`ai's
|
|||
|
bidding. Meanwhile, Li Hsiung's general, Li Hsiang, had prepared
|
|||
|
an ambuscade on their line of march; and P`o-t`ai, having reared
|
|||
|
long scaling-ladders against the city walls, now lighted the
|
|||
|
beacon-fire. Wei Po's men raced up on seeing the signal and
|
|||
|
began climbing the ladders as fast as they could, while others
|
|||
|
were drawn up by ropes lowered from above. More than a hundred
|
|||
|
of Lo Shang's soldiers entered the city in this way, every one of
|
|||
|
whom was forthwith beheaded. Li Hsiung then charged with all his
|
|||
|
forces, both inside and outside the city, and routed the enemy
|
|||
|
completely." [This happened in 303 A.D. I do not know where Ho
|
|||
|
Shih got the story from. It is not given in the biography of Li
|
|||
|
Hsiung or that of his father Li T`e, CHIN SHU, ch. 120, 121.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
11. Having CONVERTED SPIES, getting hold of the enemy's
|
|||
|
spies and using them for our own purposes.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[By means of heavy bribes and liberal promises detaching
|
|||
|
them from the enemy's service, and inducing them to carry back
|
|||
|
false information as well as to spy in turn on their own
|
|||
|
countrymen. On the other hand, Hsiao Shih-hsien says that we
|
|||
|
pretend not to have detected him, but contrive to let him carry
|
|||
|
away a false impression of what is going on. Several of the
|
|||
|
commentators accept this as an alternative definition; but that
|
|||
|
it is not what Sun Tzu meant is conclusively proved by his
|
|||
|
subsequent remarks about treating the converted spy generously
|
|||
|
(ss. 21 sqq.). Ho Shih notes three occasions on which converted
|
|||
|
spies were used with conspicuous success: (1) by T`ien Tan in
|
|||
|
his defense of Chi-mo (see supra, p. 90); (2) by Chao She on his
|
|||
|
march to O-yu (see p. 57); and by the wily Fan Chu in 260 B.C.,
|
|||
|
when Lien P`o was conducting a defensive campaign against Ch`in.
|
|||
|
The King of Chao strongly disapproved of Lien P`o's cautious and
|
|||
|
dilatory methods, which had been unable to avert a series of
|
|||
|
minor disasters, and therefore lent a ready ear to the reports of
|
|||
|
his spies, who had secretly gone over to the enemy and were
|
|||
|
already in Fan Chu's pay. They said: "The only thing which
|
|||
|
causes Ch`in anxiety is lest Chao Kua should be made general.
|
|||
|
Lien P`o they consider an easy opponent, who is sure to be
|
|||
|
vanquished in the long run." Now this Chao Kua was a sun of the
|
|||
|
famous Chao She. From his boyhood, he had been wholly engrossed
|
|||
|
in the study of war and military matters, until at last he came
|
|||
|
to believe that there was no commander in the whole Empire who
|
|||
|
could stand against him. His father was much disquieted by this
|
|||
|
overweening conceit, and the flippancy with which he spoke of
|
|||
|
such a serious thing as war, and solemnly declared that if ever
|
|||
|
Kua was appointed general, he would bring ruin on the armies of
|
|||
|
Chao. This was the man who, in spite of earnest protests from
|
|||
|
his own mother and the veteran statesman Lin Hsiang-ju, was now
|
|||
|
sent to succeed Lien P`o. Needless to say, he proved no match
|
|||
|
for the redoubtable Po Ch`i and the great military power of
|
|||
|
Ch`in. He fell into a trap by which his army was divided into
|
|||
|
two and his communications cut; and after a desperate resistance
|
|||
|
lasting 46 days, during which the famished soldiers devoured one
|
|||
|
another, he was himself killed by an arrow, and his whole force,
|
|||
|
amounting, it is said, to 400,000 men, ruthlessly put to the
|
|||
|
sword.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
12. Having DOOMED SPIES, doing certain things openly for
|
|||
|
purposes of deception, and allowing our spies to know of them and
|
|||
|
report them to the enemy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Yu gives the best exposition of the meaning: "We
|
|||
|
ostentatiously do thing calculated to deceive our own spies, who
|
|||
|
must be led to believe that they have been unwittingly disclosed.
|
|||
|
Then, when these spies are captured in the enemy's lines, they
|
|||
|
will make an entirely false report, and the enemy will take
|
|||
|
measures accordingly, only to find that we do something quite
|
|||
|
different. The spies will thereupon be put to death." As an
|
|||
|
example of doomed spies, Ho Shih mentions the prisoners released
|
|||
|
by Pan Ch`ao in his campaign against Yarkand. (See p. 132.) He
|
|||
|
also refers to T`ang Chien, who in 630 A.D. was sent by T`ai
|
|||
|
Tsung to lull the Turkish Kahn Chieh-li into fancied security,
|
|||
|
until Li Ching was able to deliver a crushing blow against him.
|
|||
|
Chang Yu says that the Turks revenged themselves by killing T`ang
|
|||
|
Chien, but this is a mistake, for we read in both the old and the
|
|||
|
New T`ang History (ch. 58, fol. 2 and ch. 89, fol. 8
|
|||
|
respectively) that he escaped and lived on until 656. Li I-chi
|
|||
|
played a somewhat similar part in 203 B.C., when sent by the King
|
|||
|
of Han to open peaceful negotiations with Ch`i. He has certainly
|
|||
|
more claim to be described a "doomed spy", for the king of Ch`i,
|
|||
|
being subsequently attacked without warning by Han Hsin, and
|
|||
|
infuriated by what he considered the treachery of Li I-chi,
|
|||
|
ordered the unfortunate envoy to be boiled alive.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
13. SURVIVING SPIES, finally, are those who bring back news
|
|||
|
from the enemy's camp.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[This is the ordinary class of spies, properly so called,
|
|||
|
forming a regular part of the army. Tu Mu says: "Your surviving
|
|||
|
spy must be a man of keen intellect, though in outward appearance
|
|||
|
a fool; of shabby exterior, but with a will of iron. He must be
|
|||
|
active, robust, endowed with physical strength and courage;
|
|||
|
thoroughly accustomed to all sorts of dirty work, able to endure
|
|||
|
hunger and cold, and to put up with shame and ignominy." Ho Shih
|
|||
|
tells the following story of Ta`hsi Wu of the Sui dynasty: "When
|
|||
|
he was governor of Eastern Ch`in, Shen-wu of Ch`i made a hostile
|
|||
|
movement upon Sha-yuan. The Emperor T`ai Tsu [? Kao Tsu] sent
|
|||
|
Ta-hsi Wu to spy upon the enemy. He was accompanied by two other
|
|||
|
men. All three were on horseback and wore the enemy's uniform.
|
|||
|
When it was dark, they dismounted a few hundred feet away from
|
|||
|
the enemy's camp and stealthily crept up to listen, until they
|
|||
|
succeeded in catching the passwords used in the army. Then they
|
|||
|
got on their horses again and boldly passed through the camp
|
|||
|
under the guise of night-watchmen; and more than once, happening
|
|||
|
to come across a soldier who was committing some breach of
|
|||
|
discipline, they actually stopped to give the culprit a sound
|
|||
|
cudgeling! Thus they managed to return with the fullest possible
|
|||
|
information about the enemy's dispositions, and received warm
|
|||
|
commendation from the Emperor, who in consequence of their report
|
|||
|
was able to inflict a severe defeat on his adversary."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
14. Hence it is that which none in the whole army are more
|
|||
|
intimate relations to be maintained than with spies.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu and Mei Yao-ch`en point out that the spy is
|
|||
|
privileged to enter even the general's private sleeping-tent.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
None should be more liberally rewarded. In no other business
|
|||
|
should greater secrecy be preserved.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu gives a graphic touch: all communication with spies
|
|||
|
should be carried "mouth-to-ear." The following remarks on spies
|
|||
|
may be quoted from Turenne, who made perhaps larger use of them
|
|||
|
than any previous commander: "Spies are attached to those who
|
|||
|
give them most, he who pays them ill is never served. They
|
|||
|
should never be known to anybody; nor should they know one
|
|||
|
another. When they propose anything very material, secure their
|
|||
|
persons, or have in your possession their wives and children as
|
|||
|
hostages for their fidelity. Never communicate anything to them
|
|||
|
but what is absolutely necessary that they should know. [2] ]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
15. Spies cannot be usefully employed without a certain
|
|||
|
intuitive sagacity.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Mei Yao-ch`en says: "In order to use them, one must know
|
|||
|
fact from falsehood, and be able to discriminate between honesty
|
|||
|
and double-dealing." Wang Hsi in a different interpretation
|
|||
|
thinks more along the lines of "intuitive perception" and
|
|||
|
"practical intelligence." Tu Mu strangely refers these
|
|||
|
attributes to the spies themselves: "Before using spies we must
|
|||
|
assure ourselves as to their integrity of character and the
|
|||
|
extent of their experience and skill." But he continues: "A
|
|||
|
brazen face and a crafty disposition are more dangerous than
|
|||
|
mountains or rivers; it takes a man of genius to penetrate such."
|
|||
|
So that we are left in some doubt as to his real opinion on the
|
|||
|
passage."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
16. They cannot be properly managed without benevolence and
|
|||
|
straightforwardness.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu says: "When you have attracted them by
|
|||
|
substantial offers, you must treat them with absolute sincerity;
|
|||
|
then they will work for you with all their might."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
17. Without subtle ingenuity of mind, one cannot make
|
|||
|
certain of the truth of their reports.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Mei Yao-ch`en says: "Be on your guard against the
|
|||
|
possibility of spies going over to the service of the enemy."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
18. Be subtle! be subtle! and use your spies for every kind
|
|||
|
of business.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Cf. VI. ss. 9.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
19. If a secret piece of news is divulged by a spy before
|
|||
|
the time is ripe, he must be put to death together with the man
|
|||
|
to whom the secret was told.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Word for word, the translation here is: "If spy matters
|
|||
|
are heard before [our plans] are carried out," etc. Sun Tzu's
|
|||
|
main point in this passage is: Whereas you kill the spy himself
|
|||
|
"as a punishment for letting out the secret," the object of
|
|||
|
killing the other man is only, as Ch`en Hao puts it, "to stop his
|
|||
|
mouth" and prevent news leaking any further. If it had already
|
|||
|
been repeated to others, this object would not be gained. Either
|
|||
|
way, Sun Tzu lays himself open to the charge of inhumanity,
|
|||
|
though Tu Mu tries to defend him by saying that the man deserves
|
|||
|
to be put to death, for the spy would certainly not have told the
|
|||
|
secret unless the other had been at pains to worm it out of
|
|||
|
him."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
20. Whether the object be to crush an army, to storm a
|
|||
|
city, or to assassinate an individual, it is always necessary to
|
|||
|
begin by finding out the names of the attendants, the aides-de-
|
|||
|
camp,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Literally "visitors", is equivalent, as Tu Yu says, to
|
|||
|
"those whose duty it is to keep the general supplied with
|
|||
|
information," which naturally necessitates frequent interviews
|
|||
|
with him.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and door-keepers and sentries of the general in command. Our
|
|||
|
spies must be commissioned to ascertain these.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[As the first step, no doubt towards finding out if any of
|
|||
|
these important functionaries can be won over by bribery.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
21. The enemy's spies who have come to spy on us must be
|
|||
|
sought out, tempted with bribes, led away and comfortably housed.
|
|||
|
Thus they will become converted spies and available for our
|
|||
|
service.
|
|||
|
22. It is through the information brought by the converted
|
|||
|
spy that we are able to acquire and employ local and inward
|
|||
|
spies.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Yu says: "through conversion of the enemy's spies we
|
|||
|
learn the enemy's condition." And Chang Yu says: "We must tempt
|
|||
|
the converted spy into our service, because it is he that knows
|
|||
|
which of the local inhabitants are greedy of gain, and which of
|
|||
|
the officials are open to corruption."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
23. It is owing to his information, again, that we can
|
|||
|
cause the doomed spy to carry false tidings to the enemy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chang Yu says, "because the converted spy knows how the
|
|||
|
enemy can best be deceived."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
24. Lastly, it is by his information that the surviving spy
|
|||
|
can be used on appointed occasions.
|
|||
|
25. The end and aim of spying in all its five varieties is
|
|||
|
knowledge of the enemy; and this knowledge can only be derived,
|
|||
|
in the first instance, from the converted spy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[As explained in ss. 22-24. He not only brings information
|
|||
|
himself, but makes it possible to use the other kinds of spy to
|
|||
|
advantage.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hence it is essential that the converted spy be treated with the
|
|||
|
utmost liberality.
|
|||
|
26. Of old, the rise of the Yin dynasty
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Sun Tzu means the Shang dynasty, founded in 1766 B.C. Its
|
|||
|
name was changed to Yin by P`an Keng in 1401.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
was due to I Chih
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Better known as I Yin, the famous general and statesman
|
|||
|
who took part in Ch`eng T`ang's campaign against Chieh Kuei.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
who had served under the Hsia. Likewise, the rise of the Chou
|
|||
|
dynasty was due to Lu Ya
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Lu Shang rose to high office under the tyrant Chou Hsin,
|
|||
|
whom he afterwards helped to overthrow. Popularly known as T`ai
|
|||
|
Kung, a title bestowed on him by Wen Wang, he is said to have
|
|||
|
composed a treatise on war, erroneously identified with the
|
|||
|
LIU T`AO.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
who had served under the Yin.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[There is less precision in the Chinese than I have thought
|
|||
|
it well to introduce into my translation, and the commentaries on
|
|||
|
the passage are by no means explicit. But, having regard to the
|
|||
|
context, we can hardly doubt that Sun Tzu is holding up I Chih
|
|||
|
and Lu Ya as illustrious examples of the converted spy, or
|
|||
|
something closely analogous. His suggestion is, that the Hsia
|
|||
|
and Yin dynasties were upset owing to the intimate knowledge of
|
|||
|
their weaknesses and shortcoming which these former ministers
|
|||
|
were able to impart to the other side. Mei Yao-ch`en appears to
|
|||
|
resent any such aspersion on these historic names: "I Yin and Lu
|
|||
|
Ya," he says, "were not rebels against the Government. Hsia
|
|||
|
could not employ the former, hence Yin employed him. Yin could
|
|||
|
not employ the latter, hence Hou employed him. Their great
|
|||
|
achievements were all for the good of the people." Ho Shih is
|
|||
|
also indignant: "How should two divinely inspired men such as I
|
|||
|
and Lu have acted as common spies? Sun Tzu's mention of them
|
|||
|
simply means that the proper use of the five classes of spies is
|
|||
|
a matter which requires men of the highest mental caliber like I
|
|||
|
and Lu, whose wisdom and capacity qualified them for the task.
|
|||
|
The above words only emphasize this point." Ho Shih believes
|
|||
|
then that the two heroes are mentioned on account of their
|
|||
|
supposed skill in the use of spies. But this is very weak.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
27. Hence it is only the enlightened ruler and the wise
|
|||
|
general who will use the highest intelligence of the army for
|
|||
|
purposes of spying and thereby they achieve great results.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Tu Mu closes with a note of warning: "Just as water, which
|
|||
|
carries a boat from bank to bank, may also be the means of
|
|||
|
sinking it, so reliance on spies, while production of great
|
|||
|
results, is oft-times the cause of utter destruction."]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Spies are a most important element in water, because on them
|
|||
|
depends an army's ability to move.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Chia Lin says that an army without spies is like a man with
|
|||
|
ears or eyes.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[1] "Aids to Scouting," p. 2.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[2] "Marshal Turenne," p. 311.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
End of the Project Gutenberg Etext of Sun Tzu on the Art of War
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|