User:Frigoris/昧雉彼視

Traditional interpretation
An oath.


 * =, pronounced as <
 * = pheasant, in this case the sacrifice animal, the OBJ of 割
 * = that one
 * = to see; to deem; to look at

I.e., "look at that slaughtered pheasant!" / "deem me equal to that slaughtered pheasant!"

Meaning: "If any of us shall violate (the oath of never going back to Wey), we will meet the same fate as that of the sacrificial pheasant."

The problem
The glossing of >  as 割, and reading as  <, is problematic. See Chen Li: 《公羊義疏》 https://archive.org/details/02074773.cn/page/n8/mode/1up

Textual error
Consider the possibility that might be a typo fixated in the textual tradition.


 * = [character composition + (隹 = semantically )]. The text should read: 昧矢隹彼視 = 昧矢，維彼[是]視 (if anyone should violate the oath, they shall only look at that thing [i.e. sacrifice victim, not necessarily pheasant]!)
 * ,, 隹 = , as in the construct 「 + OBJ + + VERB」
 * Problem: textual error due to left-right splitting of character is highly unlikely in ancient vertical text

It might be that splitting is not necessary, as might has well been a typo for 維, and the reconstructed sentence becomes even more laconic (昧，維彼[是]視).

Other interpretations of 昧
Chen Li himself considers to be a typo of, and connects it to  which has the meaning of , , and  [the latter being the Baxter–Sagart reconstruction]. However, the usage of as "to kill, to cut, etc." seems a bit modern.

彼 as variant to 是
See external link. The problem is that this usage, if supportable, appears rather rare.

雉 and Prince Shensheng's death
Intriguingly, the  wrote of Prince 's death as 雉經于新城之廟 (page). The Eastern-Han-era dictionary  says 雉經 means dying from asphyxiation with bent neck "in the manner how a pheasant does it". The pheasant in classical culture has a reputation of never submitting to live capture; it always dies fighting or by suicide. However, it is questionable whether it is possible at all to die from suicide in this manner by bending one's own neck. The Qing-era commentary on the Shiming quotes (page) from 's commentary to the  and subsequent commentary by et al. (page), by linking 雉 to the rare character, rope for pulling a cattle by the nose. That character could be a variant of, possibly related to by pronunciation. This is corroborated by the  where Shensheng's death is said to be from self-hanging. It's unclear whether this meaning and its context could be related to 昧雉彼視 via 雉.

麻夷非是
This weird phrase found in excavated stone tablets, interpreted as the conclusion of oaths, has been linked to the phrase here.



Some reading based on near homophony was proposed, such as "". However this instance of near homophony is more likely in modern Chinese than in OC.

Perhaps a closer homophone would be


 * ~ (also, similar "arrow"/"bow" elements in character shapes)
 * ~ (also, similar "arrow"/"bow" elements in character shapes)

I.e.


 * 靡矢非是, lit., "None swears not-this" = "No one swears any other oath" or "No one's oath was not like this" = "So say we all."
 * As double-negative, this is considered more natural than *靡非是矢
 * The problem is of course the identification of 夷 with possible near-homophone 矢. The latter character is not a rare one.
 * Interestingly the char 夷 appears to be written as ⿱夷土. "Borrowing" the glottal final (> departing tone) from ? (Appears to be quite common in written character, see link).

Or alternatively, a straightforward reading without homophone characters: "Destroy (夷, to flatten) like reaping hemp plants (麻) [those who are] not like this.". Cf.:.