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Chapter[ Introduction

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Item[ 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]


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