CHAPTER 4. COUNSEL TO PRINCES NOT TO ALLOW THEMSELVES TO BE DECEIVED BY MEN WHO WOULD ADVISE THEM TO WAR.
1. Comp. IV, Pt. I, xiv, 3.
2. Comp. I, Pt. II, xi, 2. It is spoken of T'ang.
3. 革车,— "leathern carriages, or chariots", said by some to be baggage wagons, but, more probably by others, chariots of war, each one of which had 72 foot soldiers attached to it, so that Woo's army would number 21600,