The Ethics of Confucius
                                                            
                                    
                                            Miles Menander Dawson 
                                    
                                
                            9781465577337
                                183 pages
                            Library of Alexandria
                            
                            
                                
                         
                        
                                
Overview
                                WHEN Confucius died, it is recorded that his last words were regrets that none among the rulers then living possessed the sagacity requisite to a proper appreciation of his ethical philosophy and teachings. He died unhonoured,—died in his seventy-third year, 479 B.C., feeling in the flickering beats of his failing heart that his inspiring pleas for truth and justice, industry and self-denial, moderation and public duty, though then without having awakened men's impulses, would yet stir the depths of the social life of his land.