TRANSGRESSIONOFTHELAVV
Ch’inShih
Huang
Ti,
thefirst
emperor
ofChina
(221-210B.C.),
wasthe
mightiest
manofhis
day.
His
empire
wasvasterandmore
powerful
than
that
ofAlexandertheGreat.Hehad
conquered
allofthe
kingdoms
sur-
rounding
his
own
kingdom
ofChinandunifiedthemintoonemassive
realmcalledChina.Butinthelast
years
ofhis
life,
few,
if
anyone,
sawhim.
The
emperor
livedinthemost
magnificent
palace
builttothat
date,
in
the
capital
of
Hsien-yang.
The
palace
had
270
pavilions;
allof
these
were
connected
by
secret
undergroundpassageways,allowing
the
emperor
to
move
through
the
palace
without
anyoneseeing
him.He
slept
in
a
differ-—
entroom
everynight,
and
anyone
who
inadvertently
laid
eyes
onhimwas
instantly
beheaded.
Only
ahandfulofmenknewhis
whereabouts,
andif
they
revealeditto
anyone,they,
too,
were
put
todeath.
The
first
emperor
had
grown
soterrified
ofhumanContact
thatwhen
hehadtoleave
the
palace
hetraveled
incognito,disguising
himselfcare
fully.
Ononesuch
tripthrough
the
provinces,
he
suddenly
died.His
body
wasbornebacktothe
capital
inthe
emperor’scarriage,
withacart
packed
withsalted fish
trailing
behindittocover
up
thesmell ofthe
rotting
corpse-—~no
onewastoknowofhisdeath.Hedied
alone,
farfromhis
wives,
his
family,
his
friends,
andhis
courfiers,
accompaniedonlyby
a
ministerand
a
handfulofeunuchs.
Interpretation
Shih
Huang
Tistartedoffasthe
king
of
Ch’in,
afearlesswarriorofunbri-
dled
ambition.Writersof
the
timedescribed
himasaman
with“a
waspish
nose,
eyes
like
slits,
the
voice
ofa
jackal,
andtheheart
ofa
tiger
orwolf.”
Hecouldbemerciful
sometimes,
butmoreoftenhe“swallowedmen
up
withouta
scruple.”
Itwas
through
trickery
andviolencethathe
conquered
the
provincessurrounding
hisownandcreated
China,
forging
a
single
na-
tionandcultureoutof
many.
Hebroke
up
thefeudal
system,
andto
keep
an
eye
onthe
many
membersofthe
royal
familiesthatwerescattered
acrosstherealm’svarious
kingdoms,
hemoved
120,000
ofthemtothe
cap-
ital,
wherehehousedthemost
important
couxtiersinthevast
palace
of
Hsienyang.
Heconsolidatedthe
many
wallsonthebordersandbuiltthem
into
theGreat
Wall
ofChina.
Hestandardizedthe
country’s
laws,
its
writ-
ten
language,
even
thesize
ofits
cartwheels.
As
part
ofthis
process
of
unification,
however,
thefirst
emperor
out-
lawedthe
writings
and
teachings
of
Confucius,
the
philosopher
whose
ideasonthemorallifehad
already
become
virtually
a
religion
inChinese
culture.OnShih
Huang
Ti’s
order,
thousandsofbooks
relating
toConfu-
cius
were
burned,
and
anyone
who
quoted
Confuciuswastobe
beheaded.
This
made
many
enemiesforthe
emperor,
and
he
grewconstantly
afraid,
even
paranoid.
Theexecutionsmounted.A
contemporary,
thewriterHan-
fei-tzu,
notedthat“Ch’inhasbeenvictoriousforfour
generations,yet
has
livedinconstantterror
and
apprehension
ofdestruction.”
Asthe
emperor
withdrew
deeper
and
deeper
intothe
palace
to
protect
'lHI.
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LAWis 131