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A Chinese Biographical Dictionary
53

138 Ch'ang Chü 長沮. A man who was working in the fields on one occasion when Confucius, passing by, wished to find out the whereabouts of a ford. Tzŭ Lu was sent to enquire of him; whereupon the man pointed significantly towards the Master and said, "He knows the ford." See Chieh Ni.

139 Ch'ang Ling 長齡 (T. 懋亭). A.D. 1758-1838. A celebrated official, of Mongolian descent. He began life in 1775 as a secretary of the Grand Council, after taking the hsiu ts'ai degree at the Manchu examination. In 1787 he fought in Formosa, and in 1792—95 against Nepaul. In 1800 he was in command of the expeditionary force sent against insurgent bands in Hupeh, and subsequently in various operations undertaken from time to time against disturbances caused by the evil influence of secret societies. He became successively Governor of Anhui and Shantung, and in 1807 Governor General of Shensi and Kansuh. In 1808 he was impeached on several charges and stripped of his rank, and then banished to Ili. A few months later he was once more employed, and gradually rose again to the highest posts. In 1825 he was Viceroy of Ili. In 1826, when the rebel 張格爾 Jehangir crossed the frontier and began his depredations, capturing Kashgar, Yingishar, Yarkand and Khoten, he was appointed Generalissimo; and by the end of 1827 had captured Jehangir and put an end to the rebellion. The prisoner was sent to Peking in a cage, and brained in the presence of the Emperor, who conferred on Chiang Ling a triple-eyed peacock's feather. Canonised as 文襄, and admitted into the Temple of Worthies.

140 Ch'ang O 嫦娥. The wife of Hou I, who is said to have stolen from her husband the drug of immortality and to have fled with it to the moon, where she was changed into a toad. This toad, which answers to our "man in the moon," is believed to swallow the moon during an eclipse. Ch'ang 0's name was originally 恒