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Confucianism -> Liji -> Wang Zhi -> 51

All who had charge of the prohibitions for the regulation of the multitudes
did not forgive transgressions of them.
Those who had rank-tokens, the long or the round, and gilt libation-cups
were not allowed to sell them in the market-places;
nor were any allowed to sell robes or chariots, the gift of the king;
广 or vessels of an ancestral temple; or victims for sacrifice; or instruments of war; or vessels which were not according to the prescribed measurements; or chariots of war which were not according to the same; or cloth or silk, fine or coarse, not according to the prescribed quality, or broader or narrower than the proper rule; or of the illegitimate colours, confusing those that were correct; or cloth, embroidered or figured; or vessels made with pearls or jade; or clothes, or food, or drink, (in any way extravagant); or grain which was not in season, or fruit which was unripe; or wood which was not fit for the axe; or birds, beasts, fishes, or reptiles, which were not fit to be killed. At the frontier gates, those in charge of the prohibitions, examined travellers, forbidding such as wore strange clothes, and taking note of such as spoke a strange language.


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