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Introduction to Literary Chinese - Lesson 5, Text 1

Adapted from the 1927 book by J. Brandt
A Ya-hu Pearl
Among traders in the western regions, there was one who held a pearl and sought to sell it to Shang-wen, demanding a price of six hundred thousand.
A connoisseur said, "It is the so-called Ya-hu Pearl. To pay six hundred thousand for it would not be excessive."
The whole company looked at it passing it round and vied to regard it as wonderful.
Shang-wen asked, "What is the use of this gem?"
The man said, "By keeping it in the mouth one can have no thirst,"
Shang-wen said, "If one man kept it in the mouth, so that a hundred thousand men would not thirst, then it would have been a gem indeed.
But if one pearl will only help one man, its utility is then insignificant."
As for what I would call a gem, rice would be it.
One day without eating it and one grows hungry; three days without eating it and one falls ill; seven days without eating it and one dies.
If they have it, then the masses are quiet; if they don't have it, then the country revolts.
If we compare them by their utility, how is it not greater than that pearl?"