According to tradition, the method of collection of the various
Shijing poems involved the appointment of officials, whose duties included documenting verses current from the various states which constituted the empire. Out of these many collected pieces, also according to tradition, Confucius made a final editorial round of decisions for elimination or inclusion in the received version of the
Poetry. As with all great literary works of ancient China, the
Poetry has been annotated and commented on continuously throughout history, as well as in this case providing a model to inspire future poetic works. Various traditions concern the gathering of the compiled songs and the editorial selection from these make up the classic text of the
Odes: "Royal Officials' Collecting Songs" () is recorded in the
Book of Han, and "Master
Confucius Deletes Songs" () refers to Confucius and his mention in the
Records of the Grand Historian, where it says from originally some 3,000 songs and poems in a previously extant "
Odes" that Confucius personally selected the "300" which he felt best conformed to traditional ritual propriety, thus producing the
Classic of Poetry. In 2015,
Anhui University purchased a group of looted manuscripts dating to c. 330 BC (during the Warring States period), among which is one of the
oldest extant scribal copies of the
Classic of Poetry (at least part of it). The manuscript has been published in the first volume of this collection of manuscripts, .
Compilation The Confucian school eventually came to consider the verses of the "Airs of the States" to have been collected in the course of activities of officers dispatched by the
Zhou dynasty court, whose duties included the field collection of the songs local to the territorial states of Zhou. This territory was roughly the
Yellow River Plain,
Shandong, southwestern
Hebei, eastern
Gansu, and the
Han River region. Perhaps during the
harvest. After the officials returned from their missions, the king was said to have observed them himself in an effort to understand the current condition of the common people. The well-being of the people was of special concern to the Zhou because of their ideological position that the right to rule was based on the benignity of the rulers to the people in accordance with the will of
Heaven, and that this
Heavenly Mandate would be withdrawn upon the failure of the ruling dynasty to ensure the prosperity of their subjects. The people's folksongs were deemed to be the best gauge of their feelings and conditions, and thus indicative of whether the nobility was ruling according to the mandate of Heaven or not. Accordingly, the songs were collected from the various regions, converted from their diverse regional dialects into standard literary language, and presented accompanied with music at the royal courts.
Confucius The
Classic of Poetry historically has a major place in the
Four Books and Five Classics, the canonical works associated with
Confucianism. Some pre-Qin dynasty texts, such as the
Analects and a recently excavated manuscript from 300 BCE entitled "Confucius' Discussion of the
Odes", mention Confucius' involvement with the
Classic of Poetry but Han dynasty historian
Sima Qian's
Records of the Grand Historian was the first work to directly attribute the work to Confucius. Subsequent Confucian tradition held that the
Shijing collection was edited by
Confucius from a larger 3,000-piece collection to its traditional 305-piece form. This claim is believed to reflect an early Chinese tendency to relate all of the
Five Classics in some way or another to Confucius, who by the 1st century BCE had become the model of sages and was believed to have maintained a cultural connection to the early Zhou dynasty. This view is now generally discredited, as the
Zuo Zhuan records that the
Classic of Poetry already existed in a definitive form when Confucius was just a young child. In works attributed to him, Confucius comments upon the
Classic of Poetry in such a way as to indicate that he holds it in great esteem. A story in the
Analects recounts that Confucius' son
Kong Li told the story: "The Master once stood by himself, and I hurried to seek teaching from him. He asked me, 'You've studied the Odes?' I answered, 'Not yet.' He replied, 'If you have not studied the Odes, then I have nothing to say.'"
Han dynasty According to Han tradition, the
Poetry and other classics were targets of the
burning of books in 213 BCE under
Qin Shi Huang, and the songs had to be reconstructed largely from memory in the subsequent Han period. However the discovery of pre-Qin copies showing the same variation as Han texts, as well as evidence of Qin patronage of the
Poetry, have led modern scholars to doubt this account. During the Han period there were three different versions of the
Poetry which each belonged to different
hermeneutic traditions. The Lu
Poetry (), the Qi
Poetry () and the Han
Poetry () were officially recognized with chairs at the Imperial Academy during the reign of
Emperor Wu of Han (156–87 BCE). Until the later years of the Eastern Han period, the dominant version of the
Poetry was the Lu
Poetry, named after the
state of Lu, and founded by Shen Pei, a student of a disciple of the
Warring States period philosopher
Xunzi. The Mao Tradition of the
Poetry (), attributed to an obscure scholar named () who lived during the 2nd or 3rd centuries BCE, was not officially recognized until the reign of
Emperor Ping (1 BCE to 6 CE). However, during the Eastern Han period, the Mao
Poetry gradually became the primary version. Proponents of the Mao
Poetry said that its text was descended from the first generation of Confucius' students, and as such should be the authoritative version.
Xu Shen's influential dictionary
Shuowen Jiezi, written in the 2nd-century CE, quotes almost exclusively from the Mao
Poetry. Finally, the renowned Eastern Han scholar
Zheng Xuan used the Mao
Poetry as the basis for his annotated 2nd-century edition of the
Poetry. Zheng Xuan's edition of the Mao text was itself the basis of the "Right Meaning of the Mao
Poetry" () which became the imperially authorized text and commentary on the
Poetry in 653 CE. By the 5th-century, the Lu, Qi, and Han traditions had died out, leaving only the Mao
Poetry, which has become the
received text in use today. Only isolated fragments of the Lu text survive, among the remains of the
Xiping Stone Classics. == Legacy ==