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In the passage of nearly forty years since the first discovery of the Honan relics and their strange inscriptions, great has been the progress in their decipherment. How much and how solid this gain in knowledge has been, the present writer can perhaps appreciate better than more recent students, when he looks back at his own notes and the correspondence that passed betweenthe late Mr. Frank Chalfant and himself.
page 414 note 1 , sect. 3, p.20.
page 416 note 1 See Legge's, Chinese Classics, vol. 3, part 2, p. 452Google Scholar.
page 417 note 1 See my “Sovereigns of the Shang Dynasty”, in JRAS., January, 1917, p. 85.
page 418 note 1 “thus stands for” is what the writer really means.
page 420 note 1 See Lo Chên-yü, Hou Pien , p. 32, and Ch'ien Pien, 5, 41.
page 421 note 1 Cited in the , Chia Ku Hsüeh (Wên Tzŭ Pien), sect. 3, p. 21.
page 421 note 2 A: Tsang Kuei Chih Yü, p. 17. B: Yin Ch'i I Ts'un, Bone 959. C: Yin Hsü Shu Ch'i, 4, 55. D: Yin Hsü Shu Ch'i, Hou Pien , p. 19. E: Yin Hsü Shu Ch'i, 4, 54.