Feng Shui - Zhang Shu 1.0
Feng Shui - Zhang Shu 1.0
Feng Shui - Zhang Shu 1.0
by Guo Pu (276-324)
Translated by Stephen L. Field, Ph.D.
I. The Qi of Burial
A. Vital Qi
2. The five (phases of) qi [2] course through the earth, materialize and give
birth to the myriad things.
B. The Qi of Bones
2. If the ancestors bones acquire qi, the descendants bodies are endowed.
3. The Classic says: Qi is moved and responds in kind; [3] the blessings of
ghosts extend to the living.
4. This is why, when Copper Mountain collapsed in the west, the palace bell
tolled in the east.[4]
5. When the tree flowers in the spring, the chestnut sprouts in the hall.
6. Truly, life is accumulated qi; it solidifies into bone, [5] which alone remains
after death.
7. Burial returns qi to the bones which is the way the living are endowed.
2. The Classic says: Qi rides the wind and scatters, but is retained when
encountering water.
5. According to the laws of fengshui, the site which attracts water is optimum,
followed by the site which catches wind.
B. Underground Qi
6. The Classic says: When the proper depth is achieved, fengshui comes about
naturally.
1. The qi of yin and yang breathes out as wind, rises up as clouds, descends as
rain, and courses underground as vital energy.
4. The Classic says: Qi flows where the earth changes shape; the flora and
fauna are thereby nourished.
III. The Flow of Terrain
1. Qi flows within the ground, follows the contour of the terrain, and pools
where the contour runs its course.
6. Thousands of feet distant, they are contours; hundreds of feet nigh, they
are features.
B. Honorable Terrain
1. (Contour) twists and turns back upon itself, coil upon coil and spiral, like (a
dragon) crouching and waiting, like (a dragon) grasping and holding.
4. Where earth is high and water deep, where vegetation flourishes, (such
terrain) is honorable as a thousand-chariot noble and rich as ten thousand in
gold.
A. Arterial Branches
1. The value of ground is its smoothness; the value of earth is its (arterial)
branches.
7. The Classic says: Where the ground holds auspicious qi, the earth conforms
and protrudes.
9. Where the contour is fluid and features are dynamic, unwinding from
terminus to source, according to the art of fengshui, if burial occurs here good
fortune is eternal and misfortune nil.
B. Mountain Burial
2. Seek those that are harmonious; scrutinize those that are deficient.
3. Select those that are beneficial; avoid those that are harmful.
4. In this manner the gentleman will snatch merit from the gods and change
the mandate of Heaven.
2. They come in a rush, and they cease as if laid to rest, like someone resting
peacefully while embracing a treasure, or fasting in purity while laying out a
feast; like a bulging bag, or a brimming plate; like dragons and phoenixes,
soaring and circling.
4. The heavenly lights regenerate, like rivers returning to the sea, or like the
stars revolving around the North Star.
5. Embraced and protected by dragon and tiger, receiving each other like host
and guest.
6. The Four Aspects [7] correct and clear, the Five Dangers [8] nowhere near.
A. Unique Terrain
4. When features are confused, and contour is chaotic; when host and guest
are indistinguishable, such a locale is not suitable for burial.
2. Where branches and hills terminate, there is level ground like the palm of
the hand.
3. Therefore, with branches bury on their summit, and with hills bury at their
base.
4. When divining, branches are the head and hills are the feet.
5. If features and contours do not conform to the rule, qi will escape in a rush.
8. The difference between bad and good fortune separates the prince from the
prisoner.
C. Fathoming Qi
2. On the outside it catches the eight winds; inside it hides the five elements.
3. The heavenly lights shine down; the earthly energies are carried upwards.
4. Yin and yang blend and mix, (forming) the five (colored) soils and the four
perfections.
5. With the intelligence of strong vision and the totality of skill, pursue the
perfect and avoid the imperfect; augment the high and low.
6. Subtlety lies in wisdom; deduce from analogy and thereby take advantage.
7. By the mysterious fathom yin and yang; through skill snatch the (merit)
created (by heaven).
A. The Terminus
B. The Dragon
1. The Classic says: Where contour ceases and features soar high, with a
stream in front and a hill behind, here hides the head of the dragon.
2. The snout and forehead are auspicious; the horns and eyes bring doom.
3. The ears obtain princes and kings; the lips can lead to death or injury from
weapons.
4. Where terrain winds about and collects at the center, this is called the belly
of the dragon.
5. Where the navel is deep and winding, descendants will have good fortune.
6. If the chest and ribs are injured, burial in the morning will bring sobbing that
night.
A. Flowing Qi
5. The Classic says: The lair that does not hoard will only harbor rotting bones.
B. Blowing Qi
2. The dragon and tiger are what protect the district of the lair.
3. On a hill amid folds of strata, if open to the left or vacant to the right, if
empty in the front or hollow at the rear, vital qi will dissipate in the blowing wind.
4. The Classic says: A lair with leakage will only harbor a decaying coffin.
C. Soil
1. The soil should be fine and firm, moist and lustrous; it should be cleavable
like jade or fat, and composed of all the five colors.
2. If it is dry like grains of millet, or wet like severed flesh; if there are springs
or gravel, all of these make inauspicious gravesites.
1. Bury with the Cerulean Dragon to the left, the White Tiger to the right, the
Vermilion Bird in front, and the Dark Turtle in back.
2. The Dark Turtle hangs its head; the Vermilion Bird hovers in dance; the
Cerulean Dragon coils sinuously; the White Tiger crouches down.
4. Therefore the crouching tiger is said to hold the corpse in its mouth.
6. The Dark Turtle that does not droop will reject the corpse.
7. The Vermilion Bird that does not dance will soar off.
1. At locales where arteries are the dragon and tiger, mounds and hills are the
vestiges of advance and cessation.
2. They should be like the crook of the arm and are said to surround and
embrace.
C. Water to the South
1. At locales where water is the Vermilion Bird, decline and prosperity rely on
the efficacy of features.
2. Swift currents are taboo and are said to bring grief and lamentation.
7. Waters confined and held back overflow and flow back without cease.
8. (According to natural) law, at every bend (of a river) water pools before it
flows on.
11. The Classic says: Where mountains advance and waters encircle, there is
nobility, longevity and wealth.
12. Where mountains imprison and waters flow (straight), the king is enslaved
and the prince is destroyed.
A. Contour Shapes
1. On the art of divining mountains, the reading of contours is the most
difficult; features are next in difficulty; and direction is the least difficult.
7. Terrain as sharp-pointed as the dagger-ax and spear, here soldiers die, are
punished or imprisoned.
B. Feature Shapes
5. If features resemble the casting of lots, the hundred affairs will be confused
and disordered.
7. If features resemble a rubbish bag, homes and granaries will burn down.
8. If features resemble a capsized boat, women will be ill and men will be
imprisoned.
11. If features resemble a drawn dagger, yield to misfortune and flee from
disaster.
C. Other Shapes
4. The turtle, crocodile, tortoise and terrapin are distinguished by their use of
water.
7. Types of terrain that are active and unsettled are all unsuitable for burial.
8. When the four bearings are unfathomable they all should be shunned,
according to the laws of fengshui.
3. If the contour is inauspicious, and the feature auspicious, there is hope for
one happiness in a hundred.
1. The Classic says: The earth has Four Aspects; qi follows the Eight Directions.
3. Zhen, li, kan, dui, qian, kun, gen and xuan[10] are the Eight Directions.
4. The Four Aspects activate dragons, and the Eight Dragons bestow life.
5. If the dwelling obtains unity, there will be good fortune, blessings, honor
and nobility.
3. Burial sites in the direction of qian require a contour that rises and falls
continuously; the features should be broad and square.
4. Burial sites in the direction of kun require a contour like a partitioned screen
with no incline; the features should be broad and level.
5. Sites in the direction of gen require a contour that is sinuous and yielding;
the features should be lofty, steep peaks.
6. Sites in the direction of xuan require contours that are lofty and luxuriant;
the features should be sharp and imposing.
7. Sites in the direction of zhen require contours that are gradual and
harmonious; features should be towering and commanding.
8. Sites in the direction of li require contours that spread and arch; features
should be rising and lofty.
9. Sites in the direction of dui require contours to advance majestically with
ascending slopes; features should be square and level.
10. Sites in the direction of kan require contours that are long and winding;
features should be luxuriant verticals and lofty.
1. Truly, there are three situations for an auspicious lair and six situations for
an inauspicious burial.
2. The heavenly lights shine down, and the earthly energies are carried
upwards.
3. Preserve the spirits at the conjunction of sun and moon; welcome the gods,
and shun the ghosts: this is the first auspicious situation.
4. Blend and mix yin and yang; form the five (colored) soils and the four
perfections: this is the second auspicious situation.
5. With the intelligence of strong vision and the totality of skill, pursue the
perfect and avoid the imperfect, augment the high and low: this is the third
auspicious situation.
6. When yin and yang interfere, this is the first inauspicious situation.
7. When time and season conflict, this the second inauspicious situation.
8. When force is small but intentions are great, this is the third inauspicious
situation.
10. Usurping the superior and coercing the inferior is the fifth misfortune.
11. To alter the proper and estrange the actual, this is the sixth misfortune.
12. The Classic says: If the lair is auspicious but the burial is not, this is the same
as discarding the corpse.
Footnotes
[1] Qi is the sine qua non for any discussion of fengshui. In the Book of Burial it
is sheng qi in particular that burial is contingent upon. Prior to the philosophies of
the Han dynasty cosmologists, qi was something like the Greek pneuma (wind,
air, breath). In one of its earliest contexts (Zuozhuan: Zhao 1/8) qi is a
meteorological category composed of the six atmospheric forces of cold and
warmth, wind and rain, and darkness and light. When the human body received
an excess of these external influences, the consequence was the physical
manifestation of fever, chills, delusions, etc. By the time of Mozi, qi was seen
primarily to refer to human phenomena:
The sage-kings felt quite concerned, thinking that the caves might keep off the
wind and cold in winter, but that in summer it would be wet below and steaming
above which might hurt the qi of the people. So palaces and houses were built.
(Mei, 244; Mozi chap. 21)
During the Warring States and early Han period qi gained a cosmic significance
as the universal fluid, active as Yang and passive as Yin, out of which all things
condense and into which they dissolve (Graham, Disputers, 191). The
cosmogony that begins chapter 3 of the Huainanzi is illustrative:
The Dao began in the Nebulous Void.
The Nebulous Void produced spacetime;
Spacetime produced the primordial qi. . . .
That which was pure and bright spread out to form Heaven;
The heavy and turbid congealed to form Earth. . . .
The conjoined essences of Heaven and Earth produced yin and yang.
The supercessive essences of yin and yang caused the four seasons. (Major, 62)
The universe here depicted as coming into being is more process than event. At
the same time that the cosmos becomes substance in space, it also becomes
process enduring throughout time (Graham, 279). Coming into being is a
recurring cycle, not a singular event. Thus during the year the yang qi waxes at
the expense of the yin up to the summer solstice, and then wanes in favor of the
yin up to the winter solstice (Graham, 351). The earliest reference to sheng qi is
the Lshi chunqiu in a passage describing the cycle. In the last month of spring,
we are told, sheng qi flourishes, and yang qi flows forth; shoots emerge, and
buds unfold. From this context it is apparent that the term means something
like life-giving energy. In this translation I refrain from translating qi.
[3] According to the Huainanzi, All things are the same as their qi; all
things respond to their own class (Huainanzi 4.VIII.27), and Things within the
same class mutually move each other; root and twig mutually respond to each
other (Huainanzi 3.II.27-28).
[4] In the reign of Emperor Wu of the Han a bronze bell in the Weiyang
Palace suddenly tolled for no apparent reason. Dongfang Shuo, the emperors
court jester, explained the phenomenon as resulting from the collapse of Copper
Mountain. Several days later news arrived from Shu in the southwest that indeed
the mine had collapsed. When asked how he had correctly perceived the cause
of the tolling bronze bell, Dongfang Shuo replied that Copper is extracted from
mountains, and qi mutually resonates, just like people receive their bodies from
their father and mother.
[6] This passage distinguishes two major classes of terrain that are
required for locating the presence of qi. Each class is manifested in a pair of
mountain forms qiu or hill and long or crag, on the one hand, and gang or
bank and fu or mound, on the other. Hills and crags are characterized by the
presence of rock formations, banks and mounds by the absence of rock.
Regardless of the composition of the terrain, the goal of the diviner is to locate
the system or chain of forms that would be evidence of the flow of qi. This
system is described in anthropomorphic terms bones or ranges of hills and
crags, and (arterial) branches or ridges of banks and mounds. Like arteries or
veins in the human body, a metaphor used in place of branches later in the text
(see III.A.1), these geological systems protrude as banks and mounds or run
hidden underground. The experienced diviner can locate the submerged veins by
following the flow of exposed terrain.
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