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Sixth Century BCE to Seventeenth Century

Page 50

by Ying-shih Yü


  in provincial examinations ( juren

  ), a scholar in his twenties would give up

  his studies and choose to pursue the career of a merchant. Of course individual

  cases of this type occurred much earlier. We have already seen a Northern Song

  case in the story of Huang Andao mentioned above. During the Ming Period, it

  became noticeable as early as the fi fteenth century.

  Judging by the date of Wang Yangming’s tomb inscription (1525), Fang Lin’s

  shift of career must have happened in the second half of the previous century.

  According to Sang Yue

  (1447–1530), his father, Sang Lin

  (1423–1497),

  also married into a merchant family and then abandoned his studies for the

  juren examinations to take charge of a large shop, exactly as Fang Lin did.109

  The same trend also continued well into later centuries. For example, in the

  single county of Wuyuan (in Xin-an) no less than fi fty such cases can be found

  in the local gazetteer for the Qing Period alone,110 but the largest concentration

  of scholar- turned- merchant cases, as far as can be confi rmed by the sources, was

  between 1500 and 1700. This phenomenon requires an explanation.

  Tentatively, I would like to suggest that the ever- increasing competitiveness

  of the examination system on the one hand and the prosperity of the market

  economy on the other seemed equally responsible for it. A rough estimate indi-

  cates that China’s population prob ably rose from some 65 million in the late

  fourteenth century to the neighborhood of 150 million by 1600.111 But the quo-

  tas of the jinshi and juren degrees remained basically stationary throughout the

  Ming- Qing Period. As Wen Zhengming

  (1470–1559) pointed out in 1515,

  in the eight counties of Suzhou Prefecture, there were altogether no less than

  fi fteen hundred shengyuan

  in the local schools. Out of this large number,

  however, only twenty gongsheng

  and thirty juren were produced in every

  three- year period, so he proposed a liberal increase of the gongsheng quotas as a

  solution.112 At about the same time, Han Bangqi

  (1479–1556) also re-

  marked that both the jinshi juren quotas ought to be greatly expanded to cope

  with the situation that the gongsheng generally had little opportunities for offi

  -

  cial appointment.113 By contrast, the chances of success in the sixteenth- century

  business world were extremely good. It was believed that “while one out of ten

  scholars will attain success in examinations, nine out of ten merchants will in

  business.”114 A man named Huang Chongde

  (1469–1537) was persuaded

  by his father to give up his preparations for examinations and went to coastal

  252 busine s s c ul t ur e a nd c h ine s e t r adi t ions

  Shandong for the salt trade. A year’s work brought him a 10 percent profi t, which

  soon rose to doubling his capital.115 Thus, we see that the “push” of the examina-

  tion system and “pull” of the market jointly created the fi rst and long- lasting

  “commercial wave,” which threw numerous “intellectuals” into the “ocean of busi-

  ness,” to borrow the language now very much in vogue in China.116

  Second, when Wang Yangming, endorsing and elaborating Fang Lin’s view,

  said that scholars of his day were more profi t- minded than merchants, while

  among merchants there were individuals who lived up to the ideals of the Sagely

  Way of antiquity, he was making essentially the same criticism of the same so-

  cial real ity that Shen Yao did three centuries later. The main diff erence was a

  linguistic one. Wang spoke a language of philosophical idealism, whereas Shen

  spoke that of historical realism. Many writers between them also made similar

  observations but expressed in diff er ent ways. The most common of them were “a

  scholar in occupation but a merchant in conduct” and “a merchant in occupation

  but a scholar in conduct,” or, in a morally neutral sense, “the scholar- merchant”

  or “the merchant- scholar,” which are too numerous to require documentation.

  What really happened, however, was that by the sixteenth century, it was hardly

  pos si ble to draw a clear social line between the scholar and the merchant; more

  often than not, both lived under the same roof. Shen Yao’s point about “the four

  categories of people being undiff erentiated in later times” had already been

  common knowledge in Wang Yangming’s time. Gui Youguang

  (1507–1571)

  also said that nowadays “scholar,” “farmer,” and “merchant” were often “mixed”

  in the same person,117 and this observation of his was only to be reconfi rmed by

  his great- grand son, Gui Zhuang

  (1613–1673), a century later.118 This new

  development is indeed noteworthy but should occasion no surprise given our

  knowledge of the earlier interpenetration between elite culture and business cul-

  ture in Song times. Nor is it unique to Chinese history. In fi fteenth- century

  Eng land, there was also a movement toward a “fusion” between merchants and

  gentry to the extent that “the gentleman merchant” even emerged as a legal term

  that is certainly comparable to “the scholar- merchant” ( shi er shang

  ), a so-

  cial term in the Chinese case. According to Sylvia Thrupp, in medieval Eng land,

  “The movement from the merchant class into the landed gentry exceeded the

  reverse movement.”119 In Ming- Qing China, however, I suspect it was prob ably

  the other way around.

  Last but not least, our greatest attention must be drawn to Wang Yangming’s

  statement that “the four categories of people were engaged in diff er ent occupa-

  tions but followed the same Way ( simin yi ye er tong Dao

  ).” For

  the fi rst time in the history of Confucian thought, a phi los o pher of Wang Yang-

  ming’s eminence openly acknowledged that the merchants are equally entitled

  to their share of the sacred Way. That Wang Yangming really meant what he

  said can be corroborated by a remark he made in a wholly diff er ent context that

  “Engagement in trade all day long will not stand in one’s way of becoming a

  sage or worthy.”120 From the sociohistorical point of view, a distinction must be

  busine s s c ul t ur e a nd c h ine s e t r adi t ions 253

  made between the general proposition that “every one can become a sage” and

  the specifi c one saying that “a merchant can become a sage or worthy,” even

  though logically, the latter is implied in the former, for the general proposition,

  long worn out with the passing of time, could sometimes become a cliché devoid

  of existential meaning. It was rather unlikely that a member of the Confucian

  elite would spontaneously associate this general idea with a merchant, or even

  with a farmer or artisan for that matter. Here, I believe, lies the central signifi -

  cance of Wang Yangming’s redefi nition of the four categories of people in

  terms of Dao.

  I must hasten to add, however, that it may not be completely fair to credit the

  originality of this idea to Wang Yangming. Two years before Wang wrote the

  tomb inscription for Fang Lin, his literary friend Li Mengyang<
br />
  (1473–

  1529) had composed an epitaph for a Shanxi merchant named Wang Xian

  (1469–1523) in which the merchant is quoted as having said to his sons that

  “scholars and merchants pursue diff er ent occupations but share the same

  mind.”121 Wang Yangming could have had access to this widely circulated epi-

  taph of Li’s and for him, “mind” and Dao were interchangeable in meaning. If

  Wang Xian’s remark had inspired the phi los o pher in some way, then it was the

  merchant who fi rst made his claim to an equal share of the sacred Way. As a

  matter of fact, merchants from the sixteenth century on appeared to take an

  active interest in Neo- Confucian philosophy and Zhu Xi

  , Lu Xianshan

  , Zhan Ruoshui

  (1466–1560), and Wang Yangming all had their

  admirers among them. It goes without saying that Xian-an merchants gener-

  ally worshipped Zhu Xi as a great moral teacher from their own locality.122 An

  early seventeenth- century merchant from Zhejiang named Zhuo Yu

  was

  also a true believer in Wang Yangming’s theory of “the unity of knowledge and

  action.”123 The case of Zhan Ruoshui is even more in ter est ing. In the 1530s

  when he was appointed minister of rites in Nanjing, many salt merchants of

  Yangzhou came to him for philosophical instructions.124 Also around this time,

  the widow of a rich merchant sent one of her sons to study with Zhan Ruoshui

  to learn how to “embody the Heavenly Princi ple.” When Zhan Ruoshui was

  short of funds for building his Ganquan Acad emy in Yangzhou, she made a

  contribution of several hundred silver taels.125 Huang Chongde, mentioned ear-

  lier, turned from scholar to merchant because he was convinced by his father’s

  argument that “the learning of Lu Xiangshan takes the securing of a livelihood

  as its fi rst priority.”126 Confronted with evidence like this, the conclusion seems

  inevitable that merchants not only actively sought to take part in the Dao but

  also reinterpreted it in their own way. In this light, Wang Yangming’s new for-

  mulation may well be taken more as a response to a changing social real ity

  than as an original idea created purely from the mind of a philosophical genius,

  which he undoubtedly was.

  Wang Yangming was one of the earlier writers who honored merchants with

  biographical accounts. From this time on, we can hardly go through the collected

  254 busine s s c ul t ur e a nd c h ine s e t r adi t ions

  work of a Ming- Qing author of note without encountering some positive state-

  ments about the social functions of merchants, which usually took the forms of

  epitaph, biography, and birthday essay. This is defi nitely a new development in

  Ming- Qing business culture, for we have yet to discover even a single merchant

  biography in the works of pre- Ming writers. In the sixteenth century, some

  writers may be justifi ably called spokesmen for the merchant class, notably

  Wang Daokun and Li Weizhen

  (1546–1626). Wang not only came from

  a merchant family but also married the daughter of a rich merchant.127 It must

  be emphatically pointed out that intermarriage between scholar families and

  merchant families was extremely common during the Ming-

  Qing Period,

  which also accounted for the rich biographical information about the merchants

  in the literary productions. For example, Qian Daxin

  (1728–1804), a most

  respected scholar of the Qianlong era, wrote an epitaph for a wealthy merchant

  named Qu Lianbi

  (1716–1786) because his daughter was married to the

  latter’s grand son.128 Li Weizhen was especially famous for his ser vice to rich

  merchants in this regard, for which he was paid handsomely.129 In both Wang

  Daokun’s and Li Weizhen’s collected writings alone, hundreds of merchant bi-

  ographies can be found. This new trend was by no means confi ned only to the

  circles of rich and power ful merchants, however. By the sixteenth century, even

  the commonest of the market people were equally determined to honor their

  fathers and grand fathers in this way. In his letter to a friend, dated 1550, Tang

  Shunzhi

  (1506–1560) wrote:

  During my leisure, I often refl ect on one or two things in our world to

  which we have long been accustomed but which are nonetheless abso-

  lutely ridicu lous. One is that a man of lowly social standing such as a

  butcher or restaurateur, as long as he is able to earn a living, would be sure

  to have an epitaph in his honor after death. . . . This is something that was

  unheard of not only in high antiquity but even before Han or Tang.130

  This is a piece of evidence of vital importance for our understanding of the

  merchant mentality in Ming China. It is further corroborated by a writer fi fty

  years later who commented that what Tang said was indeed “a true fact.”131

  Moreover, Zhang Han must also have had the merchants in mind when he

  complained about too many “epitaphs” being produced in his own day. In an-

  cient times, he said, “only those who had great accomplishments in moral virtue

  and deeds deserved such epitaphs.”132

  How are we going to interpret this new social phenomenon in the sixteenth

  century? Traditionally, it has been generally assumed that the merchants, being

  envious of the intellectual elite, made every eff ort to imitate the lifestyle of the

  scholar- offi

  cial. The standard expression is fuyong fengya

  , lit. “para-

  sitic on [the scholar’s] cultural elegance.” Even modern historians rarely ques-

  tion this interpretation, which undeniably, does contain a grain of truth. It is

  busine s s c ul t ur e a nd c h ine s e t r adi t ions 255

  also obvious, however, that the very assumption itself was part and parcel of

  the millennia- long and deep- seated prejudice against the merchant class. From

  the merchant’s point of view, however, it seems more sensible to say that their

  newly gained self- confi dence led them to think that they were equally entitled

  to the recognition and honor that had long been the mono poly of the scholars.

  This is simply Wang Yangming’s “diff er ent occupations but the same Way”

  interpreted in its most worldly sense.

  There is considerable evidence showing that not all merchants aspired to

  become scholar- offi

  cials. According to a late Ming short story, the social custom

  in Huizhou took commerce and trade as the occupation of primary importance

  and considered success in examinations to be secondary.133 Wang Daokun also

  told us that people in this region “prefer merchant to scholar and substitute

  the Nine Chapters [of Arithmetic] for the Six Classics.”134 Still another testimony

  is provided by the great ancient- style prose master Wang Shizhen

  (1526–

  1590), who said, “The custom of Huizhou has been such that the social worth

  of a man is often mea sured by his wealth.”135

  Taking all three general characterizations together, it seems safe to assume

  that among Huizhou merchants of the Ming Period, there must have been

  many who were wholeheartedly devoted to business as their calling. Space here

  doe
s not allow me to substantiate this conclusion with individual cases, but I

  shall touch on this point again later.136 It is in ter est ing to see that this custom of

  Huizhou was paralleled by that of Shanxi, another province famous for provid-

  ing China with countless enterprising merchants since the Ming dynasty. In

  1724, the provincial governor memorialized to the throne, pointing out that it

  was the established custom in Shanxi that “the majority of the talented and

  outstanding young men join the trading profession. . . . Only those whose talents

  are below average are made to study for the examinations.” In response, the

  Yongzheng Emperor said that he had long been aware of this “extremely ridicu-

  lous custom.”137 Moreover, even if a merchant sent a son to government ser vice

  or the Imperial Acad emy as a “gradu ate student” ( jiansheng

  ), his motiva-

  tion could be other than “envy” or power for its own sake. A sixteenth- century

  rich merchant of Hebei, for instance, was greatly relieved when his son was

  transferred from the Censorate to the Board of Revenue, for the former was too

  close to the center of power. He was absolutely delighted when his son was fi -

  nally made an offi

  cial in charge of customs duties in the Suzhou area. As the

  father saw it, his son was now in a position to keep the merchants from being

  harshly treated by the customs offi

  ce.138 In the case of the jiansheng, it was a

  status that would give its holder direct access to scholar- offi

  cials in general and

  government authorities in par tic u lar.139 It is not diffi

  cult to see that “envy” or

  “imitation” is too simple to be adequate to the task of historical explanation.

  By the sixteenth century, merchants were often honored by the government

  for their generous monetary contributions to emergency needs or philanthropic

  deeds. For example, in the late sixteenth century, a shrine was built, with the

  256 busine s s c ul t ur e a nd c h ine s e t r adi t ions

  emperor’s blessing, in memory of a public- spirited merchant named Huang

  Zongzhou in Jiangyin on account of the enormous funds he had provided in the

  1550s for the defense of the city against the wokou pirates, as well as for the relief

  of the poor.140 A Huizhou merchant Jiang Keshu

  (1520–1581) was honored

 

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