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第十八章 (Chapter 18)

Explore Chapter 18 of 'Cat Country' with the original Chinese text, English translation, detailed Chinese vocabulary explanations, and audio of the Chinese original. Listen and improve your reading skills.

Chinese Original
Translation
Chinese Vocabulary (EN)
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野蛮人 yě mán rén
n. barbarian, uncivilized person
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教育制度 jiào yù zhì dù
n. education system
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抄袭 chāo xí
v. to plagiarize, to copy
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摹仿 mó fǎng
v. to imitate, to mimic
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并驾齐驱 bìng jià qí qū
idiom. to keep pace with, to be on a par with
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一塌糊涂 yī tā hú tú
idiom. in a complete mess, chaotic
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悲观者 bēi guān zhě
n. pessimist
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低能 dī néng
adj./n. low ability, incompetent
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革新 gé xīn
v./n. to innovate, innovation
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笑话 xiào huà
n. joke, laughingstock
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诚实 chéng shí
adj. honest
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自傲 zì ào
v. to be proud of oneself, to be arrogant
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彻底 chè dǐ
adj. thorough, complete
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任凭 rèn píng
conj. no matter, despite
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施行 shī xíng
v. to implement, to carry out
🔊 --统计,,,,实际,屈指一算,,,,热心,,,,,,,耀,,,,:,,,,,,饿,,,,,,,,,便,便,,饿,饿,饿

This method is the best-in Cat Country. Statistically, our number of university graduates ranks first among all nations on Mars. Ranking first in numbers is enough for self-consolation, no, self-pride. We Cat-people are nothing if not practical. Count on your fingers: which country's graduate tally can keep up with ours? The fact alone brings smiles of satisfaction to all. The Emperor loves this method. Were it not for his zeal for education, how could there be so many graduates? He has done his duty by the people. Teachers love this method: everyone is a university instructor, every school is the Pinnacle of Academia, and every student is first. How glorious! Parents love this method: a seven-year-old imp graduates from university; a child's 'brilliance' is the parents' pride. As for students, needless to say, as long as they are fortunate enough to be born in Cat Country and do not die at six or seven, they are guaranteed a university degree. Economically, the method is wonderfully bizarre. Initially, when schools were first established, the Emperor had to allocate education funds yearly. Yet the educated students often opposed and troubled him. Was that not spending money to buy trouble? Now, the Emperor spends not a single coin, yet produces multitudes of graduates yearly-graduates who pose no threat to him. True, many teachers starve to death, but the number of graduates increases. Previously, principals and teachers, driven by money, schemed against each other day and night, with several killings daily. Sometimes they incited students to riot, disturbing the peace. Now the Emperor gives them no money; what is there to fight over? If they demand salaries, the Emperor ignores them. If they provoke him too far, he sends soldiers to bash their skulls. Their backing was the students, but now students graduate upon enrollment. Who will help them? With no one to aid their cause, they can only wait to starve. Starvation is an honest death, and the Emperor is quite content to see teachers starve.

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统计 tǒng jì
v./n. to statistics, statistics
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实际 shí jì
adj./n. practical, actual
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屈指一算 qū zhǐ yī suàn
idiom. to count on one's fingers, to calculate easily
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热心 rè xīn
adj. enthusiastic, warm-hearted
🔊 演进,,课程,,,,……,,,,便,,,:,,便一步登天,,:,,,便,便,,西,退,,,,,,,,,,

This requires explaining the evolution over two centuries. Initially, schools offered different courses, producing varied talents: some studied engineering, others commerce, agriculture... But after graduation, what did they do? Those who studied engineering learned foreign techniques, but we had no foreign-style industry prepared for them. Those who studied commerce learned foreign methods, but we only had small peddlers; any large-scale enterprise was confiscated by the military upon opening. Those who studied agriculture learned foreign farming, but we cultivated only intoxicating leaves, nothing else. Thus, education was utterly disconnected from society. What could graduates do? Only two paths remained: become officials or become teachers. To become an official required connections and influence; regardless of your field, with someone in court, you could soar to the top. But who all had wealth and power? For those who couldn't become officials, teaching was the next best career. After all, those educated in the new system disdained becoming petty laborers or peddlers. Gradually, society split into two: the school-educated and the non-educated. The former were set on becoming officials or teachers as their profession; the latter became petty laborers or peddlers. The impact of this on politics, I shall not discuss today. As for education, ours became what can only be called a cyclic education. I studied, I graduated, then went to teach your children. Your children graduated, then taught mine. In knowledge, it was always the same old stuff; in character, there was daily regression. How to explain? Graduates multiplied. Except for a few who could become officials, the rest had to teach. But where were the schools? Only farce remained. The cyclic education was originally meant to pass down those few immortal textbooks. It taught no benevolence or morality. So to compete for a teaching post, sometimes it sparked a civil war lasting a year or two, with killing and bloodshed-as if everyone fought desperately for education, when in truth it was only for that meager salary.

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演进 yǎn jìn
v. to evolve, evolution
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课程 kè chéng
n. course, curriculum
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一步登天 yī bù dēng tiān
idiom. to reach the sky in one step, to achieve success rapidly
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政客 zhèng kè
n. politician, often with negative connotation
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敬畏 jìng wèi
v. to revere, to hold in awe
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不可开交 bù kě kāi jiāo
idiom. too busy to disentangle, in a heated state
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天下太平 tiān xià tài píng
idiom. peace under heaven, world peace
🔊 ,--,,,,,日新月异便,西,,,,,,,,,,便使,,----,,,,,:,,,,,,国粹,,,,,,便,,便:,使,使,,,便

With no education in schools, what should those who truly wish to study do? Restore the old system-hire private tutors to teach children at home. Naturally, only wealthy families can afford this. Most children still go to school only to be deprived of learning. This educational failure shattered Cat Country's last hope, leaving not even a shadow. The initial trial of new education was a period of slandering new knowledge. New systems had to be imported along with new knowledge from abroad. Knowledge labeled 'new' obviously implies ongoing progress, a daily pursuit of truth. But new systems and knowledge grew moldy the moment they arrived here, like objects in the rainy season. Indeed, adopting others' systems and knowledge is easiest like grafting a piece of flesh from another's body onto one's own. One imagines that just cutting a piece of flesh is enough. Everyone keeps cutting new flesh, heedless of the blood and nutrients needed to sustain it. Acquiring a heap of new knowledge without grasping the spirit of inquiry inevitably leads to cyclic education. This insults new knowledge. Yet, during this period, people indeed clung to a hope. Though mistaken in thinking that grafting new flesh would grant immortality, they had this superstition: they believed that as soon as new knowledge arrived-no matter how scant-they would instantly prosper like foreign nations. This dream and pride were forgivable; there was at least some aspiration. By now, people know schools only as arenas for vying over principalships, beating teachers, and stirring up riots. So they boil this phenomenon with new knowledge in one pot and curse it: new knowledge not only fails to strengthen the nation but ruins people, they think. Thus, from slandering new knowledge, they advanced to cursing it. Now, families hire tutors to teach children, excluding all new knowledge. The price of our original old stone books increased tenfold. My grandfather was exceedingly pleased, thinking this was national essence triumphing over foreign learning. My father was delighted. He sent his son abroad to study, believing that this way, only his son could understand everything and later help him use new knowledge to deceive those clinging to stone books. Father was shrewd and capable. He always thought foreign new knowledge was useful, but only a few needed to learn it. With a few mastering foreign tricks, we would become strong. Yet most people still sympathized with grandfather: new knowledge was a kind of magic and heresy, only causing dizziness, making sons beat fathers, daughters curse mothers, students kill teachers-no benefit at all. This period of cursing new knowledge brought the nation perilously close to downfall.

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日新月异 rì xīn yuè yì
idiom. change rapidly, make new progress every day
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国粹 guó cuì
n. quintessence of Chinese culture, national treasure
🔊 ,人格,,,,西,使,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,便,便牺牲,饿,,饿,,,,便,,,,,,,便,,,,,----,,使,,?!,,

You ask, what caused the collapse of this new education? I cannot answer. I only feel it is because there is no character. Look, when new education first arrived, why did people want it? Because everyone sought to make more money, not to make children understand more. They wanted to produce new and useful things, not to make people know more truth. This attitude already stripped education of part of its purpose: to cultivate good character and inspire a spirit of inquiry. By the time new schools were established, there were people in schools, but no character. Teachers worked for money, principals for money, students to prepare for making money. Everyone saw school as a new-style eatery. What education was, no one cared. Compounded by national weakness, social darkness, the Emperor having no character, politicians having no character, the people having no character, the characterlessness outside schools further stained the characterlessness within. Naturally, in this poor and weak country, many cannot even eat their fill; it is hard to speak of character. Character often falls due to economic pressure. True. But this does not excuse those who run education. Why education? To save the nation. How to save it? Through knowledge and character. This should have been decided at the outset, when education was first established. This should have meant sacrificing one's petty interests when choosing to become a principal or teacher. Perhaps I expect too much from those who run education. People are people; a teacher fears starvation just like a prostitute. I should not solely blame teachers, and I refuse to blame them alone. But some women would rather starve than become prostitutes. Then, can't those who run education grit their teeth and become people of character? Naturally, the government most loves to bully the honest. The more honest those who run education are, the more they are bullied. But no matter how bad the government, it must heed public opinion somewhat. If we who run education truly had character, and the students we cultivated had character, could society remain blind to good and bad forever? If society saw educators as loving fathers, and the students could achieve something in society, would the government dare despise education? Dare not allocate funds? I believe that with ten years of character education, Cat Country would change. But new education has been implemented for two hundred years. The result? If the old system could cultivate honest, filial, rule-abiding people, how could new education not yield comparable good results? Everyone says-especially those who run education-that society is dark. Whose responsibility is it to whiten society? Those who run education only complain of society's darkness, forgetting their duty is to whiten it, forgetting that their character should be the starlight in the night. What hope is there? I know I am too biased, too idealistic. But should not all who run education have some ideals? I know the government and society do not help them enough. But who wants to help people as bad as those in the government and society?

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人格 rén gé
n. personality, character
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牺牲 xī shēng
v. to sacrifice, to give up
🔊 宰杀,,使退,,退,,便,,便,,便使,便,,,,,,,便西,西,便使,饿饿,,便,,,,,,,西,,心满意足,皆大欢喜,,西,,,,使,,

You saw those killing teachers? Do not be surprised yet. That is the inevitable result of characterless education. Teachers have no character, so students naturally follow suit. Not only no character, but it also throws people back tens of thousands of years, to the age of cannibalism. Human progress is excruciatingly slow, but regression is swift. A momentary loss of character, and people revert to savagery instantly. Moreover, we have run schools for two hundred years! In these two centuries, every day it was either principals fighting principals or teachers, or teachers fighting teachers or principals, or students fighting students, or students fighting principals or teachers. Fighting turns people into beasts at once; each fight adds a layer of wildness. So by now, students slaughtering a few principals or teachers is commonplace. You need not feel injustice for principals or teachers either. Ours is the cyclic education. Students will one day become principals or teachers, and someone will come to kill them. Fortunately, a few more such principals or teachers matter little to society. Who kills whom in schools goes unnoticed. In such a dark society, people seem born as little beasts, sniffing and clawing around, hoping to scavenge something edible. An advantage as small as a grain of sand is enough for them to seize with full force. Such a bunch of little creatures happen to meet that bunch of teachers in schools. Like a pack of young hungry beasts encountering old hungry beasts, they must measure claws and fangs. The desire for petty gain ignites the savagery inherited from primitive ancestors. So for a book, a stash of intoxicating leaves, they can fight until corpses litter the ground. Student riots are the agitation of youthful blood, forgivable. But our riots here have a distinct flavor: they seize on a pretext to riot, tear down buildings, destroy property, then everyone carries bricks and picks up scraps home. Students are satisfied, parents are all delighted. Because of the riot, homes get a few bricks or a wooden stick for free. The riot is not in vain. Principals or teachers steal whenever they get a chance; students destroy whenever they get a chance, then haul things home after the destruction. Principals or teachers deserve death. Students deserve death. Students killing principals or teachers is heaven's clear justice. When students become principals or teachers and are killed in turn, it is only fitting. This is our education. Education that turns people into beasts cannot be said to have no achievements. Ha!

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宰杀 zǎi shā
v. to slaughter, to kill
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心满意足 xīn mǎn yì zú
idiom. perfectly satisfied, content
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皆大欢喜 jiē dà huān xǐ
idiom. everyone is happy, satisfactory to all
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