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#
1.1 The way that can be told of is hardly an eternal, absolute,
unvarying one; the name that can be coded and given is no
absolute name.
1.2 Heaven and earth sprang from something else: the bright
nameless; the named is but the said mother that rears the ten
thousand creatures of heaven and earth, each after its kind.
1.3 He that rids himself of base desire can see the secret
essences; he that didn't and reached high being, he can see
outcomes.
1.4 Still the two are the same; the secret and its manifestations
came from the same ground, the same mould, but anyway sound
different - they're given different names where they appear. They
can both be called the cosmic mystery, awesome deep or rather
more secret than so-called mystery.
1.5 There's the deeper mystery: the gate and doorway from which
issued all secret essences, yes, all subtleties, and the subtle
mysterial opening homewards. Call it the door mystery or golden
secret of all life.
#
2.1 When the people of the world see beauty as beauty, the notion
of ugliness pops up along with that
2.2 And equally if every one recognize virtue as virtue, if they
all know the good as good, the recognition of adjacent evil is
wont to rise.
2.3 So: Being and not-yet-being interdepend in growth; grow out
of another, they can produce each other. And hard and easy
interdepend in completion; long and short interdepend. They test
each other in contrast.
2.4 High and low determine one another and interdepend or
distinguish each other in position. So it seems. Pitch and mode
give harmony to one another; tones, sound and voice interdepend
in basic, functional harmony; Front and back give sequence to one
another. The couples follow each other - interdepend in company,
so to speak.
2.5 From this the wise man relies on doing nothing in the open,
it's wu-wei. And he spreads doctrines without true or false
words, by oddly wordless influence.
2.6 All things appear, and he hardly turns away from the
creatures worked on by him: Some he gives solid, good life, he
hardly disowns his chosen ones.
2.7 He hardly takes possession of anyone under fair conditions.
He rears his sons in earthly ways, but neither appropriates nor
lays blatant claim to any one. He acts, but doesn't rely on his
outer, visible smartness or miracle-working ability. He very
often claims no credit. At times he controls them, but hardly
leans on any of them. Because he lays claim to no credit, the
handy credit can hardly be taken away from him. Yes, for the very
reason that he hardly calls attention to what he does, he isn't
ejected at once.
#
3.1 Stop looking for rare, moral persons (hsien) to put in power.
There will be jealousies among people, jealousies and strife.
3.2 If we cease to set store by products that are hard to get,
there will be less outright thieves.
3.3 If the people never see such things as excite desire, their
hearts can remain placid and undisturbed.
3.4 Therefore the wise one rules by emptying their hearts [like
the clown]. He fills their bellies, weakens their brightness and
toughens their bones, ever striving to make the people without
knowledge.
3.5 He sees to it that if there are any who are bright and
clever, they dare not interfere.
3.6 Through his non-do actions all [such subjection] runs well
[for some time].
#
4.1 Dao is like an empty vessel that yet can be drawn from
without ever needing to be filled.
4.2 It's without bottom; the very breeder of all things in the
world.
4.3 In it all sharpness is blunted, all tangles untied, all glare
tempered, all turmoil smoothed.
4.4 It's like a deep pool that never dries.
4.5 Was it too the child of something else? We can hardly tell. A
substanceless image of all things seemed to exist before the
progenitor that we hardly know of.
#
5.1 The universe seems without mercy, quite ruthless; in that
wider perspective all things are but as ritual straw dogs.
5.2 The wise man too is hard as nail; to him the people are but
as straw dogs to throw.
5.3 Yet heaven and earth and all that lies between is like a
bellows; empty, yet yielding a supply that hardly fails. Work it,
and more comes out. Whereas the force of words is soon spent.
5.4 It seems far better to keep what's in the heart. So hold to
the heart core and a regular mean.
#
6.1 The valley spirit never dies. It's named the mystic woman.
6.2 And the gate of the profound woman is the root that heaven
and earth sprang from.
6.3 It's there within us all the while; draw upon it as you will,
you can never wear it out.
#
7.1 Heaven is always, the earth, too. How can it be?
7.2 Well, they don't live only for themselves; that's why they
live long.
7.3 So the wise man puts himself last, and finds himself in the
foremost place, puts himself in the background; yet always comes
to the fore.
7.4 He keeps well fit; looks on his body almost as accidental,
outer, something to be well taken care of; still it always there,
and always remains. He remains in the open by it, too.
7.5 He hardly strives for great personal ends; his main ends seem
fulfilled.
#
8.1 The highest good is like that of water. The goodness of water
is that it benefits the ten thousand creatures; yet itself hardly
ever scrambles - it seems quite content with the places that all
men disdain. It's this that can make water so near to some dao.
8.2 And if men think the ground the best place for building a
house upon, if among thoughts they value those that are profound,
if in friendship they value gentleness; in words, truth, or
sincere faithfulness,
8.3 in government, [bugbear] order; in deeds: competence,
ability, effectiveness; in actions: timeliness and being properly
timed -
8.4 In each case it's because they prefer things that hardly lead
to strife, and therefore hardly go much astray or amiss.
#
9.1 Stretch a bow to the full, and you'll end up wishing you'd
stopped in time; to hold and fill to overflowing isn't quite as
able as to stop in time.
9.2 Temper a sword-edge to its very sharpest, and you'll find it
soon grows dull.
9.3 When gold and jade fills your hall, can it be well guarded
any more?
9.4 To be proud with things and glory given, could bring ruin.
Wealth and place breed insolence and could slowly harm and ruin:
9.5 If your work is done, withdraw! That's heaven's way. It can
be opposed to lots of ways of man.
#
10.1 Can you keep the unquiet physical-soul from straying, hold
fast to the unity and middle, and never quit it?
10.2 Can you, when concentrating your breath, make it soft like
that of an infant?
10.3 Strive after less tainted perfection, let it be aided by
penetrating insight. So wipe and cleanse your vision of the
mystery till all is without blur.
10.4 Can you love the people and rule the land, yet remain
unknown?
10.5 Can you in opening and shutting the heavenly gates, ever
play the feminine part?
10.6 Can your mind penetrate every corner of the land, but you
yourself never interfere? Can you renounce the grosser mind for
comprehending all inside knowledge?
10.7 Produce things and rear well, but never lay claims to such
things - control them, never lean upon them. Rely on some innate
ability to act well. Be a sort of master among others, just
refrain from mismanaging. Here is found the essence of dao might,
its deep, mystic virtue.
#
11.1 We put thirty spokes together and call it a wheel; but it's
on the space where there's nothing that the usefulness of the
wheel depends.
11.2 We turn clay to make a vessel; but it's on the space where
there's nothing that the usefulness of the vessel depends.
11.3 We pierce and cut out doors and windows to make a house; and
it's on these spaces where there's nothing that the usefulness of
the house depends.
11.4 Take advantage of what is, turn existing into a great
advantage: just make as much as you can out of it here. Feel free
to recognise the possible usefulness of what's not yet here.
Prosper by clever use of something not yet.
#
12.1 The five colours tend to confuse the eye, the five sounds of
music can deafen the ear, the five tastes all dull or spoil the
palate.
12.2 Excess of hunting and chasing makes a mind go mad. Things
hard to get, keeps one on one's guard. Valuable things and
products quite hard to get, can impede their owner's progress.
12.3 So the wise man is concerned with his tummy before his eyes.
He can consider the tummy first, not the eye. That is: He
disregards the world outside - "that", and he accepts,
goes for and in the end grabs the supernormal powers dormant
within - his daoist "this". Therefore he rejects the
one but accepts the other.
#
13.1 Be glad for favour. Still receive favour or disgrace with
regular apprehension. Be cautious not to lose the winning sort of
favour. Lower favour and disgrace can cause one dismay; We can
have fears because we have a self. Yet what we value and what we
fear are as if within that inner sanctimonium self."
13.2 What does this mean: "Favour and disgrace can cause one
dismay? Those who receive favour from above are dismayed when
they receive it. And should they lose it they turn distraught.
13.3 What does this mean: "What we value and what we fear
are as if within our serious self?" Regard great trouble as
seriously as you regard the body. One reason that we suffer hurt
is that we have bodies. When we don't regard that gross body as
[most important aspect of self, what have we to fear? [Lao tse.]
13.4 And so, the one who values his experienced world as part of
his exploring inner self, can then be entrusted with rule of
something. The he who loves the all as an aspect of his sensing
self - all can then be entrusted to his care.
#
14.1 Look at it, it can't be seen, is called the invisible.
Listen to it, it can't be heard, is called the inaudible. Grasp
at it, it can't be touched, is called the fine formless.
14.2 These three elude all solid inquiries And merge and become
one.
14.3 Its rising brings no light; its sinking, no darkness.
Unceasing, continuous, it can't be defined, on the way back to
where there's nothing.
14.4 It's called shape free from shapes; forms without form; the
image of nothingness. That's why it's called the elusive; Go
towards them, and you can see no physical front; go after them,
and you see no rear.
14.5 Hold on to the dao of old to master the things of the
present. Master what once was, at the start, It's the essence of
rarefied, pearl-stringed dao.
#
15.1 The best rulers of old had fine natures, mysterious, too
deep, they could not be understood.
15.2 And because such men could not be fully grasped at once,
they appeared to be cautious, like wading a stream in winter; at
a loss, like one fearing and having to deal with danger on every
side; reserved, like one who pays a visit;
15.3 pliant and yielding, as ice when it begins to melt; genuine,
like a piece of raw wood; open-minded like a valley; and blending
freely like a troubled, muddy stream of water.
15.4 Find repose in a muddy world by lying still; be gradually
clear through tranquillity. You can assume such murkiness, to
become in the end still and clear. And maintain your calm long in
between. So make yourself inert, to get in the end full of life
and stir. By such activity come back to life.
15.5 Who hugs this dao doesn't want to fill himself to
overflowing. It's just because he guards against being over-full,
there's no overflowing, and next he is like a garment that
endures all, beyond wearing out and renewal.
#
16.1 Attain complete humility towards the void; hold firm to the
basis of quietude.
16.2 The myriad things take shape and rise to activity, Now, I
watch them fall, worked on, back to their repose and roots like
plants that flourish but return to the soil and root they grew
from.
16.3 To return to the root is basic repose; it's quiet and
returning to some destiny. To submit to a destiny is to find the
eternal shelter, the always-so, or the eternal dao. To know the
eternal always-so is to be somewhat illumined. Not to know it
courts disaster.
16.4 Who knows the eternal shelter has room in him for nearly
everything - he is wide as tolerant. Being much including,
there's little prejudice; to be without blunt prejudice is
kingly; to be kingly is to be well in accord with nature; it's to
be of heaven.
16.5 To be of heaven in unison with an undaunted nature is to be
in dao; This dao is forever, and he that owns it, is hardly
destroyed, even though his body ceases.
#
17.1 Of the best the people hardly ever know they exist; The next
best they flock to and praise for nothing. The next they shrink
from; the next get reviled.
17.2 "Not believing people you turn them into liars" -
such bosses don't command the people's faith. They lose faith in
them and take to oaths!
17.3 The wise man is a clever ruler; he values his words highly.
It's so hard to get a single word from at any price that when his
task is finished, a work well done, everyone says, "It
happened by itself, and we did it."
#
18.1 When the great dao declined, jen and I arose, humanity and
righteousness."
18.2 Next, when brightness and know-how came in vogue, the great
pretence fully started.
18.3 When the six family relationships are not in harmony There's
open talk of kind parents" dutiful sons" and deep love
to children.
18.4 A confused country enmeshed in disorder praises ministers in
chaos and misrule.
#
19.1 Banish wisdom, discard knowledge, Then the people will
benefit a hundred times.
19.2 Banish human love, just dump righteous, moral justice, and
then the people will be dutiful and recover deep love of their
kin.
19.3 Banish cunning and skill, dispel profit; dismiss
utility," then thieves and robbers will disappear.
19.4 These three things are not enough; externals are somehow
decorations, purpose's not enough; they tend to rob life and make
it too little complicated.
19.5 Therefore let people hold well on to keeping accessories;
keeping simplicity to look at. Go on and shield their internal
soul's nature as some ritual, raw block to hold, their private,
secret means and foster less ardent desires.
#
20.1 #
Abandon learning and there will be no sorrow. Between Yes,
sir," and Of course not", how much difference is there?
Between good" and bad", how much difference is there?
20.2 That which men fear is indeed to be feared; alas confused,
and the end isn't yet.
20.3 All men are wreathed in smiles, ever merry-making, as if
feasting after the great sacrifice, like ascending a tower in
spring. I alone am inert, like a child that has not yet given
sign; Like a new-born child that can't smile yet. I seem to be
without a home, droop and drift, as though I belonged nowhere,
completely unattached.
20.4 All men have enough and to spare; I alone seem to have lost
everything; I am like one left out. Mine is indeed the mind of a
very idiot, my heart must be that of a fool, dull as I seem -
muddled, nebulous!
20.5 The world is full of knowing people that shine; I alone am
dull, confused. I seem to be in the dark. They look lively and
clear-cut self-assured; I appear alone, depressed, or patient as
the sea, blown adrift, seemingly aimless, never brought to a
stop.
20.6 All men can be put to some use; as worldlings have a
purpose. I alone am intractable and boorish, appearing rustic,
stubborn and uncouth, differing from most people, But I differ
most from others in that I prize no sustenance that doesn't come
from the breast of mama mia.
#
21.1 The marks of great virtue follow alone from the (one) dao.
What's called one dao seems impalpable and vague, not to be
measured at all.
21.2 Dao is an elusive, virtually incommensurable form, but
eluding, elusive it contains sub-forms.
21.3 Within it lie idea-images of coming things, within it are
some shadowy entities or some dormant, vibrant life force of the
firstborn, dim essence - even of objects, somehow, but much
rarefied - latent in the essence is the life-force. The
life-force is real and to be trusted. It's true, and can be set
to operate. and latent in it are evidences. From the days of old
till now its chunks haven't departed or ceased, By its chunks we
can view some origin of all descended units.
21.4 Do I know a father of a thing? How to know how some origin
of a manifestation is formed? By much developed intuition,
possibly.
#
22.1 "To remain whole, yield somewhat or seem curved and
bent if you may." To become straight, let yourself look
bent. To become full, seem hollow. Seem tattered now, that you
can be renewed. Those that have little, can get more, To have
plenty is to be confused.
22.2 Therefore the wise man clasps the primal unity, testing by
it everything under heaven by himself - it.
22.3 He doesn't show himself much, he is therefore luminous and
clear. He doesn't define himself, therefore he is distinct. He
doesn't boast, therefore people give him credit: he succeeds by
that. He's never outright proud of his work, and therefore it
endures.
22.4 Because he doesn't contend, none in the world can contend
with him.
22.5 So the old saying To remain whole, seem twisted!" was
no idle word; for true wholeness can only be won by return to
dao.
#
23.1 #
To be always talking goes against nature. For the same reason a
good whirlwind never lasts the whole morning, nor a swell
rainstorm the whole day.
23.2 The wind and rain emerge from nature. And if even nature
can't blow, last or pour for long, how much less should man-given
tenets?
23.3 So, he who takes to or follows (one) dao, becomes merged
with (this) dao. Or if one uses dao as one's instrument, the
results will be like dao. Who follows virtue, is soaked by it. If
one uses the "power" as one's instrument, the results
will be like the power. If one uses what's the "reverse of
the power", the results will be the "reverse of the
power".
23.4 Who is dao identified, could be glad as well. For to those
who have conformed themselves to dao, dao readily lends its
power. To those who have conformed themselves to the power, the
power readily lends more power. While to those who conform
themselves to inefficacy, inefficacy readily lends its
ineffectiveness.
23.5 Who has not enough faith will not be able to get faith. Or:
"By not believing in people you turn them into liars."
#
24.1 Who stands on tiptoe, doesn't stand steady; He who takes the
longest strides, doesn't walk.
24.2 He who does his own looking sees little, and he who shows or
reveals himself is hardly luminous.
24.3 He who justifies and defines himself isn't subsequently
distinct. He who boasts of what he will do succeeds in nothing;
Who brags doesn't endure for long. Who is proud of his work,
achieves nothing well lasting.
24.4 Such people are like remnants of food and tumours of action
from the dao point of view. Good braggarts could be dregs. So
it's said "Pass round superfluous dishes to those that have
already had enough, Such things of disgust all are likely to
detest and reject in disgust." So the man of dao spurns
them. The man that has dao doesn't stay to bray and show off.
#
25.1 Before heaven and earth here was something nebulous,
formless yet complete; without sound, without substance,
isolated, free from all form; standing alone and depending on
nothing, unchanging, operating everywhere, all pervading,
revolving and without fail. One can think of it as the mother of
all
25.2 I don't know its true name. I call it dao. "Way"
is the by-name. If forced to give it a name I can call it great
(ta) .
25.3 Now such greatness implies reaching out in space, and also
means functioning everywhere, or passing on; Space-yielding or
functioning everywhere signifies far-reaching. And passing on
means going far away, To go really far is to return to the
original point. To reach far is a return. To go far away means to
return.
25.4 So dao is great and far-reaching, and so is heaven, earth
and the king. For just as dao, earth and heaven each has its
subtle greatness, so does the ruler. There are four great things
in the universe, and the king is one of them. So within the realm
there are four portions of greatness", and one belongs to
the king.
25.5 The ways of men are conditioned by those of earth. The ways
of earth, by those of heaven. The ways of heaven by those of dao,
and the ways of dao by the Self-so's Dao in turn models itself
after Nature.
#
26.1 The solid is the platform of the light, and the heavy is the
root of the light. (Maybe firm integrity has to be the basis of
light frivolity). Quiet strength rules over activity, the
not-so-active could be the big boss of the hasty.
26.2 So the wise man travels all day and never leaves his
baggage; he who travels all day hardly likes to be separated from
his provision-chart: However great and glorious the view, he sits
quiet and dispassionate".
26.3 So the lord with ten thousand chariots can seldom allow
himself to be light-spirited and lighter than those he rules. The
ruler of a great country should never make light of his body -
anywhere. In light frivolity, the controller's centre is lost; in
hasty action, such self-mastery.
26.4 If the ruler is light-hearted, the minister will be
destroyed. If he is light, the foundation is lost; If he is
active, the lord is lost. [Maybe for ever.]
#
27.1 A good traveller leaves no track or trace behind, nor does
fit activity. So a good runner leaves no track. Perfect speech is
like a jade-worker whose tool leaves no mark. Good speech leaves
no flaws. The perfect reckoner needs no counting-slips; the good
reckoner uses no counters.
27.2 The perfect, shut door is without bolt nor bar and can't be
opened. The perfect knot needs neither rope nor twine, yet can't
be untied. No one can untie it.
27.3 So the wise man is good at helping men, always good in
saving men: the wise man is all the time helping men in the most
perfect way - he certainly doesn't turn his back on men; is all
the time in the most perfect way helping creatures. He certainly
doesn't turn his back on creatures, and consequently no man is
rejected. For that reason there's no useless person. And he is
always good in saving. So nothing is rejected. This is called
following the light (of nature) - is called resorting to the
light, nay, stealing some divine light.
27.4 Truly, the good man is the teacher of the bad, as they say.
But the bad man is the lesson of the good, in part some material
from which the good can learn. And so the imperfect is the
equipment of the perfect man".
27.5 He who hardly respects or values his teacher, hardly cares
for the material or loves his lesson, is gone far astray even if
well versed. That's the fine secret.
#
28.1 "He who knows the male (active force), yet keeps to the
female (the passive force or receptive element), becomes like a
ravine, receiving all sort of things. Being the all-encompassing
ravine he knows a power that he never calls upon in vain. This is
returning to the state of infancy.
28.2 He who knows the white, yet keeps and cleaves to the black
becomes the standard by which all things are tested, he becomes
the model for the world. As such he has all the time the eternal
power that never errs; and he returns to the limitless, a
primordial nothingness.
28.3 He who knows glory, yet keeps to obscurity or even cleaves
to ignominy, turns into the valley that receives into it all kind
of things. And being such a valley he has all the time a power
that suffices. So he returns again to some pristine simplicity,
returns to the state of simplicity: its the raw, uncarved block.
28.4 Break up simple awareness and it becomes shaped. Next it
becomes someone's tool in the hands of the wise man. For when a
block is sawed up it's made into subordinates or implements. When
the wise man uses it, it becomes chief. So the greatest carver
does the least cutting, as they say. The great ruler doesn't cut
up.
#
29.1 Those that would gain what's under heaven by tampering with
it - I've seen that they don't succeed.
29.2 For that which is under heaven is like a holy vessel,
dangerous to tamper with. Those that tamper with it, harm it.
Human go-between is likely to fail. Those that grab at it lose
it. Who makes can spoil well; who holds can lose.
29.3 Among creatures of this world some lead and some follow.
Some things go forward among creatures: some go in front, some
follow behind - Some blow out, some blow in; some blow out while
others would blow in. Some are feeling vigorous just when others
are worn out. Some are strong, some are weak. Some are loading
just when others would be tilting out. Some can break, some can
fall.
29.4 So the wise man discards excess, extravagance, and
ridiculous pride: He discards even the absolute, the
all-inclusive, the extreme.
#
30.1 He who by dao purposes to help a ruler of men, will oppose
most conquest by force of arms: such things are wont to rebound.
30.2 Where armies are, thorns and brambles can grow. The raising
of a great host could be followed by a year of dearth.
30.3 Therefore a good general effects his purpose and next stops;
for he dares not rely upon the strength of arms: he doesn't take
further advantage of a victory.
30.4 He fulfils his purpose and does hardly glory in things he
has done; effects his purpose and doesn't boast of a thing he
accomplished; fulfils an ignoble purpose, but takes no pride in
something he did well; fulfils his purpose as some perhaps
regrettable necessity - does it as a step that could hardly be
averted and avoided. So he effects his purpose, but hardly loves
violence. Why?
30.5 Things age after reaching their prime. What has a time of
vigour (and conquest) also has its time of decay. After things
reach their prime, they begin to grow old, which means being
contrary to dao. Furthermore, morbid violence and violence in
excess could be against dao. He who is against the dao perishes
young. Whatever is contrary to dao will soon perish. What's
against dao will hardly survive.
#
31.1 Fine weapons are instruments of evil as soldiers can be:
quite ill-omened things, often hated. Those with fine dao turn
away from weapons that are most often hated.
31.2 The gentleman favours the left hand side among people in
peace; peace people are of good birth. In a fair peace the
symbolic left is the place of honour. Yes, a good ruler honours
the left and its good omens when at home, but in war this is
reversed: On military occasions he favours the right side as the
place of war honour. And so he honours the right of bad omens.
31.3 -
31.4 The durable, even when he conquers, does hardly regard
weapons as lovely things. Weapons and soldiers can be bad and
evil-doing tools. They're not often the tools of the gentleman
and good ruler. To hold them dear means to delight in them, and
so to delight in slaughter of men. And he who delights in the
slaughter of men will never get what he looks for out of those
that live and function under heaven. In ugly victory there's no
beauty, and who calls it handsome perhaps preaches slaughter. Use
of soldiers [and police] can't be helped, best policy is calm
restraint. Who delights in the slaughter of men wont succeed,
wont succeed in ruling the world; and slaying of multitudes
should be mourned.
31.5 -
31.6 A host that has slain men had better be received with grief
and mourning rites; he that has conquered in battle had better be
received and celebrated with some mournful funeral custom. A
victory is the grand occasion for funerals.
#
32.1 Best dao is absolute and eternal. As such it has neither
name nor fame. Its uncunning, cute naiveté, the fabled raw block
of wood, and it cant be used by anybody. None in the whole world
can master and make use of such basic simplicity. Yet, though
seemingly of small value, it could be greater than anything in
the universe.
32.2 Good kings and barons can keep such unspoiled, inborn
nature. If kings and barons would but hold on to it, all beings
and things would submit to them well of their own accord.
32.3 Yes, the best let heaven and earth join, so that the mystic
sweet rain falls, all the time beyond the command of men, yet
evenly upon all. Let heaven and earth unite to drip sweet dew.
And the ten thousand creatures would flock to honour you; for the
world would conspire much for sweet dew: Without law or
compulsion, men would take up regulations and institutions, sort
out names and [try to] live in harmony. A human civilisation can
rise once there are names [principles].
32.4 Once the block is carved, there will be such names; they're
wide differentiations of things. But as soon as there are
[principles and neatly differentiated] names, know that it's time
to stop. Its well to know where to stop for calm and poise. As
soon as there are names [and study] it's time to stop. By knowing
when it's time to stop, much danger could be avoided.
32.5 In the world dao can be likened to rivers that turn into
wider rivers and eventually course into some sea. All will come
to and be clasped by one and more such dao rivers -and to [some]
dao all under heaven will come, as streams and torrents flow into
a great river or sea [of universal dao].
#
33.1 He who knows others is learned; but he who knows himself is
wise, nay, in the end it could be illumined.
33.2 He who conquers others has strength of muscles; To conquer
oneself is hard. So he who conquers himself is strong.
33.3 To be content with what one has is to feel rich; so let the
contented feel rich. Next: He who works, may eventually succeed.
And he one who acts with vigour has will. Even he who works
through sordid violence can get his way - The determined one has
strength of will.
33.4 What stays in its place can endure. He who doesn't lose his
centre can last quite long, he who hardly loses his place (with
such as dao). The one ho dies but doesn't really perish enjoys
long life. He who dies yet (his power) remains has long life.
When such a one dies he should hardly be thought of as [too]
lost; there's no other longevity [than long life].
#
34.1 Some great dao can flow everywhere. Like a flood it can go
left or right. Like a drifting boat it can go this way or that.
34.2 All things [eventually] derive their life from it. It hardly
denies or disowns them. It accomplishes its task, but seem to
claim no credit for it. It hardly takes possession of anyone,
either. So though it covers all there is like some garment, it
hardly takes possession. It can clothe and feed all beings but
hardly claims to be guru over them.
34.3 Therefore it can perhaps be called low and quite free from
insignificant desires.
34.4 To turn into the home of all things, don't make any outer
claims. (Implied; cf. Y) See into how dao is by non-desiring
empty mind. (Cf. Y) Ten thousand [hungry] creatures obey a dao
master and his ways, though they hardly understand it or how. Dao
is called great. And the man who lives it or a dao repertoire is
called great as well. The wise man never strives [verbally] for
the great. To the end the wise dao man doesn't claim any outer
greatness. Thus [some degree of subtle Vossa-] greatness is
installed.
34.5 And the wise man never at any time hardly ever makes a show
of greatness. By such a dogged, keen strategy some [clowns]
achieves greatness.
#
35.1 Hold the great symbol and great form of dao know-how. He who
visualises or holds the great symbol form at its best can go
about his work (in such as his empire), yet without doing harm.
An then all the world follows. At last a lot of people will come
and meet no harm. All in peace, quietness and security,
commonwealth. All can enjoy comfort and health.
35.2 Sound of music, smell of good dishes will make the passing
stranger pause. Yes, offer music and dainties, very good things
to eat and the [odd], passing and wayfaring stranger will stays.
35.3 How different the words that dao gives forth! So thin,
insipid, so flavour- or tasteless! Still dao is mild to the
taste. Looked at, it can't be seen. So look at dao; it's quite
imperceptible. If one looks for dao, there's hardly anything
solid to see. If one listens for it, there's nothing loud to
hear. We listen to this inaudible [thing]. If one uses it, its
supply never fails. So use it; it's inexhaustible.
#
36.1 What's in the end to be shrunk can first be stretched. The
one who is to be made to dwindle (in power) can first be caused
to expand; and then it's necessary first to expand. Whatever is
to be weakened must begin by being made strong [enough for it
first of all]. He who is to be laid low can first be exalted to
power. So: first promote, next destroy. Or: To destroy, first
promote. What's to be overthrown must begin by being set up. He
who would be a taker must begin as a giver.
36.2 And this is the fine art of "dimming" one's light.
According to this [set-up] the soft overcomes the hard; and the
weak, the strong. [Such things can happens, but most often not,
or what?]
36.3 Fish should be left in the deep pool, not taken away from
water. And sharp weapons of the state should not be displayed,
but left where nobody can see them.
#
37.1 The dao never does; it takes no action. Through it
everything is done, yet there's nothing left undone.
37.2 If good kings and barons would master some fit dao and keep
it, all things in the world should transform spontaneously. When
reformed and rising to action, let all influenced be restrained
by the blankness of the unnamed, the nameless pristine
simplicity. Yes, if after being transformed they should desire to
act, someone has to restrain them with simplicity that has no
name.
37.3 It's an unnamed blankness; it could bring dispassion; As
such nameless pristine simplicity is stripped of desire. So to be
truly, artfully dispassionate, be free of desires and still.
Simple wit and sense is free of desires. By stripping of desire
true [yoga] rest is achieved almost of itself, the whole [body
or] empire will be at rest of its own accord. And next the world
[perhaps of somebody] could get at peace of its own accord.
#
38.1 The man of superior [scholar] virtue is hardly (conscious of
his) virtue, and so he is virtuous. Superior virtue is hardly
(conscious of) its virtue. [Or could it be that superior virtue
is hardly virtue at all?] The high-standing man hardly ever shows
off he has some supreme powers or prowess deep inside himself. He
keeps such powers, and in this way he really owns virtue. The man
of low virtue is hardly losing virtue, and so he is devoid of
virtue. The man of low virtue can lose sight of some virtue by
never losing sight of it. Rather low or indecent power"
can't get rid of the appearance of being some power'; [There's no
scoffed, angrily sulking Messiah power'].
38.2 No one thinks a man of highest calibre acts. No one thinks
he ever acts with ulterior motives. The man of low virtue acts
from himself, and very often with an ulterior motive - and is so
regarded -
38.3 The man of super-kindness also acts, but with no irksome,
ulterior motives. But all folks never think the superman acts.
The man of superior justice acts but has no ulterior motive to do
so, and maybe with an ulterior motive, as he who is best in
ritual acts not merely acts. (Yes, when) the man of superior
morality acts and finds no response, he rolls up his sleeves and
stretches his arms or advances upon them to force it on others.
38.4 So: Only when dao is lost does [said] virtue arise. When
[spoken-of] virtue is lost, only then does [a parade of] kind
humanity rise. Such good kindness is lost, then (comes some sort
of or endorsement of) just moral: When humanist riches deep
inside are lost, only then comes [conform, outer-directed] normal
righteousness. When righteousness is lost, only then propriety
pops up.
38.5 [And now it stands up: Boss-given, endorsed] morality can be
the thinning out of loyalty and honesty of heart and the start of
chaos. [Inner, hearty] morality lost, then propriety or
semi-ritual. So [much] ritual endorsement could be the mere husk
of loyalty and promise-keeping. [And so, all in all,] good,
seemly propriety is a superficial expression of loyalty and
faithfulness, and the start of chaos or disorder.
38.6 Those who are the first to know, let words of dao flower,
and in the end it's an origin of folly. From this the great or
noble man dwells in the solid, heavy and thick (base), and not in
the superficial or thinned (end). Yes, he dwells in reality,
which is a fruit, and not in the show of appearances, or
flowering (expression). Therefore he rejects the one and accepts
the other.
#
39.1 There were those in old times who grasped and were possessed
of the one: The heaven was much clarified by attaining it.
Likewise, the earth got stable or calm by the same [rotating]
measure; and demon spirits or gods were spiritualised, became
divine.
39.2 The valley likewise became full, the abyss replenished. By
staying in the one, all creatures lived and grew. By staying in
some basic unity, [Russian] princes and dukes became the ennobled
of the people - That was how each became so. Barons and princes
direct their people [in some ways]. It's some inner fabric of
unified wholeness that sees to it.
39.3 [Man-felt] heaven could soon split open without fundamental
clarity. Without basic clarity, heavens might become torn.
Without resting, steady stability, the earth might quake and tip
over. Without spiritual power, the gods might wither and crumble,
39.4 Without being filled, the valleys might crack and run dry.
If the myriad things had not thus lived and grown all would end
without the life-giving sustenance of power. Without the
ennobling power, the honourable kings and barons in high places,
even the directors of their people, might stumble, some
overthrown.
39.5 So the humble is the stem upon which the mighty grows. Yes,
humble oneness is the basis for all honour. So even the exalted
ones depend upon the lowly for their base.
39.6 That could be [one reason] why [Russian] princes and dukes
call themselves the orphaned," the lonely one," the
unworthy," or the truly ill-provided. Is it not true then
that they [to some extent] depend upon common man for support, or
on hard ruler might rooting itself upon humility?
39.7 Just enumerate all the parts of a chariot. and you still
have no [unified construct, no] chariot.
39.8 So [learn to] rumble like rocks rather than jingle like
jade.
#
40.1 Reversion is the action of dao. In dao the only motion is a
return; and the one useful quality is named soft [or polite]
gentleness, So polite or weak gentleness [or humility] is the
function of dao.
40.2 The creatures and things of this world come from being. And
being from not-yet-being. though all
#
41.1 When the highest of men hear of dao and truth they put it
into practice quite diligently. When the common types hear of
dao, they seem to be in two minds about it, half believing, aware
and unaware of some.
41.2 When the lowest types hear of dao, they ridicule or laugh
loudly - but if they did not laugh, it would be no dao.
41.3 The proverb has it: The way out into the light often looks
dark; one who understands dao seems dull, as dao which is bright
appears to be dark. The dao which goes forward appears to fall
backward; the one who is advanced (in dao) seems to slip
backwards; the way that goes ahead often looks as if it went
back. He who works and moves on the even dao [co-path] seems to
go up and down; the least hilly way often looks as if it went
thus, as level dao appears uneven.
41.4 Great virtue seems hollow and empty. The truly loftiest
might looks like an abyss; superior virtue appears like a valley
(hollow). Great capability is [granted to be] hollow. Yes, the
loftiest is something abysmal. Sheerest white seems blurred,
sheer white is like tarnished; (most) purity seems like disgrace.
The most sufficing might looks inadequate; far-reaching virtue
hardly seems to be enough; and great [and rustic] character
appears to be not enough [but it's all the same]. The
[organising] might that stands most firm seems flimsy. Solid
character looks infirm; and solid virtue unsteady. What's in its
natural, pure state looks faded: True substance looks changeable,
and pure worth seems dirtied. The largest square has no corners:
great space has no corners. The greatest capacities develop
latest, and great talent could be slow to mature; as they say:
The greatest vessel takes the longest to finish. The great tool
and talent is slow to finish (or mature). Great tools do slow
work. Great inside talent takes long to ripen. Great music is far
from course; [at times] rare, it could be hard to get, or hardly
heard.
41.5 Great, hidden form has neither shape nor contour; as great
here means of dao, [which is thought up as] hidden and without
(overtly sounded) name. Now, dao backs all things financially;
dao alone skilfully provides for all - it supports all things and
advances [some] to perfection. Well dao-lent power could bring us
(some degree of) fulfilment. Skilled, able dao-lending (of some
majesty and power) could bring [Christian] fulfilment.
#
42.1 Dao gave birth to the one; the one gave birth successively
to two things, three things, up the everything, everybody and the
whole world we know.
42.2 The ten thousand things carry the yin as some back or
behind, and hug the yang in front. Through the blending of the
pervading principles as some abstract union, and by a further
blending [designing] the material force (ki) they can gain
[sound] harmony. And so the union in harmony gets strong [and
defences]. In other words, living beings can't turn their backs
to the shade [such as cooling yin] without having the sun on
their bellies [it could be invigorating yang], and it's on such
(yin-yang) blending of so-called breaths that [most] harmony
depends.
42.3 Most people hate to be diagnosed as lonely, unworthy,
orphaned, needy, ill-provided. Yet princes and dukes style
themselves so, and call themselves by these names.
42.4 Truly, things are often increased by seeking to diminish
them and diminished by seeking to increase them." And
sometimes things are benefited by being taken away from and
suffer by being added to. And so it often happens that things can
gain by losing and lose by gaining.
42.5 What others have taught, I teach also: "Violent and
fierce people hardly die a natural [elegant] death." Yet,
show me a man of violence that came to a good end, and I will
take him for my teacher. I shall make all this the father (basis)
of my teaching. [Uha.]
#
43.1 The softest things in the world overcome the hardest things
in the world. The softest substance radiates through the hardest.
Also, what's most yielding can eventually overwhelm the hardest.
Formless penetrates no-crevice; substanceless it can enter where
there's no space; all this could be not-yet-being entering and
jostling non-space. That's how I know the value of action that's
actionless. Through this I [also] know the benefit or advantage
of taking no action.
43.2 There can be [sad] teaching without words. To teach without
words can be best. Still few can understand such stuff. And there
can be solid value in action that's actionless, or the advantage
of taking no action. Yes, the [said] benefit of taking no action
is without compare. Few can understand it.
#
44.1 Fame or one's own self, which matters most? Nay, which does
one love more? Which should one love more, fame or one's own
life? Which is more valuable, one's own life or wealth? One's own
self or things bought, the solid goods, which should really count
most? Which is worse, gain or loss? Could it be loss (of self) or
possession which is the greater evil? [Which gain is the greater
evil here?]
44.2 Therefore: he who loves most spends most. He who has lavish
desires could spend extravagantly. He who hoards much could lose
much. Who hoards much is in for losing heavily if who has hoarded
most could suffer the heaviest loss.
44.3 The contented man could meet no disgrace; Who stops in time
knows when to stop. Who stops in time nothing can harm if free
from danger he can long endure and feel forever safe and secure.
He can long endure who stays forever safe and secure -
#
45.1 What's most perfect [ambivalence] seems to be incomplete;
[its] highest perfection is never impaired. The perfect seems to
have something missing; [so have something missing]. Highest
perfection is like imperfection, but its use is never impaired,
nor its utility [at times]. What's most full [opening] seems
empty; its use will never fail. The greatest abundance seems
meagre indeed, but its use will never fail. What's most straight
seems devious, maybe crooked.
45.2 The greatest skills seems to be [rustic,] clumsy. The
greatest cleverness appears like stupidity, [(Demon skill seems
like clumsiness. Apt skill seems clumsy, true cleverness seems
clumsy.] The greatest [harlequin] eloquence seems to stutter or
seems like stuttering.
45.3 Hasty movement overcomes cold. Keeping still can overcome
heat. Tranquillity and staying still can overcome heat. By being
greatly still you'll next be fit to rule the world. Who is calm
and quiet becomes the universe deceit. By his limpid calm he all
the time puts right everything [as universal deceit].
#
46.1 When dao reigns in the kingdom, galloping horses are turned
back to fertilise certain fields with their manure. If the world
in accord with dao, racing horses are turned back to pull refuse
carts. When the world hardly lives in accord with dao, dao
doesn't prevail or win. Next war horses will be reared even on a
sacred hill below the city walls, and blatant cavalry will frolic
in the countryside, driving and riding pestering war horses in
suburbs in between. Dao does hardly prevail if war is on in city
suburbs.
46.2 No lure is greater than to possess what others want. There's
no greater guilt than [sudden] discontent. There's (...) greater
disaster than greed. [Eventually] there's hardly a greater sin
than desire for possession. No disaster could be greater than
[...] to be content with what one has [in dire need and disabling
poverty]. No presage of [airy] evil is greater than men wanting
to get more.
46.3 He who has once known the pure [orgasm] contentment that
comes simply through being content [at its peak], gets rather
content-centred a long time after.
#
47.1 One can know what's happening all over the world without
going out of doors. One can see the dao of the big wide beyond
here without looking out of ones windows, and see all the ways of
that beyond-here. Then, the further one travels the less one
knows.
47.2 So the wise man can [at times] arrive without going and know
without going about; he can understand much without seeing - or
achieve much without [visible] action.
#
48.1 The student of knowledge goes into learning a little day by
day; The student of dao reduces his assets by dwindling or losing
a bit each day. Learning consists in adding daily to one's stock,
and the practice of dao consists in loose dwindling day by day.
It could be subtracting till one has reached inactivity. By
steady reductions [of certain sorts] you reach certain sorts of
laissez-faire.
48.2 So decrease and further decrease until you reach the point
of taking no action. [This is clowning.] By artful inactivity
everything [bad] can be set in motion. He who conquers the
[inside] domain does so [mostly] by doing nothing. Those who once
won the adherence of all who live here, did so by not interfering
much. Had they interfered, they would never have won this
adherence.
48.3 One who likes to do, may not be able to rule a kingdom
[inside or outside].
#
49.1 The wise man makes no judgements of his own. He has no rigid
and plump ideas alone. Maybe no certain, opinionated feelings. He
uses the heart of the people as his own inner side and heart.
People's opinions and feeling are then as his own.
49.2 He says: Good ones I declare good; and I [often] treat those
who are good with goodness, as I approve of the good man. I also
treat those who are not so good with goodness. I often approve of
the [said] bad; he gets goodness. So bad ones I also declare
good. That's the goodness on how goodness can be attained [by
demagogy.]
49.3 The honest ones I believe; and [some] liars I also believe;
I am honest to those who are honest, and I am also honest to
those who are not [so] honest. By such means great honesty, the
faith of virtue, can be attained and the honest gets [closer to
rueful] truthfulness.
49.4 In dealing with the world a wise man seems like one dazed
with a felt fear, and while governing his [little] empire he has
no subjective viewpoint. So a wise man lives in the world in
peace, and his bright mind forms a sound whole with that of his
[dear] people. Then they all lend their sense perceptions - eyes
and ears - and he treats them all - infants as well. But
sometimes again a wise man, dealings with some world, for the
world's sake dulls his wits. Where a hundred families all the
time strain their eyes and ears, the wise man all-sees a people
are brought into a fold of one heart. Next the wise man regards
them as his own dear children. At times the wise man sees and
hears no more than an infant. [that's not much.]
#
50.1 He who aims at life could achieve his death. Out of living,
death pops up. Who comes to life can go to death.
50.2 If three out of ten are life companions, then the same
number are death companions as well. As such the latter are
labelled death-spots: some take life, through activity, to death.
How is it? Its much due to men's intensive striving after life;
in part the intense activity of multiplying life. Some do feed
life too grossly.
50.3 It's said that he who is a good preserver of his life can
meet no tigers or wild buffaloes on land. Such a one could have a
true hold on life, If so, in battle or fighting he should hardly
try to escape from weapons. He should neither get very much
touched nor vulnerable to weapons in battle. [Cf. don't be there]
50.4 The wild buffalo cannot butt its powerless horns against
him, The tiger cannot fasten its then useless claws in him and
tear him apart, And much absent weapons of war should find no
place to enter - cannot thrust their blades into him. [The absent
part is always to blame. Demagogy] And why? (Demagogy, that's
why] In him there's no room for death because he is beyond death.
Others find no Achilles heel in him then and there.
#
51.1 One dao gives them birth, next hidden virtue and glory
fosters them. Matter gives them physical form. some get shaped
according to intrinsic designs, perfected by first being allotted
its primal strength. Sets of circumstances and tendencies
complete them. So all things of the universe worship their
intrinsic ways (dao forms) and honour virtue. There's hardly one
who doesn't honour inborn modes of living and standard
accommodations, so in one way or other all who accommodate
likeably do homage to set dao structure, and concomitant native,
later, possibly unfolded growth power.
51.2 Conclusion: all things of the universe honour dao and exalt
good te without being ordered by anybody. From this: the right
praise always come spontaneously. And this is so of its own
accord. Proficient dao hardly needs any right to be worshipped,
Hardly does its best fit, proper unfoldment prowess or power
claim the right to be honoured.
51.3 Its just like this: Some dao produces them and concomitant,
abundant virtue fosters them. Said in other words: The right dao
gives them birth, a proper te fosters them, Dao [deep structure]
and might enough can rear and develop, can feed, nurture and
shelter. In other words: grant some harbour of security, protect
and give deep, strong peace in a place fit for that end. Just the
right dao could be a prolongation of some deft was always and of
itself so. Yes, the right dao gives birth, shields from storms,
and seems hardly possessive. The right shields hardly lay claim
to you. Good dao bore you and the power" of dao evolved or
reared you (a bit), made you grow [naturally, according to innate
designs] brewed for you personally, sort of. A man must rear
others, control some, but never lean upon them. By such natural
designs just dao can act and also help, but it hardly
appropriates. Just be chief among them, but hardly manage them.
This can be called the superior power. See: The superior power
hardly controls anybody! And this is the [program of developing
fit] mystic might.
#
52.1 There was a [bang] start of the universe, call it the mother
of the world.
52.2 Who has found that mother dao, also understands [some of]
her sons (things) by it. From the mother, we can know her sons.
Having understood some sons, yet keep to the inner, subtle
mother. Who has known the sons will hold to the mother, for one's
whole life can be protected from danger by it. [So they say.]
52.3 Shut down life's various openings. Close its doors, and till
the end your strength may remain. Next, your whole life can seem
without toil.
52.4 On the other hand; open the mouth busy about affairs, and to
the end of life there will be no help or salvation coming to you
[from the outer realm].
52.5 Good sight implies seeing what's very small. Seeing what's
small is called [Zen] enlightenment. Who stays by some good
conduct is strong.
52.6 So use the light and return to clear sight through the
bright light of the subtle, shining inner realm [debated in
Buddhism] By this art, never cause yourself future distress, [but
see well in advance by the inner realm's sight and bright light;
or just psyche such things out,] thereby preserved from most
harm. This is called resorting to the always-so, or practising
the eternal. That act is also called to steal the absolute.
#
53.1 Once started on the great [lax] highway, if I had but little
[Vossing] knowledge I should, in walking on a broad way, fear
getting off the road. On the main path (dao), I would avoid the
by-paths.
53.2 Some dao main path is easy to walk [or drift] on, but safe
and easy. All the same people are fond, men love by-paths, love
even small by-paths:
53.3 The by-path courts are spick-and-span. And the fields go
untilled, nay, exceedingly weedy. They're content to let their
fields run to weed. All the while granaries stand quite empty and
some exceedingly empty.
53.4 They have elegant, in clothes and gown to wear, some
furnished with patterns and embroideries, Some carry sharp
weapons, glut themselves with drink and foods enjoyed beyond
limit, And wealth and treasures are accumulated in excess, owning
far more than they can handle and use. This is to [molest] the
world towards brigandage, it's robbery as extravagance. In the
end they're splitting with wealth and possessions. Wealth splits,
tends to. This cannot be a highway of dao (the way).
#
54.1 Well planted can hardly be plucked. Who is well established
(in dao) can hardly be pulled away. The firmly grounded is hardly
easily shaken. Who has a firm grasp doesn't easily let go. Who
has a firm grasp of dao can't be separated from it. A really firm
grasp can't be relaxed. Next, the ancestor's dao ways and means
and their powers unite to carry the modern family on. From
generation to generation firmly gripped dao [gyrations] shall be
continued without fail. Such ancestral sacrifice is not to be
suspended.
54.2 When one cultivates firm grasp or well modified ancestor
disciplines in one's own life, things tend to go markedly well:
If you cultivate, elevate and apply well blended, ad hoc modified
ancestor ways and means, jobs, routines, accomplishments, such
formerly seen, halfway "inherited" cardinal dao
know-how at its best should be rewarding for yourself as an
individual or person at its peak, and if so, your lifestyle could
become suitable, even genuine, and its prowess likewise. This
spells such as: Apply the firm manas grasp to yourself according
to "like father, like son" and you'll incur no manas
problem, no such deep, unseen trouble - From this: Apply such
inherited "firmly rooted strategy" and its various
grasps to yourself, and by its id outlets and precious routines
you'll be freed from much unsuitable dross. Also apply best,
united ancestor dao (or sakti) to your family or household and
your household should flourish and thrive by this syncretic way
of ways. [Honour your best father(s) at their best by doing in
best footsteps under his wings, in his shadows - by such as
halfway inherited or taken-op proclivities.] Apply it to the
village on a wider, social scale, and the village will be
strengthened or more secure. Apply it to the kingdom, and the
kingdom could prosper. Apply it to an kingdom, and it will grow.
Cultivated in the world, sour id-based handling sets could become
all-embracing. Therefore: Delve into how "well structured,
planted or formed" some things that are instituted seem to
be. By delving back through own conscious stages as parts of
yourself, you can in the end contemplate and ridicule yourself a
little. The person should be some family-and-ancestors embedded
"thing" in its own right. Next you can control your
household by the united dao controls involved in it [allied to
yin-yang structured cosmology].
54.3 According to (such well-planted, relations-structured
schooled and trained virtue of) the individual, evaluate the
individual; According to (the same virtues of) the family, judge
the family; According to (similar blends of virtue of) the
village, judge the village; According to (the virtue of the
statutes ) the state, judge the state; According to (the crossed
virtues of) the world, evaluate the world.
54.4 How do I know the world? It's from the cultivation of
root-strong virtue from the level of the individual to that of
the sour world - I know just by what's inside me and this, all
brought together.
#
55.1 He who has a lot of mystic might also should be strong in
secret able influence-might - quite free from getting harmed, at
times like a tender child: full of childlike virtue at its best.
Then no poisonous insects should sting him. Fierce beasts should
not seize him and wild beasts hardly attack him, clawing birds of
prey should not pounce on and harass him. The bones of this dear
little one are soft and tender, his sinews tender, but his grip
is quite firm.
55.2 He hardly yet knows about the union of male and female, yet
his organs are fully formed and well, at times aroused. This
means that his essence is at its height there and then, or means
that the vital force is at its height. [It could be both.]
55.3 Such a one can cry all day without getting hoarse if his
[libido as natural balance] is whole and healthy [for it]. If so
it's well in accord with something eternal. Now, to know eternity
full well can be a discerning matter. To know bland harmony
likewise implies to be in eternity, or if missed, it is to
understand some [principle of] always-so by some degree of mental
illumination. But to be well in accord with the eternal means to
be free as a bird.
55.4 To fill life to the brim is to invite ugly portents, bad
omens. To force the growth of life likewise spells ills. Some
ready at hand or to come later on, maybe. Now, if the heart makes
calls upon the life-breath, laziness or [yogic] rigidity can
follow suit.
55.5 After things reach their prime, they begin to grow old,
Whatever has a time of vigour also has a time of decay. Certain
things age after reaching their prime. Much is contrary to dao.
Whatever is contrary to dao will soon perish. He who is against
dao can perish rather young. What's against dao could soon be
destroyed.
#
56.1 He who knows doesn't speak (artfully). He who speaks hardly
knows.
56.2 Fill your openings, shut the doors, Dull all nasty edges.
Untie all tangles. Temper or soften all glaring light. Submerge
its turmoil as unified with the world: Let all chaotic hustle and
bustle be smoothed down. This is the called the mysterious
[Vossing] levelling for bland unity or deep insider
identification.
56.3 Love and hatred can barely affect the gods and supermen who
are said to have achieved it. Certain forms of loss can hardly
reach up to this. It can be hard to repel and shoo such an
accomplished god-being, as it's impossible to be distant and
indifferent to him. He can't be raised, can't be much humbled,
and disgrace can hardly affect him deep inside. So he is already
highest of all humbled creatures. He is to be so honoured by the
world.
#
57.1 Kingdoms can only be governed if rules are kept; rule a
kingdom by some normal standards and with utmost discretion.
Battles, on the other hand, can be won if rules are aptly broken.
Operate the army and fight some battles by (unusual) tactics of
surprise and attack. Yet administer the kingdom by engaging in no
activity. Win the world by doing next to nothing, for major
adherence can only be won by letting well alone. How do I know
this will be so? By this:
57.2 The more prohibitions, ritual avoidances, and taboos there
are, the poorer the people will end. The more 'sharp weapons'
there are, the more troubled and chaotic the state will be, and
the more benighted the whole land will grow.
57.3 The more cunning craftsmen there are, the more skills of
technique, the more vicious things will appear: the more
pernicious contrivances will be invented. The more laws are
promulgated, the more thieves and bandits there will be. So: The
greater the number of statutes, the greater the number of thieves
in the end.
57.4 So a wise man decreed: So long as I "do nothing"
the people get transformed of themselves. So long as I love
quietude, the people will of themselves go straight.
57.5 So long as I act only by proper inactivity the people will
of themselves grow rich. I have no desires, and the people of
themselves become simple as the mythological raw block'.
#
58.1 When the government is non-discriminative, lazy and dull,
the people are contented and not spoiled, but quite generous.
When the ruler looks sullen or depressed, the people will be
happy and satisfied; When the government is efficient and smart,
searching and discriminative, the people are discontented,
disappointed and contentious. Even if the ruler looks lively and
self-assured the people will be carping and discontented.
58.2 Good fortune leans on bad fortune and bad fortune could rest
on good fortune. Latent calamity is happiness, and sound
happiness depends on some calamity. Fortune's route is a
disaster; fortune is hidden disaster.
58.3 Who knows when the limit will be reached? Who would be able
to know the ultimate results of good fortune? They may be: The
normal will (in time) revert to deceitful. There will hardly be
any correctness (used to govern the world) any more. The old
correct will become the perverse again. Some of the good we know
of will again turn evil. Few know it, but the people have been
deluded for a long time. Anyhow, there's a bourn where there's
neither right nor wrong. It's in a realm where every straight is
doubled by a crooked and every good by an ill. Surely mankind has
gone long enough astray?
58.4 Therefore the wise man has firm, square principles. He is at
times as pointed as a square, but hardly cuts or pierces. His
integrity is as acute as a knife but hardly cuts, hardly hurts
(innocent others), so "he shapes the corners without
lopping", He is indeed straight, but doesn't extend his
sway. He reaches his [most cherished] ends. He is far from
high-handed, he can be bright, but refrains from dazzling.
#
59.1 In managing human affairs, there's no better rule than to be
sparing, which is to forestall. You can't rule men nor serve
heaven unless you have laid up a store; Be [simply artistic]
frugal, there's nothing better for serving heaven and ruling
people.
59.2 To forestall is to be prepared and strengthened; and by
being frugal in such ways one may recover quickly. To recover
quickly means to accumulate [intense moral] rather much. This
"laying up a store" means quickly absorbing, And
"quickly absorbing" in the end means doubling one's
garnered "power". Double your garnered power and it
acquires a strength that nothing can overcome. By the heavy
accumulation of virtue one can overcome everything. Be prepared
and strengthened to be always victorious: to have infinite
capacity; If there's nothing it can't overcome, it knows no
bounds, then he will acquire a capacity with limits well beyond
anyone's knowledge. One can next overcome nearly everything. And
only what knows no bounds is huge enough to keep a whole kingdom
in its grasp.
59.3 If his capacity is beyond anyone's knowledge, he is fit to
rule a kingdom. Who has infinite capacity is fit to rule, but
only he who having the kingdom goes to the mother, can keep it
long. He who possesses he mother (dao) of the state will last
long. The mother (principle) of a ruling country can long endure.
59.4 This is called the art of making the roots strike deep by
fencing the trunk, It signifies to be firmly rooted, to have deep
strength, for the roots are deep and the stalks are firm, road to
immortality and enduring vision, the way of long life and
everlasting existence is won by making life long by fixed
staring.
#
60.1 Ruling a big kingdom is like frying a small fish.
60.2 They who by dao ruled all that's under heaven did not let an
evil spirit within them display its powers.
60.3 Such evil spirits did not display their supernatural powers;
the spirits of wise men were hardly used to hurt other men. So
when dao is employed to rule the kingdom, spiritual beings will
lose their supernatural grip and cease to harm common people. And
their supernatural power will far from harm people, and the wise
man also will refrain from harming people.
60.4 When both don't do each other harm, virtue (power) flows
towards them. If the sage's good spirit is nowhere mobilised to
harm other men, he himself can be saved from [deterioration]
harm. And so, if evil spirits and supermen don't harm each other,
each can be quite saved from harm. Furthermore, some of their
"tall abilities" could converge. If so, virtue can be
accumulated in both for ulterior benefit or towards some common
[soap opera] end.
#
61.1 A big kingdom can be compared to the lower part of a river,
like the low ground which all streams flow down towards. Here is
a point towards which all things under heaven converge. Its part
must be that of the woman who overcomes man by simple quietude.
By [such as] quiescence she gets underneath, and by tranquillity
she is down under.
61.2 A big kingdom can take over [a soul of] a small one if it
succeeds in getting itself below the small kingdom; If so it
absorbs some from the small country, or wins some adherence of
the small kingdom in the open.
61.3 If a small country on the other hand places itself below a
big country, it can absorbs or take over some of the big country
[assets]. Therefore some place themselves low so as to take over
or absorb (others). Some are (naturally) low and absorb (others).
Because small kingdoms are by nature in this way underneath large
kingdoms, they [sometimes] win the adherence of large kingdoms
[or end].
61.4 What a big kingdom is after is but to annex and herd others.
So what large countries really need is a lot of inhabitants. What
small countries need is some place where their surplus
inhabitants can go and get employment. What they want can be
little more that to join, be somewhat sheltered and perhaps serve
for it all.
61.5 Both can have what they want; I say the large kingdom must
"get underneath".
#
62.1 Dao is thought up as the mysterious secret of the universe,
it could be the storehouse of "all things", like the
pivotal worship centre in the south-west corner in the [old
Chinese] house. It's the good man's treasure and the bad man's
support and resort.
62.2 Fine words can buy honour, fine sayings can be sold. Fine
deeds can win respect from others. The best conduct is a gift.
Persons of noble, grave demeanour are accepted as gifts. Even if
a man is bad, when has (dao) rejected him? Why reject bad people
[the winners of tomorrow if all goes fine]? Even the bad let slip
no opportunity to acquire gifts that fit them well enough.
62.3 Therefore on the crowning of an emperor and appointing his
three ministers of the state, rather than send ta disc of jade
and teams of four horses, sit down and deliver this dao. It can
be done without moving from one's seat.
62.4 What did the old ones say of this dao, how did they prize
it? Why did they treasure such dao? Did they not say of those
that have it "Pursuing, they shall catch; pursued, they
shall escape?" Or, "Search for the guilty ones and
pardon them?" Or, "Those who seek shall have it, those
who sin shall be freed"? They thought [common] dao to be the
most precious, the treasure of the world.
#
63.1 Succeed in the magician's wu-wei: Accomplish seemingly
do-nothing. Attend seemingly to no-affairs. And do completely
without ado. What runs, acts without action, does without doing,
So let's taste without tasting. Taste the flavourless. Taste the
flavourless without tasting. Find flavourless flavour.
63.2 Whether it's big or small, many or few, requite hatred with
virtue. Dao can make the small great and the few many, can
requite injuries with some decent deeds.
63.3 But prepare for the hard while it's still easy. Deal with it
while it's still easy. Deal with the great or big while it's
still small. In governing your kingdom everything hard must be
dealt with while it's still easy.
63.4 The hard has to be dealt with while still very easy. All the
great (ones and great problems) of the world are to be dealt with
while they're yet small. Everything great must be dealt with
while it's still small.
63.5 Therefore the wise man never has to deal with the great; and
so gets greatness. He never strives for the great, by this the
great is had. So great undertakings shall start with what's
small.
63.6 But again "Who makes rash promises surely lacks. Who
lightly makes a promise, can find it too hard to keep his faith.
And light assent inspires little confidence. Who takes things
very easily is surely in for dealing with more difficulty in the
end. So "many easies" means many a hard. In other
words, who makes light of many things should find many
difficulties.
64.7 From all this even the wise man regards things as hard, but
he also knows how to make the easy difficult. For that reason he
very seldom meets with difficulties. [Uha.]
#
64.1 What remains placid is quite easy to hold. Not determined
happenings can be prepared for well in advance. Before there has
been an omen it's easy to lay plans. It's easy to forestall some
things that don't are or not yet occur. It's quite easy to plan
for and prepare well in advance. [But such forestalling is had by
thoughts, and thoughts are airy and can be tender and brittle, to
say the least.] And what's brittle is easy to crack. What's
tender is easily torn. What's brittle like ice is easy to melt.
And what's tiny is easy to scatter.
64.2 [All the same, reach up to] deal with things in their state
of not-yet-being; deal with things well before they appear. Just
put things well in shape before disorder and confusion. Put all
very well in order before disorder, and next go on to check loss
or disorder well.
64.3 A tree as big as a man's hug grows from a tiny sprout. A
tower nine storeys high begins with a clod of earth. Further, the
journey of three hundred miles began with ... the feet. A journey
of a thousand li begins right where one stands, even with the
very first step.
64.4 Still, he who takes a [visible forestalling] action fails.
Who acts, harms; he who grabs, lets slip. And therefore the wise
man doesn't act in the open, and so doesn't spoil or harm; yes,
he takes seemingly no action and therefore hardly fails. And why
is this? It's due to: He who grasps things [often] loses them. He
doesn't grasp a lot, he doesn't let slip a lot. Does hardly grab
in the open, and so doesn't let slip a lot. He grasps nothing
visibly to others, and therefore he doesn't lose much. Whereas
people in their handling of affairs often fail when they're about
to succeed at their tasks. Such people constantly spoil things
when within an ace of completing them. Be as careful at the end
as at the start to avert failures at hand. Then there will be no
such failures. Heed the end no less than the start, so that your
valuable work will not be spoiled and ruined.
64.5 Therefore the wise man learns to seem unlearned, wants only
things that are unwanted. Yes, the wise man publicly desires to
have no desire.
64.6 Therefore the wise man desires no desire - and desires all
the same. He doesn't often value rare treasures publicly. He
hardly values objects hard to get or find - in public. He says he
learns that which is unlearned. He claims he sets no store by
products difficult to get, and so teaches things untaught. [It's
a trap.] But he also turns all beings back to the very thing they
have left behind, so that he can assist in the course of nature
somehow. And if so, "the ten thousand creatures" can be
restored to their self-sameness, the self-so which is of [some]
dao. Yes, he supports all things in some of their natural states.
This he does; but hardly presume to interfere all right. He
hardly dares to act in the open. So he denies to take any visible
action.
#
65.1 In old times those who practised a dao well, did hardly aim
to enlighten people, but to make them ignorant and hold them that
way.
65.2 It seems that the more knowledge people have, the harder
they are to rule. Maybe it's hard for people to live in peace due
to very much knowledge. So he who rules the state through
knowledge is robber of the state; and who seek to rule by giving
knowledge could be like [coming] bandits preying on the land.
Maybe all who seek to rule by knowledge form the nation's curse,
eventually. He who rules a state not through knowledge is a
blessing. Those who seek not to rule by knowledge, are the
nation's blessing. To rule without giving knowledge could bring a
stock of good fortune to the land. [And maybe not.]
65.3 One who knows these two things also (sets) the standard.
Always to know such an old standard is called to of the deep,
secret calibre.
65.4 When such secret virtue becomes clear, outgoing,
far-reaching, and lets things revert back to some guessed at
source, all related things could return to some natural state. It
could go all the way back to [brutal] concord and harmony.
#
66.1 How did the great rivers and seas become the kings of the
ravines? By being experts at keeping low.
66.2 Therefore to be above the people you have to speak as though
you're lower than the people in some ways. So to be ahead of the
people, you have to follow them in your own person. To be
foremost or guide well, walk behind.
66.3 The wise man keeps himself on top, and the people hardly
feels his weight or get crushed by it in time. He guides in this
way, and the people don't harm him the least. He can even walk in
front [as an example], and people don't wish him harm. [Let's
hope that.] In this dynamic [guru] way everything under heaven
will be glad to be pushed by him and will not find his guidance
irksome. Then the people of the world are glad, the world
rejoices and praises him without getting tired of it, in order to
uphold him forever.
66.4 He accomplishes his aims by overt non-striving. Because he
doesn't compete in the open, no one can compete well with him.
#
67.1 Every one says my dao is greatly like folly. Just because
it's great, it looks like folly. Great ways don't look like the
ordinary anyhow. If it did not look like folly, it could have
turned small and petty long ago! Then it would have been small.
As for things that don't look foolish to common men, there can be
no question about their smallness.
67.2 I have three treasures. Guard and keep them: The first is a
deep, deep concern; call it mystic pity, if you like. The second
is never too much, which may mean frugality. And the third is
refusal to be ahead, foremost or first, for I hardly dare to be
ahead.
67.3 Deep, concerned love brings guts [or fall]. Through not
doing too much, one has amplitude (of reserve power): Who has
spared, may then give and seem generous. Through not presuming to
be the first and best there is, one can develop one's talent and
strength; let it mature to dominate a world.
67.4 On the other hand, to be bold by forsaking deep love; to be
generous by forsaking frugality-won reserves and clever, artful
restraint; and to be ahead and rushing in front by forsaking
following behind; all this could prove fatal in the end.
67.5 Ardent, loving concern can't fight well without conquering a
lot. It shall help in the case of attack, and likewise to be firm
in the case of defence. When heaven is to save a person, heaven
will protect him through deep love. Heaven arms those it would
not see beaten, with all right concern. [Let's hope that.]
#
68.1 A skilful leader of troops is never oppressive with his
military strength. The brave soldier is hardly very violent; The
best fighter doesn't become visibly angry; he hardly loses his
temper.
68.2 A skilful conqueror doesn't compete with people. The great
conqueror doesn't fight for small issues alone. The best user of
men acts as though he were their inferior and puts himself below
them by the virtue of not-competing.
68.3 This is called the ability or capacity to use men, or
matching heaven, or being suited to the highest found principle,
[maybe of old]
#
69.1 The strategists say: "If I dare not be the guest, then
let me be the host. When I dare not take the offensive, then I'll
take the defensive. If you doubt your ability to advance, then
retreat." Also: "When you doubt your ability to meet
the enemy's attack, take the offensive yourself."
69.2 Much of this his implies to march without visible
formations; its in part like rolling up the sleeve, and yet
presenting no bare arm. Or it could be like stretching your arm
without showing the sleeves. Confront well, present no
battle-front yourself. Refrain from charging in frontal attacks,
and seem to be armed without weapons. [Let that come as a
surprise.] Hold a thousand weapons without seeming to have them.
69.3 Now, great calamity comes from making light of an enemy.
There's no greater catastrophe than if a foolishly underestimated
enemy robs and destroys your most cherished treasures. It could
even destroy your topmost treasure, your old, dear body. Refrain
from having an enemy at the price of losing your body and life.
Remember: He whose enemy presents no front, could lose his booty.
69.4 Therefore when armies meet, the kind-looking man of sorrows
could win [by such as surprise tactics. But often it's the
opposite that happens.] Who doesn't delight in warfare in the
open, he wins. [And most often not?]
#
70.1 My words are very easy to understand and very easy to put
into practice. Yet no one understands them; no one puts them into
practice.
70.2 But some of my teaching could have nature as a source, and
also there's a principle-ruled ancestry in some of my words. Yes,
[some of] my deeds have a lord; my deeds could have [right] dao
as sovereign. Most men don't understand this, they're unable to
understand me. Few people understand me, and on this my real
value depends. I am highly valued, for few understand me.
70.3 The wise man wears a coarse cloth on top and carries jade
underneath his dress, within his bosom.
#
71.1 To know that you do not know is best. Who knows that he
doesn't know is the highest. To know when one doesn't know is
best. Who pretends to know what he doesn't know is sick-minded;
To think one knows when one doesn't know is a sort of malady.
Pretend to know when you don't know - that's a disease. He who
recognises this disease as a disease can also cure himself of it
[and maybe not]. [One may eventually get free from a disease by
recognising it for what it is.] Who recognises sick-mindedness as
sick-mindedness can't be wholly sick-minded, after all.
71.2 The wise man is hardly sick-minded if he recognises sick
mind as sick and also cures some diseases. He's hardly a sick
mind.
#
72.1 If the people hardly fear what's dreadful, something greatly
dreadful could descend. If people have no fear of force, then
great force descends. So never mind if people are not intimidated
by your authority. Some mightier authority could deal with them
in the long run.
72.2 Neither despise their dwellings nor narrow the living space
of their dwellings. They could cease to turn away if you don't
put them in jail. Don't dislike their offspring, harass or
oppress their lives. Don't harass them, and they could cease to
turn from you. Drop heavy taxes, and the people won't be fed up.
If you don't persecute all, you'll hardly be so much disliked.
They're not oppressed if you refrain from gross oppressive
measures.
72.3 So the wise man knows himself but hardly shows off. Knows
his own value, but doesn't exalt himself. Truly, "he rejects
the one (brute force or enemicy) but accepts or takes the other
(being some kind, sturdy neighbour)."
#
73.1 Who is brave in daring can kill or get killed [on a bus]. On
the other hand, one who is brave in not daring, can survive or
give life.
73.2 Either approach can be profitable or unprofitable, still one
of them is harmful. Who is brave in non-daring without ado lets
live. There can be some advantage and some disadvantage in each
approach - Now, "Dao-heaven hates the one it hates, hates
what it hates; and none can know the reason why." Who knows
why and what it dislikes? Heaven dislikes certain people; but the
wise man considers it a tricky question. Yes, why heaven seems to
hate - even a wise man regards it as a tricky question.
73.3 Well, it's in the fixed dao sets of heaven not to strive in
the open, but none the less to conquer. Not to compete, but all
the same win expertly. Be good at conquest without strife. Dao
hardly speaks, it skilfully responds. It comes without skilful
invitation, it can appear without a call. It doesn't seem anxious
about things and yet it shows up it plans very well. It gets able
results without obvious design, as from hidden, laid, [broad]
plans and schemes. [Say little, foster well laid schemes and
designs.]
73.4 Dao-heaven's net is wide, with big, coarse meshes. Still it
misses nothing. Nothing slips through.
#
74.1 When the people are not afraid of death, why threaten them
with death sentences?
74.2 Even supposing the people are constantly afraid of death and
we can seize and kill those who are unruly or vicious, who would
dare to slay them?
74.3 There's always the master executioner (Heaven). To kill in
his stead is like thrusting oneself into he master-carpenter's
place and doing his chipping for him. "He who tries it is
lucky if he doesn't cut his hand," they say. To undertake
executions for the master executioner is like hewing wood for
him. It rarely happens you escape injuring your own hands. Now,
often it happens as well that the executioner is killed - And to
take the place of the executioner is in part like handling the
hatchet for the master carpenter. He who handles the hatchet for
the master carpenter seldom escapes injury to his hands.
#
75.1 People are hungry because rulers eat too much income, too
much tax-grain. Therefore they starve, but also because of bad
interference from those above.
75.2 Some turn hard to rule as their rulers do too many things.
That's why they're hard to keep in order.
75.3 If so, the people are not very afraid of death, as they're
anxious to make a living. That's why they take death lightly in
such cases. So: Those who interfere not with their living that
are wise in exalting life. Maybe he who seeks only little after
life can excel in making life valuable. But all that have hearts
set only little on life could be superior to those who set store
by life.
#
76.1 When man is born, he is tender and weak. In death he becomes
stiff and hard.
76.2 All things, the grass as well as trees, are supple and soft
while alive. When dead they become brittle and dried.
76.3 So hardness and stiffness very often accompany death, the
soft and gentle could be companions of life.
76.4 The headstrong army will lose in battle. They say "the
weapon that's too hard will be broken, the tree that has the
hardest wood will be cut down". Yes, a hard tree will be cut
down. So the hard and mighty eventually should be cast down; and
the soft and weak may be set on high.
#
77.1 Heaven's way is like the bending of a bow. When a bow is
bent the top comes down and the bottom-end comes up.
77.2 So too could heaven take away from those who have too much,
and give to those that have not enough. Take away from those that
have too much and give to those that have not enough. But this is
far from man's way. He takes away from those that have not enough
to offer those who already have too much.
77.3 The man of dao can fool enough and spare, and next give to
the whole world.
77.4 So the wise man acts, but doesn't possess, accomplishes but
lays claim to no credit. If he accomplishes a task, achieves an
aim, he doesn't wish to reveal himself as better than others. So
he seems to claim no credit. He seems to have no wish to appear
superior, no desire to display excellence.
#
78.1 There's hardly anything more yielding than [gas, air, and]
water, but almost none is better in attacking the resistant and
hard, There are few substitutes for it.
78.2 Thus the yielding may conquer the resistant and the soft the
hard. This was utilised by none I knew.
78.3 Wise sayings, "Only he who has accepted the dirt of a
country can be lord of its soil-shrines: can become
heaven-accepted there. Who bears evils of the country can become
a king. Who takes into himself the calumny of the world serves to
preserve the state." Straight words seem crooked.
#
79.1 To allay the main discontent, but in a way that begets
further discontents, can hardly be top successful. And to patch
up great hatred is sure to leave some hatred behind; how can this
be regarded as satisfactory?
79.2 So the wise man keeps the obligation of a contract and
refrains from blaming the other party. He stays where he is and
does not go round making claims on people.
79.3 Therefore good people attend to their obligations, while
those without virtue attend to other people's mistakes.
79.4 The way of heaven is impartial. It's always with the good
man, without distinction of persons, to keep the good firmly
supplied.''
#
80.1 Let there be a small country with few people. Let there be
ten times and a hundred times as many utensils and let them not
be used. Let there be contrivances requiring ten times, a hundred
times less labour; they should not use them. Let the people value
their lives highly and not travel far. Bring it about that the
people are quite ready to lay down their lives at times to defend
their homes rather than emigrate.
80.2 As for ships and carriages, let there be none to ride. There
can still be weapons, but no one to drill seriously with them and
none to display them often.
80.3 People should have no use for any form of writing save
knotted ropes: Let the people again knot cords for reckoning. Let
them be very pleased with their food, beautify their clothing, be
content with their homes, take pleasure in rustic tasks, and
delight in such customs [just like Negroes].
80.4 The neighbouring place can be overlooked, can be so near
that one may hear the cocks crowing in it, the dogs barking; but
the people would grow old and die without ever having been there.
#
81.1 True words hardly sound fine. Nice words are far from always
true.
81.2 A good man seldom proves by argument; he hardly argues. He
who argues or proves by argument is hardly so good (as
non-argumentative good men). Who argues [blatantly] is hardly
(ever) a good man. [All this is "Lao" arguing, debating
or clowning.]
81.3 Brilliant wisdom is different from sordid learning. Much
bookish learning can mean too little wisdom. Who has extensive
knowledge is hardly a wise man.
81.4 The wise man has no need to hoard for himself. He lives for
other people, seemingly, and grows richer himself if the more he
uses for others, the more he has for himself - He gives to other
people to get greater abundance.
81.5 Heaven's way is to sharpen and bless, all free from harm of
cutting, And the wise man's way is to act and accomplish without
contending or striving.