1
The Tao
described in words is not the real Tao. Words cannot describe
it. Nameless, it is the source of creation. Named, it is the
mother of all things.
To
see Tao the observer must be motiveless. Those with selfish
motives see only the surface, not the innermost
depths.
These two kinds of
observers look alike, but differ in the insight of their
observations. They look alike because they are both
human. Within humanity is the key to the door of
creation.
2
Whenever the most
beautiful is perceived ugliness arises, the least
beautiful. Whenever good is perceived evil exists, its natural
opposite.
Perception involves
opposites: Reality and fantasy are opposing
thoughts. Difficult and simple oppose in degree. Long and
short oppose in distance. High and low oppose in
height. Shrill and deep oppose in tone. Before and after
oppose in sequence.
The truly wise
accept this, and they work diligently without allegiance to
words. They teach by doing, not by saying; are genuinely
helpful, not discriminating; are positive, not
possessive. They do not proclaim their accomplishments, and
because they do not proclaim them, credit for them can never be
taken away.
3
Leaders Work
Humbly
Leaders should not
seek power or status; people will not then crave power or
status. If scarce goods are not valued highly, people will
have no need to steal them. If there is nothing available to
arouse passion, people will remain content and
satisfied.
The truly wise do
lead by instilling humility and open-mindedness, by providing
for fair livelihoods, by discouraging personal ambition, by
strengthening the bone-structure of the people.
The wise avoid evil
and radical reform; thus the foolish do not obstruct
them. They work serenely, with inner quiet.
4
Tao is a vast
immeasurable void. It can be used to infinity. It is truly
inexhaustible.
Like
nature, it appears to be the origin of everything. In it,
conflicts (sharp edges) are satisfied (rounded). Differences
(tangles) are resolved (untied). Observations (light) are
clarified (tempered). Disturbances (turmoil) are quieted
(submerged).
It is
like a deep dark pool. I do not know its source. It is like a
prelude to nature, a preface to God.
5
Nature is indifferent
to life. It realizes everything is as a straw dog (a
sacrificial animal-image). The truly wise are also indifferent to
life. They realize humanity is as a straw dog.
The universe is like
a bellows: empty, yet quite full. As it proceeds, it
produces.
Much talk, much
exhaustion. Keep your thoughts within!
6
The concept of Yin is
ever present. It is the Mystic Female from whom the heavens
and the earth originate.
Constantly, continuously, enduring always. Use
her!
7
The heavens endure;
the earth is very old. Why? Because they do not exist for
themselves, they therefore have long life.
The truly wise are
content to be last; they are therefore first. They are
indifferent to themselves; they are therefore
self-confident.
Perhaps because they do
not exist for themselves they find complete
fulfillment.
8
The highest motive is
to be like water. Water is essential to all life, yet it does
not demand a fee or proclaim its importance. Rather, it flows
humbly to the lowest level, and in so doing it is much like
Tao.
In the home the
truly wise love the humble earth, the foundation on which the
home is built. In the heart they love what is genuine. In
friendship they are compassionate. In words they are
sincere. In government they foster peace and goodwill. In
business they work with quiet efficiency.
Serenity is the goal
of Tao. Through it nothing is lost.
9
There is a danger in
extremes:
Pull a bowstring too
far, and you wish you had let go before. Hone a sword-edge too
sharp, and the edge will wear too soon. Fill your house with
gold and jade, and you invite thieves. Be proud and arrogant
over good fortune, and you prepare your own
downfall.
When you have
reached your goal, be satisfied to go no further. This is the
way of Tao.
10
Can you control your
mind so that it never strays from the way of Tao? Can you
control your breathing so that it is soft and gentle like a
new-born babe?
Can you purify
yourself so that you are perfect? Can you love all the
people, rule them, and remain unknown? And do so without
interference? Can you play the same role always?
Give birth, provide
nourishment; do this without being possessive. Give help
without obligation. Lead without dominating. This is the Mytic
Virtue (Teh).
11
Thirty spokes unite at
the hub of a wheel but the ultimate use of the wheel depends
on the part where nothing exists.
Clay is molded into
a vessel but the ultimate use of the vessel depends on the
part where nothing exists.
Doors and windows
are cut from the walls of a house but the ultimate use of the
house depends on the part where nothing exists.
So there is
advantage in using what can be seen, what does
exist.
There is also
advantage in using the invisible, the
non-existent.
12
Five colors (blue,
yellow, red, white, black) blind the eye. Five notes (do, re,
mi, so, la) deafen the ear. Five tastes (sweet, sour, bitter,
pungent, salt) dull the tongue.
Hunting and pursuing
will unbalance the mind. Striving for earthly goods produces
unhealthy tension.
Therefore the truly
wise satisfy the internal and reject the external. They accept
one and deny the other.
13
It is said: Both
good fortune and misfortune cause tension. The creative and the
destructive exist equally in the mind.
How can both good
fortune and misfortune cause tension? Those with good fortune are
tense anticipating their gift; those with misfortune are tense
lamenting their loss.
How can the creative
and destructive exist equally in the mind? Tension exists
because we have a mind, a self, with dual purposes. If we can
be selfless, indifferent to the mind, then tension cannot
exist.
Thus, one who views
the world as he views himself is best suited to govern the
world; one who loves humanity as he loves himself can be
entrusted with the world.
14
Looked for it cannot be
seen; it is invisible. Listened for it cannot be heard; it is
inaudible. Reached for it cannot be touched; it is
intangible. These three are beyond analysis; these three are
one.
It rises like the
sun, but does not illuminate. It sets like the sun, but does not
darken. Without beginning, without end, it is infinite,
undefinable.
It is the form of
the formless; it is existence in non-existence; it is the
greatest mystery. Meet it and it has no face; follow it and it
has no back.
Hold close to the
ancient Tao and be master of your present existence. Knowing
the present you mirror the past. This is the clue to
Tao.
15
The Tao of the
Ancients
The ancient
followers of the Tao: so wise, so subtle, so profound, so
deeply understanding, that they were themselves
misunderstood. They must therefore be described.
Cautious, like
crossing a stream in mid-winter; observant, like moving in fear
through hostile land; modest, retiring like ice beginning to
melt; dignified, like an honored guest; genuine, like natural,
untouched wood; receptive, like an inviting, open
valley; friendly, like muddied water, freely
mixing.
Who can make sense
of a world like cloudy water? Left alone and still, it becomes
clear. Should this stillness be maintained? Moving hastily
will surely cloud it again. How then can one move and not become
clouded?
Accept Tao and
achieve without being selfish; being unselfish one endures the
world's wear, and needs no change of pace.
16
Achieve the highest
goal by being passive; hold close to a state of perfect
serenity.
Everything comes
into existence, but observe, returns to its source. Thus,
vegetation flourishes and grows, but returns to the soil whence
it came.
Returning to the
source is serenity; it is to realize one's destiny. To realize
one's destiny is to know the Eternal Constant. To know the
Eternal Constant is to be enlightened. To be ignorant of
this is blindness that begets evil.
Whoever knows the
Eternal Constant is open-minded. Being open-minded is to be
impartial. Being impartial is to be above nations and
laws.
Being above nations
and laws is to be in accord with nature. Being in accord with
nature is to be in accord with Tao. Being in accord with
Tao is to be eternal.
Although his body
may die and decay, he shall live forever.
17
The Best
Leader
The best leaders,
the people do not notice. The next best, the people honor and
praise. The next, the people fear; and the next, the people
hate.
If you have no
faith, people will have no faith in you, and you must resort
to oaths.
When the best
leader's work is done the people say: "We did it
ourselves!"
18
Nature is sparing in
its talk. High winds seldom last all morning. Heavy rains
seldom last all day.
Where do these
things originate? In nature. And if nature so spares its
talk, how much more, then, should you?
19
On Real
Education
Do away with
learning, the same with wisdom; the people will gain a
hundredfold. Do away with "humanity" and the same with
"justice"; the people will rediscover love and duty. Do away
with expensive arts, the same with profits; there will be no
thieves, no robbers. These three things involve the external
world; they are therefore of no real value.
Do away with formal
learning and you will not be annoyed by its multitude of
details. How much difference between yes and yea? How much
difference between good and evil? It is true that what men fear
you must also fear, but how very remote the actual
occurrence.
The people need what
is more dependable. Reveal, then, your natural, inner
self. Realize your original nature; control selfishness;
subdue desires.
20
The great mass of
people are content as if at the sacrificial feast or at the
spring carnival.
I alone am serene,
quiet, passive, like a newborn baby unable yet to smile. I am
alone, like one who is homeless.
Others seem to have
abundance while I seem to live in contemplation. Perhaps I am
the fool, so obscure, so vague.
The masses seem
bright and informed; I alone seem dull and uninformed. The
masses are clever and smug; I alone am simple and
unassuming. Alone, as if adrift on the lonely sea.
And others seem to
have useful purpose; I alone seem impractical and awkward. I
am alone, different. I choose to be sustained by
nature.
21
The Teh follows
Tao.
Tao is like a
dream: invisible, intangible, obscure.
It is invisible yet
there is a form to it. It is intangible yet there is a feel to
it. It is obscure yet there is method to it. The method is
true and so there are signs of it.
From ancient times
until now the signs have never ceased by which we can still
see the beginning. How can I know the nature of the
beginning? By these signs!
22
Be humble; you will
remain yourself. Be flexible, bend, and you will be
straight. Be ever receptive, and you will be satisfied. Become
tired and weary and you will be renewed.
Have little, you
will have enough; to have abundance is to be
troubled.
The truly wise seek
Unity, embrace oneness, and become examples for all the
world.
Not revealing
themselves, they shine; not self-righteous, they are
distinguished; not self-centered, they are famous; not seeking
glory, they are leaders.
Because they are not
quarrelsome no one quarrels with them.
Thus it is as the
ancients said: "To yield is to retain Unity." The truly wise
have Unity, and the world respects them.
23
Whoever follows Tao
becomes as Tao. Whoever follows Teh becomes as Teh. Whoever
abandons Tao or Teh will be abandoned by Tao and
Teh.
Whoever seeks Tao is
welcomed by Tao. Whoever seeks Teh is welcomed by Teh. Whoever
seeks abandonment is welcomed by abandonment.
24
Whoever stands on
tiptoe is unsteady. Whoever walks with long strides cannot
long keep up the pace. Whoever makes a show of himself cannot
shine. Whoever is self-righteous cannot gain the respect of
the people. Whoever is self-centered cannot become loved by
others. Whoever seeks glory cannot become a true
leader.
According to the
Tao these attitudes are excessive, unnecessary. Even in
earthly matters they are to be avoided. Therefore the follower of
Tao avoids them.
25
There is something
mysterious, without beginning, without end, that existed
before the heavens and earth. Unmoving; infinite; standing alone;
never changing. It is everywhere and it is inexhaustible. It
is the mother of all.
I do not know its
name. If I must name it I call it Tao and I hail it as
supreme.
Supreme means
never-ending; never-ending means far-reaching; and
far-reaching means returning. Thus Tao is supreme, the heavens
are supreme, earth is supreme, and man is supreme. There are
four supremes in the universe; man is one of them.
Man is subject to
the laws of the earth, the earth is subject to the laws of the
universe, the universe is subject to the laws of Tao, and Tao
is subject to the laws of its own nature.
26
Heaviness
(sincerity) is the root of lightness (frivolity). And serenity
far surpasses hastiness.
The truly wise can
travel all day yet never put down their baggage (a pun
alluding to depth or heaviness of spirit). Though there be
appealing distractions they remain serene, passive,
undisturbed.
How can a leader of
ten thousand chariots make his rule obscure,
insignificant?
To be light is to
lose the root of lightness; to be hasty is to lose
self-mastery.
27
A good traveler has no
need to leave tracks; a good speaker leaves no grounds for
rebuttal; a good trader needs no scales, no computer; a good
door needs no latch to remain shut; a good fastener needs no rope
to perfect its bond.
The truly wise are
helpful to people. No one is rejected. The truly wise are
helpful to everything. Nothing is rejected. This is double
enlightenment.
Therefore the good
teach the bad; the bad are lessons for the good. Whoever
dislikes such a teacher, who dislikes such lessons, may appear
learning but is misguided. This is the subtlety of true
wisdom.
28
He who knows the mystic
male (Yang) yet retains the mystic female (Yin) is as a great
canyon welcoming the whole world. He has Teh and is innocent as a
child.
Whoever is aware of
the white (Yang) yet retains the black (Yin) is as a standard
for all the world. He has Teh and has returned to the
Absolute.
Whoever is aware of
fame and glory yet retains humility and obscurity is as a
valley that can hold the earth. He has Teh and has returned to
Unity.
Divide the Unity;
the parts become as tools. In the hands of the truly wise they
become the means to an end, but never ends in
themselves.
29
Those who seek to
conquer the world and shape it as they see fit never
succeed. The world is a sacred vessel and cannot be
improved. Whoever tries to alter it spoils it; whoever tries
to direct it, misleads it.
So, some things
advance, others lag; some proceed in silence, others make
sound; some are strong, others weak; some are forward, others
retiring.
Therefore the truly
wise avoid extremes, extravagance, and foolish
pride.
30
Tao in
War
Whoever advises a
ruler according to Tao opposes conquest by war. Policies of
war tend to rebound. Where the armies march, brambles
grow. Whenever a great army is formed, hunger and evil
follow.
So, a wise general
achieves his goal and stops; he does not battle beyond
victory. He wins, but does not boast of it; he wins, but does
not celebrate it; he wins, but does not revel in the
spoils; he wins, for it is his duty to win; he wins, but not
from love of violence.
Things reach their
peak, then decline. Violence opposes Tao. Whoever opposes Tao
dies early.
31
War Is
Evil
Weapons are tools of
destruction avoided by followers of Tao. The citizen favors
the creative in time of peace; the citizen favors the destructive
in time of war.
Weapons are tools of
destruction not used by people of dignity, but when their use
cannot be avoided, the best policy is calm
restraint.
There is no beauty
in victory. Whoever calls it so delights in slaughter. Whoever
delights in slaughter is not fit to rule.
32
Tao is absolute,
nameless. A piece of wood, uncarved, natural, cannot be used
by anyone. The leaders who can be genuine and natural as
this, gain the respect of the people.
The heavens and the
earth join and gentle rains fall, beyond anyone's command, to
everyone equally.
When civilization
grew, names began. With names, one should know where to
stop. Whoever knows this has security.
In the world Tao is
like rain that falls into the rivers and thence to the open
sea.
33
One who knows others is
wise; one who knows himself is wisest. One who conquers others
is strong; one who conquers himself is strongest.
To be content is to
be wealthy. To be dedicated is to be strong. To be genuine is
to endure. To die and be remembered is to have
immortality.
34
The great Tao is
everywhere, on all sides. Everything derives from it; nothing
is rejected by it.
Through Tao
everything exists yet it does not take possession. It provides
for everything yet it does not lay claim.
Without motive it
seems small. Being the source of everything it is
great. Because it never claims greatness, its greatness shines
brightly.
35
The world will follow,
without fear of evil, serene, peaceful, secure, one who
follows the great symbol of Yin-Yang.
Music and good food
will stop the passing stranger, but Tao, offered by the spoken
word, seems unappealing, tasteless.
Looked for, it
cannot be seen; listened for, it cannot be heard; applied, it
cannot be exhausted.
36
Govern
Peacefully
That which is to
contract is first expanded. That which is to weaken is first
strengthened. That which is to be felled is first
reinforced. This is subtle enlightenment.
Being gentle
overcomes strength. As fish should not leave the deep, so the
sharp weapons of the state should always be hidden from
view.
37
Tao never acts
directly; it activates everything. If rulers would do
likewise, the world would improve of itself.
But when improving,
motives show. These should be restrained by motiveless
Yin.
Motiveless Yin is
free of all desire. Being free of desire is to be
serene. Being serene, the world is at peace.
38
Whoever has Teh never
boasts of it, and so truly possesses it. Whoever has Teh and
boasts of it, no longer possesses it.
Possessing Teh is to
be serene; with little effort much is done and motives
diminish. Losing Teh is to be hasty; with great effort much is
wasted and motives increase.
Possessing Teh is to
act out of love without ulterior motive; losing Teh is to act
self-righteous with an ulterior motive. When a person of high
station directs but sees no following of that direction, he shows
his hand and forces direction.
When Tao is lost
"compassion" becomes doctrine; when compassion is lost "justice"
becomes doctrine; when justice is lost ritual becomes
doctrine. Ritual is the slow loss of loyalty, the beginning of
unprincipled confusion.
Foreknowledge is Tao
blossoming; it is also the flower of folly. The truly wise
seek the center, not the surface; take the fruit, leaving the
flower. Accept one and reject the other.
39
Lead With a Deep
Unity
From past ages there
has been Unity: the heavens achieved it and became clear, the
earth achieved it and became firm, the valleys achieved it and
became fertile, the spirit achieved it and become
inspired, all things achieved it and became existent, leaders
achieved it and became good rulers.
Without clarity the
heavens would be tempestuous, without firmness the earth would
tremble, without fertility the valleys would dry up, without
inspiration the spirit would be lost, without existence all
things would vanish, rulers would falter and fall.
Thus good leaders
are humble. The high are founded on the low just as a chariot
is made up of many small parts.
Better to rumble
like rocks (have depth) than to jingle lightly like jewels (be
flighty).
40
Tao is an endless
circle, ever returning. Serenity is its ultimate
function. Everything rises from existence. Existence rises
from non-existence.
41
Whenever the truly wise
hear of Tao they strive earnestly to use it. Whenever the
mediocre hear of Tao they are aware, yet unaware of
it. Whenever the stupid hear of Tao they laugh aloud at it. If
it were not laughed at it would not be Tao.
Therefore it is said
of Tao: enlightenment seems dullness; progress seems
regression; the true path seems misleading.
The highest
character seems recessive like a valley; the purest virtue seems
tarnished; the most adequate seems somehow insufficient; the
most firm seems frail; the most fundamental seems
changeable.
Great space has no
corners; great ability takes time to mature; great music is
soft and mellow; great form is shapeless,
contourless.
Tao is hidden; it is
nameless; yet it stimulates; it brings
fulfillment.
42
Out of Tao comes Unity;
out of Unity comes two; from two comes three; from three all
things come.
The shade of Yin is
on the back of everything; the light of Yang is on the face of
everything. From their blending together balance exists in the
world.
To feel unworthy, to
be alone, orphaned, is greatly feared and disliked, yet
statesmen claim these feelings. Loss sometimes benefits; benefits
can be a loss.
Others have taught
this too: the violent meet violent ends. This is a good
teaching.
43
The softest will
penetrate the hardest. The non-existent will penetrate the
existent. By this I know the value of being
passive.
This is teaching
without words, achievement without direct action. In all the
world few know this.
44
Fame or self: which
is more important? Wealth or self: which is more
valuable? Gain or loss: which is the greater evil?
Overdoing leads to
waste; great fortunes invite theft.
Being content
prevents humiliation. Knowing where to stop prevents
danger. To know this is to endure.
45
The most perfect seems
imperfect, but it endures with constancy. The greatest
fullness seems empty, but it cannot be exhausted.
The most straight
seems twisted. The most skillful seems clumsy. The most
eloquent seems awkward.
Movement overcomes
cold, stillness overcomes heat. The serene and passive are
guides for all.
46
Contentment
When the world
follows Tao, racehorses work on farms. When the world forsakes
Tao, cavalry horses practice in parks.
The greatest curse
is discontent. It is the greatest misery. The greatest sin is
selfish striving.
Being content with
contentment is to be always satisfied.
47
One can know the world
without leaving the house. One can see Tao without looking out
the window.
The more you study
the less you know.
Thus the truly wise
know without traveling, perceive without seeing, achieve without
doing.
48
The scholar needs to
know more and more each day. The follower of Tao needs to know
less and less each day.
By lessening
knowledge one reaches inaction. By inaction everything can be
done.
The world is won by
those who leave it alone. When one feels compelled to
dominate, the world is already beyond reach.
49
The truly wise are
selfless. People's needs are their needs.
The good are treated
with goodness; the bad are also treated with goodness; this is
the goodness of Teh.
The faithful are
treated with faith; the faithless are treated with faith; this
is the faith of Teh.
The truly wise live
peacefully and impartially. In their eyes people share a common
heritage. The truly wise accept all people as their own
family.
50
Life leaves and death
enters.
Three and ten parts
accompany life; three and ten parts accompany death; three and
ten parts move toward death. (Four limbs plus nine
orifices.)
Why? The wear of the
drive to live. Why? Living tips the balance toward
dying.
It is said that
whoever realizes this is not attacked by the wild buffalo or
tiger and is not vulnerable on the field of battle. The
buffalo's horns find no place to gore, the tiger's claws no place
to tear, the soldier's weapons no place to pierce.
Why? Because death
is not yet within reach.
51
Tao causes all things
to exist; Teh sustains them. Reality gives them form; fate
completes them. Thus all things honor Tao and respect Teh of
their own accord.
Teh sustains all
things in existence. It fosters growth, develops them, harbors
them, provides shelter. It nourishes them, gives
protection.
Everything exists
through Tao and nothing is rejected. Everything is produced
through Tao but Tao is not possessive. Tao is superior but
never interferes.
52
The beginning of the
universe may be considered the mother. Knowing the mother the
sons can be known. Knowing the sons we can keep close to the
mother. Thus life has within itself security.
Eyes closed and
mouth shut, life is without trouble. Eyes open, busily
conversant, life is without hope.
Whoever sees the
most minute sees clearest. Whoever cherishes the weak has the
most strength. Whoever uses enlightenment has bright
vision.
Thus, no harm is
done. This is following Tao.
53
The Main Path of
Tao
Let me walk along
the main path of Tao and avoid by-paths of worthless
knowledge. I would not leave this main path, so easily
followed, but many people prefer the by-paths.
The palaces are well
kept while fields go untilled and the granaries are
empty.
To wear elegant
clothes, to carry a fine sword, to gorge with food and drink, to
have wealth and riches, all this invites plunder.
Is this not
departing from Tao?
54
Whatever is firmly
planted is not easily uprooted. Whatever is firmly grasped is not
easily loosened. Generation follows generation, continuing
endlessly.
Accept Tao in
yourself and Teh is yours. Accept Tao in the family and Teh is
abundant. Accept Tao in the village and Teh multiplies. Accept
Tao in the nation and Teh flourishes. Accept Tao in the world and
Teh is universal.
Therefore, one can
measure by Teh: By your Teh gauge the family. By the family's
Teh gauge the village. By the village's Teh gauge the
nation. By the nation's Teh gauge the world.
How do I know this
is so? By seeing it so!
55
Whoever has Teh is like
a child:
Poisonous insects
will not bit. Wild animals will not attack. Predatory birds
will not strike.
Bones soft, muscles
weak, but gripping strongly. Unconcerned about sex yet most
vigorous. Crying out all day long but not hoarse.
This involves
perfect harmony. Knowing harmony is to approach the
eternal. Knowing the eternal is to be enlightened.
To become excitable
leads to confusion. To freely vent emotions is to be
aggressive.
Things reach their
prime and then decline. To be impatient is to oppose
Tao. Whatever opposes Tao dies young.
56
Whoever knows does not
speak; whoever speaks does not know.
So, stop the
senses. Close their doors. Solve their riddles. Subdue
their light. Be one with humble dust.
This is the mystic
unity.
It is beyond love
and hate, beyond profit and loss, beyond honor and
dishonor. Thus it is the most valuable treasure in all the
world.
57
Be Lawful, Not Full of
Laws
Rule by what is
right. Wage war by clever strategy. Win the world by being
passive. How do I know? By this:
More restrictions
mean weaker people. More weapons mean a troubled state. More
cunning means many surprises. More laws mean more
violators.
Be passive and the
people will be reformed. Be serene and the people will be
righteous. Be peaceable and the people will be wealthy. Be
selfless and the people will be simple and serene.
58
To Govern, Be
Gentle
Govern passively,
the people are happy. Govern precisely, the people are
restless.
Happiness arises
from unhappiness; unhappiness lies beneath happiness. Who
knows what is best?
When the state is
self-righteous, self-righteousness becomes strategy and good
becomes evil. Man has long been misguided.
The truly wise
are: square (sharp-cornered) but not cutting; angled
(wedge-like) but not interfering; straight (pointed) but not
domineering; bright (enlightened) but not binding.
59
With Tao, You Are
Supreme
In ruling men be
reserved. To be reserved is to conform to Tao. To conform to
Tao is to achieve Teh. With Teh anything is
possible.
Because anything is
possible, no one knows your supremacy. Because no one knows
your supremacy, a nation can be ruled well.
Because this is a
Mother Principle it long endures. Therefore you are as deeply
rooted and as immortal as it is.
60
Do, But Never
Overdo
Rule a great
state as you cook a small fish: do not overdo
it!
Rule with Tao and
evil departs. Evil will still have power, but it will not harm
the people.
Then not only does
evil cease to do harm, the ruler also ceases to do harm, and
therefore both possess Teh.
61
The Tao of
Statecraft
A great nation is
one to which the streams descend. It is the meeting place, the
female of the world. Quiet, passive, leading the male by humble
submission.
A great nation
lowers itself to the smaller and thus wins the smaller
nation. A smaller nation lowers itself beneath the greater and
thus wins the greater nation. So, some lower themselves to win
others; some are already low, and therefore win
others.
A great nation wants
more people; a small nation wants more room. When both are
dedicated to these ends, the greater nation should humbly
yield.
62
Tao is at the source of
everything: treasure for the good, refuge for the bad. Fine
words can be sold; fine deeds can be just a show. Why then
reject the bad?
Therefore, at the
crowning of the emperor or at the appointment of the three
ministers, rather than present gifts of jade and
horses, present the gift of Tao.
Why did the ancients
value Tao so? Did they not say the seeker shall find it, the
sinner shall find it and be forgiven? So is it the treasure of
the world.
63
Achieve serenity. Work
passively. Taste the flavorless. Large or small, many or few,
exchange love for hatred.
Undertake the
difficult while it is still simple. Undertake the great while it
is still minor. The problems of the world must be solved while
they are easy, the great while they are minor. The truly wise
find greatness by undertaking nothing great.
A promise lightly
made is often difficult to keep. Whoever makes light of things
encounters many problems. The truly wise know that things are
difficult and therefore meet with no difficulties.
64
What is not moving is
easily held. What has not happened is easily planned. What is
brittle is easily broken. What is tiny is easily
dispersed.
Deal with a problem
before it arises; exercise control before confusion
exists.
A tree with an
arm-girth of trunk grows from a tiny sprout. A nine-storied
terrace arises from a heap of dirt. A thousand-mile journey
begins with the first step.
Action spoils;
reaching loses. The truly wise are not active. Thus they do
not spoil things. Do not reach so do not lose.
Things are often
spoiled very close to completion. Be as careful at completion as
you were at the beginning.
Thus the truly wise
want the unwanted and do not prize what is rare. Study what is
unstudied and preserve what is lost. Assist in the course of
nature but never interfere in it.
65
Simplicity an Ancient
Standard
The ancient
followers of Tao did not use it to increase knowledge, but
rather to preserve simplicity.
People are difficult
to govern when there is too much knowledge. Whoever rules a
country by furthering knowledge is that nation's
curse. Whoever rules a country by furthering simplicity is
that nation's blessing.
To know these two
principles is to know the ancient standard. To know the
ancient standard is to possess Teh of a certainty.
Teh is deep and vast
as infinity. It returns us to primal peace.
66
To Lead, Appear to
Follow
Why do rivers and
seas have dominion over lowlands? Because the one lowers itself
to the other.
To be elevated by
the people, speak like their inferior. To lead the people,
walk behind them.
Thus the truly wise
are above, but people do not feel their weight. They walk in
front, but people do not feel blocked.
The whole world
respects and never grows tired of such leadership. Because the
truly wise are not aggressive, no one attacks
them.
67
The world says: "Tao
is great but seems so foolish!" It seems foolish because it is
great. If it did not seem so foolish it would long since have
lost its value.
I have three
treasures. Guard them and keep them safe! The first is
love, the second is moderation, the third is
humility.
From love one gains
courage, from moderation one gains ability, from humility one
achieves greatness.
To forsake love and
courage, to forsake moderation and ability, to forsake
humility and rush to the forefront, is death to all
hope.
With love battles
can be won, with love defense proves invulnerable, with love
heaven arms those it would protect.
68
Victory in
Tao
The most skilled
soldier is not aggressive. The most proficient fighter never
loses control. The most victorious commander does not
bicker. The most efficient leader is humble before
all.
This is the virtue
of serenity. This is the mastery of life. This is matching Teh
to Tao
69
Tao
Strategy
Ancient military
strategists said: I would rather be invaded than be the
invader. I would rather retreat one foot than advance one
inch.
This means not
marching in formation; not appearing prepared, with sleeves
up; not charging in frontal assault; not arming with elaborate
weapons.
There is no worse
catastrophe than to underestimate the enemy. To underestimate
the enemy is to run the risk of losing everything.
When evenly matched
armies do battle, the passive, recessive one is the
victor.
70
My teachings are easily
understood and readily put into practice. Yet not everyone
understands them, not everyone practices them.
Words have specific
origins, deeds specific controls. Not having such
knowledge, people do not know me. Being unknown, honor is
mine. Unknown, I am distinguished.
The wise wear common
clothes and carry jewels in their hearts.
71
On
Intelligence
To know what you do
not know, is best.
He who thinks he
knows what he does not know, is sick in mind.
One who sees this
sickness for what it is, is not sick in mind.
The followers of Tao
are not sick in mind, because they know this.
72
Lead Humbly But
Surely
When the people do
not fear absolute rule, a greater fear will yet descend on
them.
Do not give them
cramped quarters. Do not make sacrifice of their children. If
you do not dislike them you will not be disliked
yourself.
The truly wise know
themselves but do not flaunt themselves. The truly wise love
themselves but do not take pride in themselves. They reject
the one and accept the other.
73
One of courage, with
audacity, will kill. One of courage, but gentle, spares
life. From these two kinds of courage arise harm and
benefit.
Even if Tao dislikes
certain people, who can say why? The truly wise regard
this as a most difficult question.
Tao does not contend
but it surely wins, does not speak but it surely
responds, does not command but things come of themselves. It
is empty yet contains the master plan.
The net of Tao is
all-encompassing, its meshes are wide, yet nothing is
lost.
74
Capital
Punishment
If the people do not
fear death, why threaten them with it?
If the people do
fear death, and if the unlawful be killed, who would dare to
execute them?
Only the Supreme
Executioner kills.
To take His place is
to set an unskilled man to wield the hatchet of the master
carpenter: he rarely escapes chopping off his own
hand!
75
Rule Without
Interfering
The people
starve when rulers impose heavy taxes. That is why people
starve.
The people are
rebellious when rulers meddle in their affairs. That is why
people are rebellious.
The people do not
fear death when they try to lead a better life. That is why
they do not fear death.
Those who do not
interfere with life receive genuine value from it.
76
Living, man is supple
and yielding; when dead, man is hard and stiff. Living,
animals and plants are soft and pliant; when dead, they are
withered and brittle.
Being inflexible and
unyielding is part of dying; being flexible and yielding is part
of living. A headstrong legion will lose in war just as an
unyielding tree will snap under the axe.
The place of the
strong is below; the place of the gentle is above.
77
Is not Tao like the
drawn bow? The highest part is lowered, the lowest part is
raised. Overall length is shortened, overall depth is
lengthened.
So the Great
Tao lowers the highest and raises the lowest. But the Tao of
man increases the high and decreases the low.
Who can take from
the high and give to the low? Only the true follower of
Tao.
Thus, the truly wise
act but are not possessive, achieve but claim no
credit, because they have no desire for vain
glory.
78
Nothing in the world is
weaker or more yielding than water. Yet nothing is its
equal in wearing away the hard and strong. There is nothing
quite like it.
Thus the weak can
overpower the strong; the flexible can overcome the rigid. The
whole world can perceive this, but does not put it into
practice.
And so the truly
wise say: Whoever bears the shame of the nation is fit to lead
the nation. Whoever bears the sins of the world is fit to lead
the world.
Straight words
(truth) can seem crooked (paradoxical).
79
Settling
Disputes
Settling a great
dispute leaves some hatred behind. Can this be
good?
Therefore the truly
wise defend the weak and do not seek vengeance.
The man with Teh
fosters reconciliation; the man without Teh fosters
reaction.
And so it is truly
said: While Tao is impartial, it permeates good
men.
80
The Ideal
State
The ideal state is
small with few people. It has abundance of goods, beyond possible
use. Understanding death, the people do not
emigrate.
Though they have
vessels and vehicles, they do not travel far in them. Though
they have armor and weapons, they have no need to display
them.
Let them use knotted
ropes for simple reckoning, be satisfied with their food, be
attractive in their clothing, be comfortable in their
homes, be happy with their customs.
Though from other
states the dog's bark and cock's crow can clearly be
heard, the people never leave the ideal state.
81
Words of truth are not
high-sounding; high-sounding words are not the truth. One who
has Teh does not argue; one who argues does not have Teh. The
truly wise do not know many things; one who knows many things is
not truly wise.
The truly wise do
not selfishly crave. They live for other people and thereby
grow richer. They give freely of themselves and thereby have
great abundance.
The great Tao
endows, but does so unconditionally. The Tao of the wise
accomplishes, but does so unselfishly.
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