The Tao-Teh Canon.
(Part 1)
Edited
by
Steven Ericsson Zenith
This
is part one of a three part rendition of the Tao Te Ching.
TAO-TEH
CHING
(TAO)
"The
Mystery of Tao"
The
TAO that can be expressed in words is not the all-embracing and
immutable TAO: the Name that can be spoken is not the eternal
Name.
Without a name, It is the Beginning of The Universe and
Our World: conceived as having a name, It is the Progenitrix of all
things.
Those alone who are free from earthly passions can
perceive the deep mystery of the Unmanifested One: those who are
possessed by desires can only behold the Manifest's outward
form.
These two, the Manifest and the Unmanifest, although
differing in name, in essence are identical. This sameness is the
mystery, the deep within the deep, the door of many
mysteries.
"The
Unfathomable."
How
unfathomable is TAO! An infinite depth, the Source of all that is, the
Ancient Progenitor, before all things.
Yet, how pure and still is TAO!
It
smoothes the rough, unravels the entangled, tempers excessive lights,
clarifies the obscure.
It
is everlasting. I do not know what gave it birth; TAO is before the
Manifested.
"The
Showing Forth of the Mystery."
Looking at It, It eludes the eyes; therefore It is
called Invisible. Listening to It, It eludes the ears; therefore It is
called Inaudible. Touching It, It eludes the grasp; therefore it is
called Intangible. These three cannot be described, but they blend in
unity, the TAO!
Above, It is not bright: below, It is not dim. It is
Ineffable.
Unceasing in Its action, It appears to do all things:
returning to Itself, It appears to do nothing.
It
may be called the Form of the Formless, the Image of the Imageless,
the Fleeting, the Indeterminate.
Advancing towards It, we cannot see Its beginning:
following after it, we cannot see its end.
To
find the Ancient TAO is to control the affairs of the present day; to
know the Ancient Beginning is to have found the Path of
TAO.
"The
Eluding Source."
The
mightiest manifestations of Providence flow solely from TAO, the
Inscrutable , the Impalpable.
Eluding sight, eluding touch, yet within it there is
Form.
Eluding sight, eluding touch, yet within it there is
Substance.
How
profound, and how obscure! Within it is the Vital Essence whereby all
things forever endure.
These essences of the truth enfold, immutably the same
as of old.
From the Old until Now, its name remains
unchanged.
Through its portals emerges the stream of manifested
things.
How
do I know the origin of things that pass to
consummation?
Through TAO!
The
"Forms" of TAO are Eternal and Archetypal
Ideas.
The
Substance of TAO is the Divine Ground or Root of all
Creation.
"The
Mysterious Virtue."
They who know the TAO, tell it not: they who tell it,
know it not.
They who know, close their lips, shut the doors of their
senses, subdue the impulses, and checks
irregularities.
They who diffuse the Light, gather people into unity,
and descend to the level of dust.
This is the Mysterious Virtue.
Such people are beyond familiarity and reserve: gain and
loss do not affect them: praise and blame are regarded by them
alike.
Therefore they are honored above
all.
"The
Emanations of TAO."
TAO
produces Unity;
Unity produces Duality;
Duality produces Triplicity;
In
Triplicity all things have life, and from it they proceed. The
darkness of the Unmanifested is behind all things: the light of the
Manifest is before them; and they are brought into harmony by the
Breath of the Great Deep.
"Apprehending the Mystery."
Before The Universe and Our World existed there was
something undefined but already perfect.
How
calm it was and formless! Self-sufficient and unchanging:
all-pervasive without effort.
I
do not know its name, but for a title call it TAO. If forced to
describe it. Call it Great.
Being Great, it is ever-flowing; flowing on, It becomes
remote; becoming remote, it returns again.
Therefore, TAO is Great: The Universe is Great: Our
World is Great: The Source is Great.
Four are the kinds of universal greatness of which being
The Source is one. The individual finds his or her law on Our World:
Our World finds its law as a part of the Universe: the Universe finds
its law in TAO; but the law of TAO consists in being what it
is.
"The
TAO of The Universe"
Universal TAO is like the bending of a bow: that which
is too high is lowered; that which is too low is raised up. Where
there is an excess, it is lessened; where there is too little, it is
increased.
The
Providence of The Universe gives to all things that which is their
due.
But
the providence of people is not like that of TAO, for people take from
those in need of more, to increase their own
excess.
Who
are they who, possessing most, can supply the wants of
all?
Only they who have the TAO!
That is why Enlightened People act without looking for
reward, accomplishing their task without claiming any
merit.
By
this means they hide their mastery.
"The
Exercise of Enlightenment."
TAO
appears quiescent: its activity is all within yet there is nothing
that it does not do.
If
people and their government were able to maintain it, all would be
transformed from within themselves.
If
this transformation became an object of desire, it would still that
desire by the ineffable Simplicity.
The
nameless Simplicity brings absence of desire; absence of desire brings
stillness; so the world would become perfect from within
itself.
"Supernal Simplicity."
Immutable TAO has no name.
Small though it appears in its original simplicity, the
servant of TAO may stand against the world.
If
a leader could hold and keep it, the world of itself would submit at
once to that leader and spontaneously pay homage. The Universe and Our
World would unite to nourish that leader, and all people without
pressure would harmonize in peace.
When TAO proceeds to action, it has a name. Having a
name people may learn how to rest in it; knowing how to rest in it,
they are free from error and decay.
TAO
is to world like the great River and Sea are to the streams from the
valleys.
"The
Perfect Achievement."
All-pervading is the Great TAO.
It
extends simultaneously to the right and to the
left.
All
beings live by receiving it, and all are in its
care.
It
accomplishes its works, but claims no title of
merit.
It
cherishes and nurtures all, but does not assume their
mastery.
It
ever seeks the innermost, and its name is the
smallest.
All
things at last return to it. TAO is their final root. But TAO is not
increased thereby, nor claims to be their ruler; and its name is the
greatest.
That is why the highest people never magnify themselves;
thus they become perfect in their
greatness.
"Returning Home."
The
path of TAO is a return to The Source.
Gentleness is its
characteristic.
All
things under heaven derive their being from the manifestation of TAO;
and TAO the Manifest is born in TAO the
Unmanifest.