- Tao Te Ching
- Written by Lao-Tzu
- Translation by John H. McDonald
- (with typographical errors removed)
-
- 1
- The tao that can be described
- is not the eternal Tao.
- The name that can be spoken
- is not the eternal Name.
-
- The nameless is the boundary of Heaven and
Earth.
- The named is the mother of creation.
-
- Freed from desire, you can see the hidden
mystery.
- By having desire, you can only see what is
visibly real.
-
- Yet mystery and reality
- emerge from the same source.
- This source is called darkness.
-
- Darkness born from darkness.
- The beginning of all understanding.
-
- 2
- When people see things as beautiful,
- ugliness is created.
- When people see things as good,
- evil is created.
-
- Being and non-being produce each other.
- Difficult and easy complement each other.
- Long and short define each other.
- High and low oppose each other.
- Fore and aft follow each other.
-
- Therefore the Master
- can act without doing anything
- and teach without saying a word.
- Things come her way and she does not stop
them;
- things leave and she lets them go.
- She has without possessing,
- and acts without any expectations.
- When her work is done, she takes no credit.
- That is why it will last forever.
-
- 3
- If you over esteem talented individuals,
- people will become overly competitive.
- If you overvalue possessions,
- people will begin to steal.
-
- Do not display your treasures
- or people will become envious.
-
- The Master leads by
- emptying people’s minds,
- filling their bellies,
- weakening their ambitions,
- and making them become strong.
- Preferring simplicity and freedom from desires,
- avoiding the pitfalls of knowledge and wrong
action.
-
- For those who practice not-doing,
- everything will fall into place.
-
- 4
- The Tao is like an empty container:
- it can never be emptied and can never be filled.
- Infinitely deep, it is the source of all things.
- It dulls the sharp, unties the knotted,
- shades the lighted, and unites all of creation
with dust.
-
- It is hidden but always present.
- I don't know who gave birth to it.
- It is older than the concept of God.
-
- 5
- Heaven and Earth are impartial;
- they treat all of creation as straw dogs.
- The Master doesn't take sides;
- she treats everyone like a straw dog.
-
- The space between Heaven and Earth is like
a bellows;
- it is empty, yet has not lost its power.
- The more it is used, the more it produces;
- the more you talk of it, the less you comprehend.
-
- It is better not to speak of things you do
not understand.
-
- 6
- The spirit of emptiness is immortal.
- It is called the Great Mother
- because it gives birth to Heaven and Earth.
-
- It is like a vapor,
- barely seen but always present.
- Use it effortlessly.
-
- 7
- The Tao of Heaven is eternal,
- and the earth is long enduring.
- Why are they long enduring?
- They do not live for themselves;
- thus they are present for all beings.
-
- The Master puts herself last;
- And finds herself in the place of authority.
- She detaches herself from all things;
- Therefore she is united with all things.
- She gives no thought to self.
- She is perfectly fulfilled.
-
- 8
- The supreme good is like water,
- which benefits all of creation
- without trying to compete with it.
- It gathers in unpopular places.
- Thus it is like the Tao.
-
- The location makes the dwelling good.
- Depth of understanding makes the mind good.
- A kind heart makes the giving good.
- Integrity makes the government good.
- Accomplishment makes your labors good.
- Proper timing makes a decision good.
-
- Only when there is no competition
- will we all live in peace.
-
- 9
- It is easier to carry and empty cup
- than one that is filled to the brim.
-
- The sharper the knife
- the easier it is to dull.
- The more wealth you possess
- the harder it is to protect.
- Pride brings its own trouble.
-
- When you have accomplished your goal
- simply walk away.
- This is the pathway to Heaven.
-
- 10
- Nurture the darkness of your soul
- until you become whole.
- Can you do this and not fail?
- Can you focus your life-breath until you become
- supple as a newborn child?
- While you cleanse your inner vision
- will you be found without fault?
- Can you love people and lead them
- without forcing your will on them?
- When Heaven gives and takes away
- can you be content with the outcome?
- When you understand all things
- can you step back from your own understanding?
-
- Giving birth and nourishing,
- making without possessing,
- expecting nothing in return.
- To grow, yet not to control:
- This is the mysterious virtue.
-
- 11
- Thirty spokes are joined together in a wheel,
- but it is the center hole
- that allows the wheel to function.
-
- We mold clay into a pot,
- but it is the emptiness inside
- that makes the vessel useful.
-
- We fashion wood for a house,
- but it is the emptiness inside
- that makes it livable.
-
- We work with the substantial,
- but the emptiness is what we use.
-
- 12
- Five colors blind the eye.
- Five notes deafen the ear.
- Five flavors make the palate go stale.
- Too much activity deranges the mind.
- Too much wealth causes crime.
- The Master acts on what she feels and not
what she sees.
- She shuns the latter, and prefers to seek
the former.
-
- 13
- Success is as dangerous as failure,
- and we are often our own worst enemy.
-
- What does it mean that success is as dangerous
as failure?
- He who is superior is also someone's subordinate.
- Receiving favor and losing it both cause alarm.
- That is what is meant by success is as dangerous
as failure.
- What does it mean that we are often our own
worst enemy?
- The reason I have an enemy is because I have
"self".
- If I no longer had a "self", I would
no longer have an enemy.
-
- Love the whole world as if it were your self;
- then you will truly care for all things.
-
- 14
- Look for it, and it can't be seen.
- Listen for it, and it can't be heard.
- Grasp for it, and it can't be caught.
- These three cannot be further described,
- so we treat them as The One.
-
- Its highest is not bright.
- Its depths are not dark.
- Unending, unnamable, it returns to nothingness.
- Formless forms, and imageless images,
- subtle, beyond all understanding.
-
- Approach it and you will not see a beginning;
- follow it and there will be no end.
- When we grasp the Tao of the ancient ones,
- we can use it to direct our life today.
- To know the ancient origin of Tao:
- this is the beginning of wisdom.
-
- 15
- The Sages of old were profound
- and knew the ways of subtlety and discernment.
- Their wisdom is beyond our comprehension.
- Because their knowledge was so far superior
- I can only give a poor description.
-
- They were careful
- as someone crossing an frozen stream in winter.
- Alert as if surrounded on all sides by the
enemy.
- Courteous as a guest.
- Fluid as melting ice.
- Whole as an uncarved block of wood.
- Receptive as a valley.
- Turbid as muddied water.
-
- Who can be still
- until their mud settles
- and the water is cleared by itself?
- Can you remain tranquil until right action
occurs by itself?
-
- The Master doesn't seek fulfillment.
- For only those who are not full are able to
be used
- which brings the feeling of completeness.
-
- 16
- If you can empty your mind of all thoughts
- your heart will embrace the tranquility of
peace.
- Watch the workings of all of creation,
- but contemplate their return to the source.
-
- All creatures in the universe
- return to the point where they began.
- Returning to the source is tranquility
- because we submit to Heavens mandate.
-
- Returning to Heavens mandate is called being
constant.
- Knowing the constant is called 'enlightenment'.
- Not knowing the constant is the source of
evil deeds
- because we have no roots.
- By knowing the constant we can accept things
as they are.
- By accepting things as they are, we become
impartial.
- By being impartial, we become one with Heaven.
- By being one with Heaven, we become one with
Tao.
- Being one with Tao, we are no longer concerned
about
- losing our life because we know the Tao is
constant
- and we are one with Tao.
-
- 17
- The best leaders are those the people hardly
know exist.
- The next best is a leader who is loved and
praised.
- Next comes the one who is feared.
- The worst one is the leader that is despised.
-
- If you don't trust the people,
- they will become untrustworthy.
-
- The best leaders value their words, and use
them sparingly.
- When she has accomplished her task,
- the people say, "Amazing:
- we did it, all by ourselves!"
-
- 18
- When the great Tao is abandoned,
- charity and righteousness appear.
- When intellectualism arises,
- hypocrisy is close behind.
-
- When there is strife in the family unit,
- people talk about 'brotherly love'.
-
- When the country falls into chaos,
- politicians talk about 'patriotism'.
-
- 19
- Forget about knowledge and wisdom,
- and people will be a hundred times better
off.
- Throw away charity and righteousness,
- and people will return to brotherly love.
- Throw away profit and greed,
- and there won't be any thieves.
-
- These three are superficial and aren't enough
- to keep us at the center of the circle, so
we must also:
-
- Embrace simplicity.
- Put others first.
- Desire little.
-
- 20
- Renounce knowledge and your problems will
end.
- What is the difference between yes and no?
- What is the difference between good and evil?
- Must you fear what others fear?
- Nonsense, look how far you have missed the
mark!
-
- Other people are joyous,
- as though they were at a spring festival.
- I alone am unconcerned and expressionless,
- like an infant before it has learned to smile.
- Other people have more than they need;
- I alone seem to possess nothing.
- I am lost and drift about with no place to
go.
- I am like a fool, my mind is in chaos.
-
- Ordinary people are bright;
- I alone am dark.
- Ordinary people are clever;
- I alone am dull.
- Ordinary people seem discriminating;
- I alone am muddled and confused.
- I drift on the waves on the ocean,
- blown at the mercy of the wind.
- Other people have their goals,
- I alone am dull and uncouth.
-
- I am different from ordinary people.
- I nurse from the Great Mother's breasts.
-
- 21
- The greatest virtue you can have
- comes from following only the Tao;
- which takes a form that is intangible and
evasive.
-
- Even though the Tao is intangible and evasive,
- we are able to know it exists.
- Intangible and evasive, yet it has a manifestation.
- Secluded and dark, yet there is a vitality
within it.
- Its vitality is very genuine.
- Within it we can find order.
-
- Since the beginning of time, the Tao has always
existed.
- It is beyond existing and not existing.
- How do I know where creation comes from?
- I look inside myself and see it.
-
- 22
- If you want to become whole,
- first let yourself become broken.
- If you want to become straight,
- first let yourself become twisted.
- If you want to become full,
- first let yourself become empty.
- If you want to become new,
- first let yourself become old.
- Those whose desires are few get them,
- those whose desires are great go astray.
-
- For this reason the Master embraces the Tao,
- as an example for the world to follow.
- Because she isn't self centered,
- people can see the light in her.
- Because she does not boast of herself,
- she becomes a shining example.
- Because she does not glorify herself,
- she becomes a person of merit.
- Because she wants nothing from the world,
- the world can not overcome her.
-
- When the ancient Masters said,
- "If you want to become whole,
- then first let yourself be broken,"
- they weren't using empty words.
- All who do this will be made complete.
-
- 23
- Nature uses few words:
- when the gale blows, it will not last long;
- when it rains hard, it lasts but a little
while;
- What causes these to happen? Heaven and Earth.
-
- Why do we humans go on endlessly about little
- when nature does much in a little time?
- If you open yourself to the Tao,
- you and Tao become one.
- If you open yourself to Virtue,
- then you can become virtuous.
- If you open yourself to loss,
- then you will become lost.
-
- If you open yourself to the Tao,
- the Tao will eagerly welcome you.
- If you open yourself to virtue,
- virtue will become a part of you.
- If you open yourself to loss,
- the lost are glad to see you.
-
- "When you do not trust people,
- people will become untrustworthy."
-
- 24
- Those who stand on tiptoes
- do not stand firmly.
- Those who rush ahead
- don't get very far.
- Those who try to outshine others
- dim their own light.
- Those who call themselves righteous
- can't know how wrong they are.
- Those who boast of their accomplishments
- diminish the things they have done.
-
- Compared to the Tao, these actions are unworthy.
- If we are to follow the Tao,
- we must not do these things.
-
- 25
- Before the universe was born
- there was something in the chaos of the heavens.
- It stands alone and empty,
- solitary and unchanging.
- It is ever present and secure.
- It may be regarded as the Mother of the universe.
- Because I do not know its name,
- I call it the Tao.
- If forced to give it a name,
- I would call it 'Great'.
-
- Because it is Great means it is everywhere.
- Being everywhere means it is eternal.
- Being eternal means everything returns to
it.
-
- Tao is great.
- Heaven is great.
- Earth is great.
- Humanity is great.
- Within the universe, these are the four great
things.
-
- Humanity follows the earth.
- Earth follows Heaven.
- Heaven follows the Tao.
- The Tao follows only itself.
-
- 26
- Heaviness is the basis of lightness.
- Stillness is the standard of activity.
-
- Thus the Master travels all day
- without ever leaving her wagon.
- Even though she has much to see,
- she is at peace in her indifference.
-
- Why should the lord of a thousand chariots
- be amused at the foolishness of the world?
- If you abandon yourself to foolishness,
- you lose touch with your beginnings.
- If you let yourself become distracted,
- you will lose the basis of your power.
-
- 27
- A good traveler leaves no tracks,
- and a skillful speaker is well rehearsed.
- A good bookkeeper has an excellent memory,
- and a well made door is easy to open and needs
no locks.
- A good knot needs no rope and it can not come
undone.
-
- Thus the Master is willing to help everyone,
- and doesn't know the meaning of rejection.
- She is there to help all of creation,
- and doesn't abandon even the smallest creature.
- This is called embracing the light.
-
- What is a good person but a bad person’s teacher?
- What is a bad person but raw material for
his teacher?
- If you fail to honor your teacher or fail
to enjoy your student,
- you will become deluded no matter how smart
you are.
- It is the secret of prime importance.
-
- 28
- Know the masculine,
- but keep to the feminine:
- and become a watershed to the world.
- If you embrace the world,
- the Tao will never leave you
- and you become as a little child.
-
- Know the white,
- yet keep to the black:
- be a model for the world.
- If you are a model for the world,
- the Tao inside you will strengthen
- and you will return whole to your eternal
beginning.
-
- Know the honorable,
- but do not shun the disgraced:
- embracing the world as it is.
- If you embrace the world with compassion,
- then your virtue will return you to the Uncarved
Block.
-
- The block of wood is carved into utensils
- by carving void into the wood.
- The Master uses the utensils, yet prefers
to keep to the block
- because of its limitless possibilities.
- Great works do not involve discarding substance.
-
- 29
- Do you want to rule the world and control
it?
- I don't think it can ever be done.
-
- The world is sacred vessel
- and it can not be controlled.
- You will only it make it worse if you try.
- It may slip through your fingers and disappear.
-
- Some are meant to lead,
- and others are meant to follow;
- Some must always strain,
- and others have an easy time;
- Some are naturally big and strong,
- and others will always be small;
- Some will be protected and nurtured,
- and others will meet with destruction.
-
- The Master accepts things as they are,
- and out of compassion avoids extravagance,
- excess and the extremes.
-
- 30
- Those who lead people by following the Tao
- don't use weapons to enforce their will.
- Using force always leads to unseen troubles.
-
- In the places where armies march,
- thorns and briars bloom and grow.
- After armies take to war,
- bad years must always follow.
- The skillful commander
- strikes a decisive blow then stops.
- When victory is won over the enemy through
war
- it is not a thing of great pride.
- When the battle is over,
- arrogance is the new enemy.
- War can result when no other alternative is
given,
- so the one who overcomes an enemy should not
dominate them.
- The strong always weakened with time.
-
- This is not the way of the Tao.
- That which is not of the Tao will soon end.
-
- 31
- Weapons are the bearers of bad news;
- all people should detest them.
-
- The wise man values the left side,
- and in time of war he values the right.
- Weapons are meant for destruction,
- and thus are avoided by the wise.
- Only as a last resort
- will a wise person use a deadly weapon.
- If peace is her true objective
- how can she rejoice in the victory of war?
- Those who rejoice in victory
- delight in the slaughter of humanity.
- Those who resort to violence
- will never bring peace to the world.
- The left side is a place of honor on happy
occasions.
- The right side is reserved for mourning at
a funeral.
- When the lieutenants take the left side to
prepare for war,
- the general should be on the right side,
- because he knows the outcome will be death.
- The death of many should be greeted with great
sorrow,
- and the victory celebration should honor those
who have died.
-
- 32
- The Tao is nameless and unchanging.
- Although it appears insignificant,
- nothing in the world can contain it.
-
- If a ruler abides by its principles,
- then her people will willingly follow.
- Heaven would then reign on earth,
- like sweet rain falling on paradise.
- People would have no need for laws,
- because the law would be written on their
hearts.
-
- Naming is a necessity for order,
- but naming can not order all things.
- Naming often makes things impersonal,
- so we should know when naming should end.
- Knowing when to stop naming,
- you can avoid the pitfall it brings.
-
- All things end in the Tao
- just as the small streams and the largest
rivers
- flow through valleys to the sea.
-
- 33
- Those who know others are intelligent;
- those who know themselves are truly wise.
- Those who master others are strong;
- those who master themselves have true power.
-
- Those who know they have enough are truly
wealthy.
-
- Those who persist will reach their goal.
-
- Those who keep their course have a strong
will.
- Those who embrace death will not perish,
- but have life everlasting.
-
- 34
- The great Tao flows unobstructed in every
direction.
- All things rely on it to conceive and be born,
- and it does not deny even the smallest of
creation.
- When it has accomplished great wonders,
- it does not claim them for itself.
- It nourishes infinite worlds,
- yet it doesn't seek to master the smallest
creature.
- Since it is without wants and desires,
- it can be considered humble.
- All of creation seeks it for refuge
- yet it does not seek to master or control.
- Because it does not seek greatness;
- it is able to accomplish truly great things.
-
- 35
- She who follows the way of the Tao
- will draw the world to her steps.
- She can go without fear of being injured,
- because she has found peace and tranquility
in her heart.
-
- Where there is music and good food,
- people will stop to enjoy it.
- But words spoken of the Tao
- seem to them boring and stale.
- When looked at, there is nothing for them
to see.
- When listen for, there is nothing for them
to hear.
- Yet if they put it to use, it would never
be exhausted.
-
- 36
- If you want something to return to the source,
- you must first allow it to spread out.
- If you want something to weaken,
- you must first allow it to become strong.
- If you want something to be removed,
- you must first allow it to flourish.
- If you want to possess something,
- you must first give it away.
-
- This is called the subtle understanding
- of how things are meant to be.
-
- The soft and pliable overcomes the hard and
inflexible.
-
- Just as fish remain hidden in deep waters,
- it is best to keep weapons out of sight.
-
- 37
- The Tao never acts with force,
- yet there is nothing that it can not do.
-
- If rulers could follow the way of the Tao,
- then all of creation would willingly follow
their example.
- If selfish desires were to arise after their
transformation,
- I would erase them with the power of the Uncarved
Block.
-
- By the power of the Uncarved Block,
- future generations would lose their selfish
desires.
- By losing their selfish desires,
- the world would naturally settle into peace.
-
- 38
- The highest good is not to seek to do good,
- but to allow yourself to become it.
- The ordinary person seeks to do good things,
- and finds that they can not do them continually.
-
- The Master does not force virtue on others,
- thus she is able to accomplish her task.
- The ordinary person who uses force,
- will find that they accomplish nothing.
-
- The kind person acts from the heart,
- and accomplishes a multitude of things.
- The righteous person acts out of pity,
- yet leaves many things undone.
- The moral person will act out of duty,
- and when no one will respond
- will roll up his sleeves and uses force.
-
- When the Tao is forgotten, there is righteousness.
- When righteousness is forgotten, there is
morality.
- When morality is forgotten, there is the law.
- The law is the husk of faith,
- and trust is the beginning of chaos.
-
- Our basic understandings are not from the
Tao
- because they come from the depths of our misunderstanding.
- The master abides in the fruit and not in
the husk.
- She dwells in the Tao,
- and not with the things that hide it.
- This is how she increases in wisdom.
-
- 39
- The masters of old attained unity with the
Tao.
- Heaven attained unity and became pure.
- The earth attained unity and found peace.
- The spirits attained unity so they could minister.
- The valleys attained unity that they might
be full.
- Humanity attained unity that they might flourish.
- Their leaders attained unity that they might
set the example.
- This is the power of unity.
-
- Without unity, the sky becomes filthy.
- Without unity, the earth becomes unstable.
- Without unity, the spirits become unresponsive
and disappear.
- Without unity, the valleys become dry as a
desert.
- Without unity, human kind can't reproduce
and becomes extinct.
- Without unity, our leaders become corrupt
and fall.
-
- The great view the small as their source,
- and the high takes the low as their foundation.
- Their greatest asset becomes their humility.
- They speak of themselves as orphans and widows,
- thus they truly seek humility.
- Do not shine like the precious gem,
- but be as dull as a common stone.
-
- 40
- All movement returns to the Tao.
- Weakness is how the Tao works.
-
- All of creation is born from substance.
- Substance is born of nothing-ness.
-
- 41
- When a superior person hears of the Tao,
- She diligently puts it into practice.
- When an average person hears of the Tao,
- he believes half of it, and doubts the other
half.
- When a foolish person hears of the Tao,
- he laughs out loud at the very idea.
- If he didn't laugh,
- it wouldn't be the Tao.
-
- Thus it is said:
- The brightness of the Tao seems like darkness,
- the advancement of the Tao seems like retreat,
- the level path seems rough,
- the superior path seems empty,
- the pure seems to be tarnished,
- and true virtue doesn't seem to be enough.
- The virtue of caution seems like cowardice,
- the pure seems to be polluted,
- the true square seems to have no corners,
- the best vessels take the most time to finish,
- the greatest sounds cannot be heard,
- and the greatest image has no form.
-
- The Tao hides in the unnamed,
- Yet it alone nourishes and completes all things.
-
- 42
- The Tao gave birth to One.
- The One gave birth to Two.
- The Two gave birth to Three.
- The Three gave birth to all of creation.
-
- All things carry Yin
- yet embrace Yang.
- They blend their life breaths
- in order to produce harmony.
-
- People despise being orphaned, widowed and
poor.
- But the noble ones take these as their titles.
- In losing, much is gained,
- and in gaining, much is lost.
-
- What others teach I too will teach:
- "The strong and violent will not die
a natural death."
-
- 43
- That which offers no resistance,
- overcomes the hardest substances.
- That which offers no resistance
- can enter where there is no space.
-
- Few in the world can comprehend
- the teaching without words,
- or understand the value of non-action.
-
- 44
- Which is more important, your honor or your
life?
- Which is more valuable, your possessions or
your person?
- Which is more destructive, success or failure?
-
- Because of this, great love extracts a great
cost
- and true wealth requires greater loss.
-
- Knowing when you have enough avoids dishonor,
- and knowing when to stop will keep you from
danger
- and bring you a long, happy life.
-
- 45
- The greatest accomplishments seem imperfect,
- yet their usefulness is not diminished.
- The greatest fullness seems empty,
- yet it will be inexhaustible.
-
- The greatest straightness seems crooked.
- The most valued skill seems like clumsiness.
- The greatest speech seems full of stammers.
-
- Movement overcomes the cold,
- and stillness overcomes the heat.
- That which is pure and still is the universal
ideal.
-
- 46
- When the world follows the Tao,
- horses run free to fertilize the fields.
- When the world does not follow the Tao,
- war horses are bread outside the cities.
-
- There is no greater transgression
- than condoning peoples selfish desires,
- no greater disaster than being discontent,
- and no greater retribution than for greed.
-
- Whoever knows contentment will be at peace
forever.
-
- 47
- Without opening your door,
- you can know the whole world.
- Without looking out your window,
- you can understand the way of the Tao.
-
- The more knowledge you seek,
- the less you will understand.
-
- The Master understands without leaving,
- sees clearly without looking,
- accomplishes much without doing anything.
-
- 48
- One who seeks knowledge learns something new
every day.
- One who seeks the Tao unlearns something new
every day.
- Less and less remains until you arrive at
non-action.
- When you arrive at non-action,
- nothing will be left undone.
-
- Mastery of the world is achieved
- by letting things take their natural course.
- You can not master the world by changing the
natural way.
-
- 49
- The Master has no mind of her own.
- She understands the mind of the people.
-
- To those who are good she treats as good.
- To those who aren't good she also treats as
good.
- This is how she attains true goodness.
-
- She trusts people who are trustworthy.
- She also trusts people who aren't trustworthy.
- This is how she gains true trust.
-
- The Master's mind is shut off from the world.
- Only for the sake of the people does she muddle
her mind.
- They look to her in anticipation.
- Yet she treats them all as her children.
-
- 50
- Those who leave the womb at birth
- and those who enter their source at death,
- of these; three out of ten celebrate life,
- three out of ten celebrate death,
- and three out of ten simply go from life to
death.
- What is the reason for this?
- Because they are afraid of dying,
- therefore they can not live.
-
- I have heard that those who celebrate life
- walk safely among the wild animals.
- When they go into battle, they remain unharmed.
- The animals find no place to attack them
- and the weapons are unable to harm them.
- Why? Because they can find no place for death
in them.
-
- 51
- The Tao gives birth to all of creation.
- The virtue of Tao in nature nurtures them,
- and their family gives them their form.
- Their environment then shapes them into completion.
- That is why every creature honors the Tao
and its virtue.
-
- No one tells them to honor the Tao and its
virtue,
- it happens all by itself.
- So the Tao gives them birth,
- and its virtue cultivates them,
- cares for them,
- nurtures them,
- gives them a place of refuge and peace,
- helps them to grow and shelters them.
-
- It gives them life without wanting to posses
them,
- and cares for them expecting nothing in return.
- It is their master, but it does not seek to
dominate them.
- This is called the dark and mysterious virtue.
-
- 52
- The world had a beginning
- which we call the Great Mother.
- Once we have found the Mother,
- we begin to know what Her children should
be.
-
- When we know we are the Mothers child,
- we begin to guard the qualities of the Mother
in us.
- She will protect us from all danger
- even if we lose our life.
-
- Keep your mouth closed
- and embrace a simple life,
- and you will live care-free until the end
of your days.
- If you try to talk your way into a better
life
- there will be no end to your trouble.
-
- To understand the small is called clarity.
- Knowing how to yield is called strength.
- To use your inner light for understanding
- regardless of the danger
- is called depending on the Constant.
-
- 53
- If I understood only one thing,
- I would want to use it to follow the Tao.
- My only fear would be one of pride.
- The Tao goes in the level places,
- but people prefer to take the short cuts.
-
- If too much time is spent cleaning the house
- the land will become neglected and full of
weeds,
- and the granaries will soon become empty
- because there is no one out working the fields.
- To wear fancy clothes and ornaments,
- to have your fill of food and drink
- and to waste all of your money buying possessions
- is called the crime of excess.
- Oh, how these things go against the way of
the Tao!
-
- 54
- That which is well built
- will never be torn down.
- That which is well latched
- can not slip away.
- Those who do things well
- will be honored from generation to generation.
-
- If this idea is cultivated in the individual,
- then his virtue will become genuine.
- If this idea is cultivated in your family,
- then virtue in your family will be great.
- If this idea is cultivated in your community,
- then virtue will go a long way.
- If this idea is cultivated in your country,
- then virtue will be in many places.
- If this idea is cultivated in the world,
- then virtue will be with everyone.
-
- Then observe the person for what the person
does,
- and observe the family for what it does,
- and observe the community for what it does,
- and observe the country for what it does,
- and observe the world for what it does.
- How do I know this saying is true?
- I observe these things and see.
-
- 55
- One who is filled with the Tao
- is like a newborn child.
- The infant is protected from
- the stinging insects, wild beasts, and birds
of prey.
- Its bones are soft, its muscles are weak,
- but its grip is firm and strong.
- It doesn't know about the union
- of male and female,
- yet his penis can stand erect,
- because of the power of life within him.
- It can cry all day and never become hoarse.
- This is perfect harmony.
-
- To understand harmony is to understand the
Constant.
- To know the Constant is to be called 'enlightened'.
- To unnaturally try to extend life is not appropriate.
- To try and alter the life-breath is unnatural.
- The master understands that when something
reaches its prime
- it will soon begin to decline.
- Changing the natural is against the way of
the Tao.
- Those who do it will come to an early end.
-
- 56
- Those who know do not talk.
- Those who talk do not know.
-
- Stop talking,
- meditate in silence,
- blunt your sharpness,
- release your worries,
- harmonize your inner light,
- and become one with the dust.
- Doing this is called the dark and mysterious
identity.
-
- Those who have achieved the mysterious identity
- can not be approached, and they can not be
alienated.
- They can not be benefited nor harmed.
- They can not be made noble nor to suffer disgrace.
- This makes them the most noble of all under
the heavens.
-
- 57
- Govern your country with integrity,
- Weapons of war can be used with great cunning,
- but loyalty is only won by not-doing.
- How do I know the way things are?
- By these:
-
- The more prohibitions you make,
- the poorer people will be.
- The more weapons you posses,
- the greater the chaos in your country.
- The more knowledge that is acquired,
- the stranger the world will become.
- The more laws that you make,
- the greater the number of criminals.
-
- Therefore the Master says:
- I do nothing,
- and people become good by themselves.
- I seek peace,
- and people take care of their own problems.
- I do not meddle in their personal lives,
- and the people become prosperous.
- I let go of all my desires,
- and the people return to the Uncarved Block.
-
- 58
- If a government is unobtrusive,
- the people become whole.
- If a government is repressive,
- the people become treacherous.
-
- Good fortune has its roots in disaster,
- and disaster lurks with good fortune.
- Who knows why these things happen,
- or when this cycle will end?
- Good things seem to change into bad,
- and bad things often turn out for good.
- These things have always been hard to comprehend.
-
- Thus the Master makes things change
- without interfering.
- She is probing yet causes no harm.
- Straightforward, yet does not impose her will.
- Radiant, and easy on the eye.
-
- 59
- There is nothing better than moderation
- for teaching people or serving Heaven.
- Those who use moderation
- are already on the path to the Tao.
-
- Those who follow the Tao early
- will have an abundance of virtue.
- When there is an abundance of virtue,
- there is nothing that can not be done.
- Where there is limitless ability,
- then the kingdom is within your grasp.
- When you know the Mother of the kingdom,
- then you will be long enduring.
-
- This is spoken of as the deep root and the
firm trunk,
- the Way to a long life and great spiritual
vision.
-
- 60
- Governing a large country
- is like frying small fish.
- Too much poking spoils the meat.
-
- When the Tao is used to govern the world
- then evil will lose its power to harm the
people.
- Not that evil will no longer exist,
- but only because it has lost its power.
- Just as evil can lose its ability to harm,
- the Master shuns the use of violence.
-
- If you give evil nothing to oppose,
- then virtue will return by itself.
-
- 61
- A large country should take the low place
like a great watershed,
- which from its low position assumes the female
role.
- The female overcomes the male by the power
of her position.
- Her tranquility gives rise to her humility.
-
- If a large country takes the low position,
- it will be able to influence smaller countries.
- If smaller countries take the lower position,
- then they can allow themselves to be influenced.
- So both seek to take the lower position
- in order to influence the other, or be influenced.
-
- Large countries should desire to protect and
help the people,
- and small countries should desire to serve
others.
- Both large and small countries benefit greatly
from humility.
-
- 62
- The Tao is the tabernacle of creation,
- it is a treasure for those who are good,
- and a place of refuge for those who are not.
-
- How can those who are not good be abandoned?
- Words that are beautiful are worth much,
- but good behavior can only be learned by example.
-
- When a new leader takes office,
- don't give him gifts and offerings.
- These things are not as valuable
- as teaching him about the Tao.
-
- Why was the Tao esteemed by the ancient Masters?
- Is it not said: "With it we find without
looking.
- With it we find forgiveness for our transgressions."
- That is why the world can not understand it.
-
- 63
- Act by not acting;
- do by not doing.
- Enjoy the plain and simple.
- Find that greatness in the small.
- Take care of difficult problems
- while they are still easy;
- Do easy things before they become too hard.
-
- Difficult problems are best solved while they
are easy.
- Great projects are best started while they
are small.
- The Master never takes on more than she can
handle,
- which means that she leaves nothing undone.
-
- When an affirmation is given too lightly,
- keep your eyes open for trouble ahead.
- When something seems too easy,
- difficulty is hiding in the details.
- The master expects great difficulty,
- so the task is always easier than planned.
-
- 64
- Things are easier to control while things
are quiet.
- Things are easier to plan far in advance.
- Things break easier while they are still brittle.
- Things are easier hid while they are still
small.
-
- Prevent problems before they arise.
- Take action before things get out of hand.
- The tallest tree
- begins as a tiny sprout.
- The tallest building
- starts with one shovel of dirt.
- A journey of a thousand miles
- starts with a single footstep.
-
- If you rush into action, you will fail.
- If you hold on too tight, you will lose your
grip.
-
- Therefore the Master lets things take their
course
- and thus never fails.
- She doesn't hold on to things
- and never loses them.
- By pursing your goals too relentlessly,
- you let them slip away.
- If you are as concerned about the outcome
- as you are about the beginning,
- then it is hard to do things wrong.
- The master seeks no possessions.
- She learns by unlearning,
- thus she is able to understand all things.
- This gives her the ability to help all of
creation.
-
- 65
- The ancient Masters
- who understood the way of the Tao,
- did not educate people, but made them forget.
-
- Smart people are difficult to guide,
- because they think they are too clever.
- To use cleverness to rule a country,
- is to lead the country to ruin.
- To avoid cleverness in ruling a country,
- is to lead the country to prosperity.
-
- Knowing the two alternatives is a pattern.
- Remaining aware of the pattern is a virtue.
- This dark and mysterious virtue is profound.
- It is opposite our natural inclination,
- but leads to harmony with the heavens.
-
- 66
- Rivers and seas are rulers
- of the streams of hundreds of valleys
- because of the power of their low position.
-
- If you want to be the ruler of people,
- you must speak to them like you are their
servant.
- If you want to lead other people,
- you must put their interest ahead of your
own.
-
- The people will not feel burdened,
- if a wise person is in a position of power.
- The people will not feel like they are being
manipulated,
- if a wise person is in front as their leader.
- The whole world will ask for her guidance,
- and will never get tired of her.
- Because she does not like to compete,
- no one can compete with the things she accomplishes.
-
- 67
- The world talks about honoring the Tao,
- but you can't tell it from their actions.
- Because it is thought of as great,
- the world makes light of it.
- It seems too easy for anyone to use.
-
- There are three jewels that I cherish:
- compassion, moderation, and humility.
- With compassion, you will be able to be brave,
- With moderation, you will be able to give
to others,
- With humility, you will be able to become
a great leader.
- To abandon compassion while seeking to be
brave,
- or abandoning moderation while being benevolent,
- or abandoning humility while seeking to lead
- will only lead to greater trouble.
- The compassionate warrior will be the winner,
- and if compassion is your defense you will
be secure.
- Compassion is the protector of Heavens salvation.
-
- 68
- The best warriors
- do not use violence.
- The best generals
- do not destroy indiscriminately.
- The best tacticians
- try to avoid confrontation.
- The best leaders
- becomes servants of their people.
-
- This is called the virtue of non-competition.
- This is called the power to manage others.
- This is called attaining harmony with the
heavens.
-
- 69
- There is an old saying:
- "It is better to become the passive
- in order to see what will happen.
- It is better to retreat a foot
- than to advance only an inch."
-
- This is called
- being flexible while advancing,
- pushing back without using force,
- and destroying the enemy without engaging
him.
-
- There is no greater disaster
- than underestimating your enemy.
- Underestimating your enemy
- means losing your greatest assets.
- When equal forces meet in battle,
- victory will go to the one
- that enters with the greatest sorrow.
-
- 70
- My words are easy to understand
- and easier to put into practice.
- Yet no one in the world seems to understand
them,
- and are not able to apply what I teach.
-
- My teachings come from the ancients,
- the things I do are done for a reason.
-
- Because you do not know me,
- you are not able to understand my teachings.
- Because those who know me are few,
- my teachings become even more precious.
-
- 71
- Knowing you don't know is wholeness.
- Thinking you know is a disease.
- Only by recognizing that you have an illness
- can you move to seek a cure.
-
- The Master is whole because
- she sees her illnesses and treats them,
- and thus is able to remain whole.
-
- 72
- When people become overly bold,
- then disaster will soon arrive.
-
- Do not meddle with people's livelihood;
- by respecting them they will in turn respect
you.
-
- Therefore, the Master knows herself but is
not arrogant.
- She loves herself but also loves others.
- This is how she is able to make appropriate
choices.
-
- 73
- Being overbold and confidant is deadly.
- The wise use of caution will keep you alive.
-
- One is the way to death,
- and the other is the way to preserve your
life.
- Who can understand the workings of Heaven?
-
- The Tao of the universe
- does not compete, yet wins;
- does not speak, yet responds;
- does not command, yet is obeyed;
- and does act, but is good at directing.
-
- The nets of Heaven are wide,
- but nothing escapes its grasp.
-
- 74
- If you do not fear death,
- then how can it intimidate you?
- If you aren't afraid of dying,
- there is nothing you can not do.
-
- Those who harm others
- are like inexperienced boys
- trying to take the place of a great lumberjack.
- Trying to fill his shoes will only get them
seriously hurt.
-
- 75
- When people go hungry,
- the government’s taxes are too high.
- When people become rebellious,
- the government has become too intrusive.
-
- When people begin to view death lightly,
- wealthy people have too much
- which causes others to starve.
-
- Only those who do not cling to their life
can save it.
-
- 76
- The living are soft and yielding;
- the dead are rigid and stiff.
- Living plants are flexible and tender;
- the dead are brittle and dry.
-
- Those who are stiff and rigid
- are the disciples of death.
- Those who are soft and yielding
- are the disciples of life.
-
- The rigid and stiff will be broken.
- The soft and yielding will overcome.
-
- 77
- The Tao of Heaven works in the world
- like the drawing of a bow.
- The top is bent downward;
- the bottom is bent up.
- The excess is taken from,
- and the deficient is given to.
-
- The Tao works to use the excess,
- and gives to that which is depleted.
- The way of people is to take from the depleted,
- and give to those who already have an excess.
-
- Who is able to give to the needy from their
excess?
- Only someone who is following the way of the
Tao.
-
- This is why the Master gives
- expecting nothing in return.
- She does not dwell on her past accomplishments,
- and does not glory in any praise.
-
- 78
- Water is the softest and most yielding substance.
- Yet nothing is better than water,
- for overcoming the hard and rigid,
- because nothing can compete with it.
-
- Everyone knows that the soft and yielding
- overcomes the rigid and hard,
- but few can put this knowledge into practice.
-
- Therefore the Master says:
- "Only he who is the lowest servant of
the kingdom,
- is worthy to become its ruler.
- He who is willing to tackle the most unpleasant
tasks,
- is the best ruler in the world."
-
- True sayings seem contradictory.
-
- 79
- Difficulties remain, even after solving a
problem.
- How then can we consider that as good?
-
- Therefore the Master
- does what she knows is right,
- and makes no demands of others.
- A virtuous person will do the right thing,
- and persons with no virtue will take advantage
of others.
-
- The Tao does not choose sides,
- the good person receives from the Tao
- because she is on its side.
-
- 80
- Small countries with few people are best.
- Give them all of the things they want,
- and they will see that they do not need them.
- Teach them that death is a serious thing,
- and to be content to never leave their homes.
- Even though they have plenty
- of horses, wagons and boats,
- they won't feel that they need to use them.
- Even if they have weapons and shields,
- they will keep them out of sight.
- Let people enjoy the simple technologies,
- let them enjoy their food,
- let them make their own clothes,
- let them be content with their own homes,
- and delight in the customs that they cherish.
- Although the next country is close enough
- that they can hear their roosters crowing
and dogs barking,
- they are content never to visit each other
- all of the days of their life.
-
- 81
- True words do not sound beautiful;
- beautiful sounding words are not true.
- Wise men don't need to debate;
- men who need to debate are not wise.
-
- Wise men are not scholars,
- and scholars are not wise.
- The Master desires no possessions.
- Since the things she does is for the people,
- she has more than she needs.
- The more she gives to others,
- the more she has for herself.
-
- The Tao of Heaven nourishes by not forcing.
- The Tao of the Wise person acts by not competing.
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