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Laozi Full text Morals classic |
39. Support In
mythical times all things were whole: But,
losing clarity, the sky tore; Rulers
depend upon their subjects, 40. Motion and Use The
motion of the Way is to return; 41. Following When
the great man learns the Way, he follows it with diligence; Therefore
it is said: For
the finest harmony appears plain; The
square, perfected, has no corner; The
Way can be neither sensed nor known: 42. Mind The
Way bears sensation, As
others have taught, so do I teach, 43. Overcoming Water
overcomes the stone; Yet
benefit without action, 44. Contentment Health
or reputation: which is held dearer? Great
love incurs great expense, 45. Quiet Great
perfection seems incomplete, Great
truth seems contradictory; As
spring overcomes the cold, 46. Horses When
a nation follows the Way, There
is no greater mistake than following desire; 47. Knowing Without
taking a step outdoors The
more you experience, 48. Inaction The
follower of knowledge learns as much as he can every day; By
attrition he reaches a state of inaction To
conquer the world, accomplish nothing; 49. People The
sage does not distinguish between himself and the world; He
is good to those who are good; The
sage lives in harmony with the world, 50. Death Men flow into life, and ebb into death. Some
are filled with life; Those
who are filled with life 51. Nurture The
Way bears all things; Each
follows the Way and honours harmony, The
Way bears, nurtures, shapes, completes, Bearing
without possessing, 52. Clarity The
origin of the world is its mother; Reserve
your judgments and words As
observing detail is clarity, 53. Difficult Paths With
but a small understanding When
palaces are kept up 54. Cultivate Harmony Cultivate
harmony within yourself, and harmony becomes real; Live
with a person to understand that person; How
can I live with the world? 55. Soft Bones Who
is filled with harmony is like a newborn. His
bones are soft yet his grasp is sure, But
knowing harmony creates abstraction, 56. Impartiality Who
understands does not preach; Reserve
your judgments and words; Then, 57. Conquer with Inaction Do
not control the people with laws, For: Yet
take no action, and the people nurture eachother; 58. No End When
government is lazy and informal Good
fortune follows upon disaster; Honesty
is ever deceived; So
the sage is firm but not cutting, 59. Restraint Manage a great nation as you would cook a delicate fish. To
govern men in accord with nature 60. Demons When
you use the Way to conquer the world, 61. Submission A
nation is like a hierarchy, a marketplace, and a maiden. So
when a large country submits to a small country It
is in the interest of a large country to unite and gain service, 62. Sin The
Way is the fate of men, Fine
words are often borrowed, Why
should someone appreciate the Way? 63. Difficulty Practice
no-action; Deal
with the difficult while it is yet easy; The
difficult develops naturally from the easy, Who
finds it easy to promise finds it hard to be trusted; 64a. Care at the Beginning What
lies still is easy to grasp; Yet
a tree broader than a man can embrace is born of a tiny shoot; Therefore
deal with things before they happen; 64b. Care at the End He
who acts, spoils; The
sage desires no-desire, 65. Subtlety The
ancients did not seek to rule people with knowledge, It
is difficult for knowledgeable people to become natural; Understanding
these two paths is understanding subtlety; 66. Lead by Following The
river carves out the valley by flowing beneath it. In
order to master people So
when the sage rises above the people, So
the popularity of the sage does not fail, 67. Unimportance All
the world says, Yet
here are three treasures Those
who are fearless, but without compassion, 68. Compassion Compassion
is the finest weapon and best defence. Therefore, This
is the value of unimportance; 69. Ambush There
is a saying among soldiers: In
this manner one may deploy troops without marshalling them, There
is no worse disaster than misunderstanding your enemy; 70. Individuality My
words are easy to understand My
words have meaning; my actions have reason; We
are each unique, and therefore valuable; 71. Limitation Who
recognizes his limitations is healthy; 72. Revolution When
people have nothing more to lose, Do
not take away their lands, The
sage maintains himself but exacts no tribute, 73. Fate Who
is brave and bold will perish; Fate
does not attack, yet all things are conquered by it; Fate's
net is vast and its mesh is coarse, 74. Execution If
people were not afraid of death, If
people were only afraid of death, People
fear death because death is an instrument of fate. 75. Rebellion When
rulers take grain so that they may feast, When
people act without regard for their own lives 76. Flexibility A
newborn is soft and tender, Just
as a sapless tree will split and decay 77. Need Is
the action of nature not unlike drawing a bow? It
is not so with Man. To
give away what you do not need is to follow the Way. 78. Yielding Nothing
in the world is as soft and yielding as water, The
soft overcomes the hard, Who
attends to the people would control the land and grain; 79. Reconciliation When
conflict is reconciled, some hard feelings remain; The
sage accepts less than is due The
ancients said: "nature is impartial; 80. Utopia Let
your community be small, with only a few people; Live
peacefully and delight in your own society; 81. The Sage Honest
people use no rhetoric; So
the sage does not serve himself; |
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tang-wudaozi |
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1. The Way The Way that can be experienced is not true; The world that can be constructed is not true. The Way manifests all that happens and may happen; The world represents all that exists and may exist. To experience without intention is to sense the world; To experience with intention is to anticipate the world. These two experiences are indistinguishable; Their construction differs but their effect is the same. Beyond the gate of experience flows the Way, Which is ever greater and more subtle than the world. 2. Abstraction When
beauty is abstracted So
alive and dead are abstracted from nature, The
sage experiences without abstraction, 3. Without Action Not
praising the worthy prevents contention, In
this manner the sage governs people: If
people lack knowledge and desire 4. Limitless The
Way is a limitless vessel; 5. Nature Nature
is not kind; Nature
is like a bellows, 6. Experience Experience
is a riverbed, 7. Complete Nature is complete because it does not serve itself. The
sage places himself after and finds himself before, He is complete because he does not serve himself. 8. Water The
best of man is like water, So
the sage: He does not contend, and none contend against him. 9. Retire Fill
a cup to its brim and it is easily spilled; 10. Harmony Embracing
the Way, you become embraced; Bearing
and nurturing, 11. Tools Thirty
spokes meet at a nave; 12. Substance Too
much colour blinds the eye, In
this manner the sage cares for people: 13. Self Both
praise and blame cause concern, Therefore, 14. Mystery Looked
at but cannot be seen - it is beneath form; In
its rising there is no light, Attend
the present to deal with the past; 15. Enlightenment The
enlightened possess understanding Cautious
as one crossing thin ice, Who
stills the water that the mud may settle, 16. Decay and Renewal Empty
the self completely; This
return is peaceful; Who
accepts nature's flow becomes all-cherishing; 17. Rulers The
best rulers are scarcely known by their subjects; When
the best rulers achieve their purpose 18. Hypocrisy When
the Way is forgotten When
harmonious relationships dissolve 19. Simplify If
we could abolish knowledge and wisdom Yet
such remedies treat only symptoms People
need personal remedies: 20. Wandering What
is the difference between assent and denial? The
people are merry as if at a magnificent party The
people have enough and to spare, The
people are bright and certain, The
people are busy with purpose, 21. Accept Harmony is only in following the Way. The
Way is without form or quality, Beneath
sensation and memory 22. Home Accept
and you become whole, The
sage accepts the world The
ancients said, "Accept and you become whole", 23. Words Nature
says only a few words: Who
accepts harmony, becomes harmonious. 24. Indulgence Straighten
yourself and you will not stand steady; These
behaviours are wasteful, indulgent, 25. Beneath Abstraction There
is a mystery, Being
limitless, it flows away forever; The
Way is limitless, For
I am abstracted from the world, 26. Calm Gravity
is the source of lightness, A
lone traveller will journey all day, watching over his belongings; The
captain of a great vessel will not act lightly or hastily. A
captain can not treat his great ship as a small boat; 27. Perfection The
perfect traveller leaves no trail to be followed; So
the sage nurtures all men So
the strong must guide the weak, This
is the secret of perfection: 28. Becoming Using
the male, being female, Using
strength, being weak, Using
the light, being dark, 29. Ambition Those
who wish to change the world The
world is shaped by the Way; So
some will lead, while others follow. So the sage will be neither wasteful nor violent. 30. Violence Powerful
men are well advised not to use violence, A
general is well advised For
even the strongest force will weaken with time, 31. Armies Armies
are tools of violence; Weapons
are tools of violence, Whoever
finds beauty in weapons So
slaughters must be mourned 32. Shapes The
Way has no true shape, The
Way is shaped by use, 33. Virtues Who
understands the world is learned; 34. Control The
Way flows and ebbs, creating and destroying, It
nurtures all things, It
is the substance of all things; The
sage would not control the world; 35. Peace If
you offer music and food The
Way lacks art and flavour; 36. Opposition To
reduce someone's influence, first expand it; This
is the subtlety by which the weak overcome the strong: 37. Tranquillity The
Way takes no action, but leaves nothing undone. Nature
does not possess desire; 38. Ritual Well
established hierarchies are not easily uprooted; Harmony
does not care for harmony, and so is naturally attained; Harmony
neither acts nor reasons; When
the Way is lost, there remains harmony; Ritual
is the end of compassion and honesty, The
sage goes by harmony, not by hope; กก |
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