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The Outer Teachings of Chuang Tzu: Letting Be, and Exercising Forbearance" & Horses' Hoofs -P1/2 (In Chinese)
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Today’s Between
Master and Disciples –
“The Outer Teachings of
Chuang Tzu:
‘Letting Be, and
Exercising Forbearance’
and ‘Horses’ Hoofs’” –
will be presented
in Chinese
with subtitles in Arabic,
Aulacese (Vietnamese),
Bulgarian, Chinese,
Czech-Slovak, English,
French, German,
Hindi, Hungarian,
Indonesian, Italian,
Japanese, Korean,
Malay, Mongolian,
Persian, Polish,
Portuguese, Punjabi,
Russian, Spanish
and Thai.
The great philosopher
Chuang Tzu lived
from approximately 370
to 301 BCE.
He is considered one of
the greatest literary
and philosophical figures
of China.
His philosophy is
contained in the book
bearing his name,
Chuang Tzu.
His teachings were
true to wu-wei,
the Taoist doctrine
which means
to refrain from action
contrary to Nature.
He espoused a way of life
which is simple
and natural, yet fulfilling.
He advocated
for a flexible
and pragmatic approach
to understanding concepts.
Today, we present to you
excerpts from
“Letting Be, and
Exercising Forbearance”
and “Horses’ Hoofs”
from The Outer Teachings
of Chuang Tzu.
We thank you
for your company
for today’s episode of
Between Master
and Disciples.
Join us again tomorrow
for part 2 of the excerpts
from “Letting Be, and
Exercising Forbearance”
and “Horses’ Hoofs”
from The Outer Teachings
of Chuang Tzu.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television for
Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home,
up next right after
Noteworthy News.
May Providence
guide you in light,
wisdom and peace.
We enjoyed your company
for today’s episode of
Between Master
and Disciples
on Supreme Master
Television.
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
is up next right after
Noteworthy News.
Blessed be your
good hearts
and noble endeavors!
We thank you
for your company
for today’s episode of
Between Master
and Disciples.
Join us again tomorrow
for part 2 of the excerpts
from “Letting Be, and
Exercising Forbearance”
and “Horses’ Hoofs”
from The Outer Teachings
of Chuang Tzu.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television for
Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home,
up next right after
Noteworthy News.
May Providence
guide you in light,
wisdom and peace.
We enjoyed your company
for today’s episode of
Between Master
and Disciples
on Supreme Master
Television.
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
is up next right after
Noteworthy News.
Blessed be your
good hearts
and noble endeavors!
:
Letting Be, and
Exercising Forbearance
I have heard of
letting the world be, and
exercising forbearance;
I have not heard of
governing the world.
Letting be is
from the fear that men,
when interfered with,
will carry their nature
beyond its normal condition;
exercising forbearance is
from the fear that men,
when not so dealt with,
will alter the characteristics
of their nature.
When all men do not
carry their nature beyond
its normal condition, nor
alter its characteristics,
the good government
of the world is secured.
Formerly,
Yao's government
of the world
made men look joyful;
but when they have this joy
in their nature,
there is a want
of its proper placidity.
The government
of the world by Jie,
on the contrary, made men
look distressed; but
when their nature shows
the symptoms of distress,
there is a want
of its proper contentment.
The want of placidity
and the want of
contentment are contrary
to the character
of the nature;
and where this obtains,
it is impossible that
any man or state should
anywhere abide long.
Are men
exceedingly joyful?
The Yang or element
of expansion in them
is too much developed.
Are they
exceedingly irritated?
The Yin or opposite element
is too much developed.
When those elements
thus predominate in men,
it is as if the four seasons
were not to come
at their proper times,
and the harmony
of cold and heat were
not to be maintained –
would there not result
injury to the bodies of men?
Men's joy
and dissatisfaction
are made to arise where
they ought not to do so;
their movements
are all uncertain;
they lose the mastery
of their thoughts;
they stop short midway,
and do not finish
what they have begun.
In this state of things
the world begins
to have lofty aims,
and jealous dislikes,
ambitious courses,
and fierce animosities,
and then we have actions
like those of the robber
Zhi, or of Zeng (Shen)
and Shi (Qiu).
If now the whole world
were taken to reward the
good it would not suffice,
nor would it be possible
with it to punish the bad.
Thus the world,
great as it is,
not sufficing for rewards
and punishments,
from the time of the three
dynasties downwards,
there has been nothing
but bustle and excitement.
Always occupied with
rewards and punishments,
what leisure have men had
to rest in the instincts
of the nature with which
they are endowed?
Moreover, delight
in the power of vision
leads to excess
in the pursuit
of ornamental colors;
delight in the power
of hearing, to excess
in seeking the pleasures
of sound;
delight in benevolence
tends to disorder that virtue
as proper to the nature;
delight in righteousness
sets the man in opposition
to what is right in reason;
delight in the practice
of ceremonies
is helpful to artful forms;
delight in music
leads to voluptuous airs;
delight in sageness
is helpful to
ingenious contrivances;
delight in knowledge
contributes to fault-finding.
If all men were to rest
in the instincts
of their nature,
to keep or to extinguish
these eight delights
might be a matter
of indifference;
but if they will not rest
in those instincts,
then those eight delights
begin to be imperfectly
and unevenly developed
or violently suppressed,
and the world
is thrown into disorder.
But when men begin
to honor them,
and to long for them,
how great is the deception
practiced on the world!
And not only, when
a performance of them
is once over, do they not
have done with them, but
they prepare themselves
as with fasting
to describe them,
they seem to kneel
reverentially when
they bring them forward,
and they go through them
with the excitements
of music and singing;
and then
what can be done to
remedy the evil of them?
Therefore the superior man,
who feels himself
constrained to engage
in the administration
of the world
will find it his best way
to do nothing.
In that policy
of doing nothing,
he can rest in the instincts
of the nature with which
he is endowed.
Hence he
who will administer the
government of the world
honoring it as
he honors his own person,
may have that government
committed to him, and
he who will administer it
loving it as
he loves his own person,
may have it entrusted to him.
Therefore,
if the superior man will
keep the faculties lodged
in his five viscera
unemployed, and
not display his powers
of seeing and hearing,
while he is motionless
as a representative
of the dead,
his dragon-like presence
will be seen; while
he is profoundly silent,
the thunder of his words
will resound; while
his movements are unseen
like those of a spirit,
all heavenly influences
will follow them; while
he is thus unconcerned
and does nothing,
his genial influence
will attract and gather
all things round him:
what leisure has he to do
anything more for the
government of the world?
Cui Ji asked Lao Dan,
saying, “If you do not
govern the world,
how can you make
men's minds good?”
The reply was,
“Take care
how you meddle with
and disturb men's minds.
The mind, if pushed about,
gets depressed;
if helped forward,
it gets exalted.
Now exalted,
now depressed,
here it appears
as a prisoner, and there
as a wrathful fury.
At one time it becomes
pliable and soft,
yielding to
what is hard and strong;
at another, it is sharp
as the sharpest corner,
fit to carve
or chisel stone or jade.
Now it is hot
as a scorching fire,
and anon it is cold as ice.
It is so swift that while
one is bending down
and lifting up his head,
it shall twice have put forth
a soothing hand
beyond the four seas.
Resting,
it is still as a deep abyss;
moving, it is like one of
the bodies in the sky;
in its resolute haughtiness,
it refuses to be bound –
such is the mind of man!”
Huang-Di had been
on the throne
for nineteen years,
and his ordinances
were in operation
all through the kingdom,
when he heard
that Guang Cheng-zi
was living on the summit
of Kong-tong,
and went to see him.
“I have heard,” he said,
“that you, Sir,
are well acquainted
with the perfect Dao.
I venture to ask you what
is the essential thing in it.
I wish to take
the subtlest influences
of heaven and earth, and
assist with them the growth
of the five cereals for
the better nourishment
of the people.
I also wish
to direct the operation
of the Yin and Yang,
so as to secure the comfort
of all living beings.
How shall I proceed to
accomplish those objects?”
Guang Cheng-zi replied,
“What you wish
to ask about
is the original substance
of all things;
what you wish
to have the direction of
is that substance as it was
shattered and divided.
According to your
government of the world,
the vapors of the clouds,
before they were collected,
would descend in rain;
the herbs and trees
would shed their leaves
before they became yellow;
and the light
of the sun and moon
would hasten to extinction.
Your mind is
that of a flatterer
with his plausible words
– it is not fit that I should
tell you the perfect Dao.”
Huang-Di withdrew,
gave up his government
of the kingdom,
built himself
a solitary apartment,
spread in it a mat
of the white grass,
dwelt in it unoccupied
for three months,
and then went again
to seek an interview
with the recluse.
Guang Cheng-zi
was then lying down
with his head to the south.
Huang-Di, with an air
of deferential submission,
went forward on his knees,
twice bowed low with
his face to the ground,
and asked him, saying,
“I have heard that you,
Sir, are well acquainted
with the perfect Dao –
I venture to ask how
I should rule my body,
in order that it may
continue for a long time.”
Guang Cheng-zi
hastily rose, and said,
“A good question!
Come and I will tell you
the perfect Dao.
Its essence is surrounded
with the deepest obscurity;
its highest reach is
in darkness and silence.
There is nothing to be seen;
nothing to be heard.
When it holds the spirit
in its arms in stillness,
then the bodily form
of itself
will become correct.
You must be still;
you must be pure;
not subjecting your body
to toil, not agitating
your vital force – then
you may live for long.
When your eyes see nothing,
your ears hear nothing,
and your mind
knows nothing,
your spirit will
keep your body, and
the body will live long.
Watch over
what is within you,
shut up the avenues
that connect you
with what is external –
much knowledge
is pernicious.
I will proceed with you
to the summit of
the Grand Brilliance,
where we come to
the source of the bright
and expanding element;
I will enter with you
the gate of
the Deepest Obscurity,
where we come to
the source of the dark
and repressing element.
There heaven and earth
have their controllers;
there the Yin and Yang
have their Repositories.
Watch over
and keep your body,
and all things will
of themselves give it vigor.
I maintain the original
unity of these elements,
and dwell in the harmony
of them.
In this way
I have cultivated myself
for one thousand
and two hundred years,
and my bodily form
has undergone no decay.”
Huang-Di twice bowed low
with his head
to the ground, and said,
“In Guang Cheng-zi
we have an example of
what is called Heaven.”
The other said, “Come,
and I will tell you:
The perfect Dao is
something inexhaustible,
and yet men all think
it has an end; it is
something unfathomable,
and yet men all think
its extreme limit
can be reached.
He who attains to my Dao,
if he be in a high position,
will be one of
the August ones,
and in a low position,
will be a king.
He who fails
in attaining it,
in his highest attainment
will see the light,
but will descend
and be of the Earth.
At present all things are
produced from the Earth
and return to the Earth.
Therefore I will leave you,
and enter the gate
of the Unending,
to enjoy myself in the fields
of the Illimitable.
I will blend my light with
that of the sun and moon,
and will endure while
Heaven and Earth endure.
If men agree
with my views,
I will be unconscious of it;
if they keep far apart
from them,
I will be unconscious of it;
they may all die,
and I will abide alone!”
Yun Jiang,
rambling to the east,
having been borne along
on a gentle breeze,
suddenly encountered
Hong Mang,
who was rambling about,
hopping like a bird.
Amazed at the sight,
Yun Jiang
stood reverentially,
and said to the other,
“Venerable Sir,
who are you? and
why are you doing this?”
Hong Mang went on
hopping like a bird,
but replied,
“I am enjoying myself.”
Yun Jiang said, “I wish
to ask you a question.”
Hong Mang
lifted up his head,
looked at the stranger,
and said, “Pooh!”
Yun Jiang, however,
continued,
“The breath of Heaven
is out of harmony;
the breath of Earth
is bound up;
the six elemental influences
do not act in concord;
the four seasons
do not observe
their proper times.
Now I wish
to blend together
the essential qualities
of those six influences
in order to
nourish all living things –
how shall I go about it?”
Hong Mang hopped about
and shook his head,
saying, “I do not know;
I do not know!”
Yun Jiang could not
pursue his question;
but three years afterwards,
when (again) rambling
in the east,
as he was passing by
the wild of Sung,
he happened
to meet Hong Mang.
Delighted with
the re-encounter,
he hastened to him,
and said,
“Have you forgotten me,
O Heaven?
Have you forgotten me,
O Heaven?”
At the same time,
he bowed twice with
his head to the ground,
wishing to receive
his instructions.
Hong Mang said,
“Wandering listlessly about,
I know not what I seek;
carried on
by a wild impulse,
I know not
where I am going.
I wander about
in the strange manner
which you have seen, and
see that nothing proceeds
without method and order
– what more should I know?”
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