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Tao Te Ching 

A New English Version, 
with Foreword and Notes, 
by Stephen Mitchell 



HARPERPERENNIAL 


MODERNCLASSICS 


NEW YORK • LONDON • TORONTO • SYDNEY 


HflH 
















HARPERPERENN 


AL^ 


MODERNCLASSICS 


A hardcover edition of this book was published in 1988 by Harper & Row. 
P.S.™ is a trademark of HarperColiins Publishers. 

TAO TE CHING. Translation copyright © 1988 by Stephen Mitchell. All 
rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. No part of this 
book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without writ¬ 
ten permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical 
articles and reviews. For information address HarperColiins Publishers, 10 
East 53rd Street, New York, NY 10022. 

HarperColiins books may be purchased for educational, business, or sales 
promotional use. For information please write: Special Markets Department, 
HarperColiins Publishers, 10 East 53rd Street, New York, NY 10022. 

First Harper Perennial edition published 1991. 

First Perennial Classics edition published 2000. 

First Harper Perennial Modern Classics edition published 2006. 

Designed by David Bullen 

The Library of Congress has catalogued the hardcover edition as follows: 

Lao-tzu. 

Tao te ching. 

Translation of: Tao te ching. 

ISBN 978-0-06-016001-2 
I. Mitchell, Stephen. 

II. Title. 

BL1900.L26E5 1988 299’.51482 88-45123 

ISBN-13: 978-0-06-114266-6 (pbk.) 


09 RRD 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 


TO VICKI 


Who can find a good woman? 

She is precious beyond all things. 


PROV. 31:10 











Foreword 


Tao Te Ching (pronounced, more or less, Dow Deh Jing) can 
be translated as The Book of the Immanence of the Way or The 
Book of the Way and of How It Manifests Itself in the World or, 
simply, The Book of the Way. Since it is already well known 
by its Chinese title, I have let that stand. 

About Lao-tzu, its author, there is practically nothing to 
be said. He may have been an older contemporary of Confu¬ 
cius (551-479 B.C.E.) and may have held the position of 
archive-keeper in one of the petty kingdoms of the time. But 
all the information that has come down to us is highly sus¬ 
pect. Even the meaning of his name is uncertain (the most 
likely interpretations: “the Old Master" or, more pictur¬ 
esquely, “the Old Boy”). Like an Iroquois woodsman, he left 
no traces. All he left us is his book: the classic manual on 
the art of living, written in style of gemlike lucidity, radiant 
with humor and grace and largeheartedness and deep wis¬ 
dom: one of the wonders of the world. 

People usually think of Lao-tzu as a hermit, a dropout 
from society, dwelling serenely in some mountain hut, unvis¬ 
ited except perhaps by the occasional traveler arriving from 
a '60s joke to ask, “What is the meaning of life?” But it's 
clear from his teachings that he deeply cared about society, 
if society means the welfare of one’s fellow human beings; 
his book is, among other things, a treatise on the art of 
government, whether of a country or of a child. The misper¬ 
ception may arise from his insistence on wet wu wei, literally 
“doing not-doing,” which has been seen as passivity. Noth¬ 
ing could be further from the truth. 



/ 

/ 












A good athlete can enter a state of body-awareness in 
which the right stroke or the right movement happens by 
itself, effortlessly, without any interference of the conscious 
will. This is a paradigm for non-action: the purest and most 
effective form of action. The game plays the game; the poem 
writes the poem; we can’t tell the dancer from the dance. 

Less and less do you need to force things, 
until finally you arrive at non-action. 

When nothing is done, 
nothing is left undone. 

Nothing is done because the doer has wholeheartedly van¬ 
ished into the deed; the fuel has been completely trans¬ 
formed into flame. This "nothing" is, in fact, everything. It 
happens when we trust the intelligence of the universe in 
the same way that an athlete or a dancer trusts the superior 
intelligence of the body. Hence Lao-tzu’s emphasis on soft¬ 
ness. Softness means the opposite of rigidity, and is synony¬ 
mous with suppleness, adaptability, endurance. Anyone who 
has seen a t’ai chi or aikido master doing not-doing will 
know how powerful this softness is. 

Lao-tzu’s central figure is a man or woman whose life is 
in perfect harmony with the way things are. This is not an 
idea; it is a reality; I have seen it. The Master has mastered 
Nature; not in the sense of conquering it, but of becoming 
it. In surrendering to the Tao, in giving up all concepts, 
judgments, and desires, her mind has grown naturally com¬ 
passionate. She finds deep in her own experience the central 
truths of the art of living, which are paradoxical only on 
the surface: that the more truly solitary we are, the more 
compassionate we can be; the more we let go of what we 

viii 


love, the more present our love becomes; the clearer our 
insight into what is beyond good and evil, the more we can 
embody the good. Until finally she is able to say, in all hu¬ 
mility, "I am the Tao, the Truth, the Life.” 

The teaching of the Tao Te Ching is moral in the deepest 
sense. Unencumbered by any concept of sin, the Master 
doesn’t see evil as a force to resist, but simply as an opaque¬ 
ness, a state of self-absorption which is in disharmony with 
the universal process, so that, as with a dirty window, the 
light can t shine through. This freedom from moral catego¬ 
ries allows him his great compassion for the wicked and the 
selfish. 


Thus the Master is available to all people 
and doesn’t reject anyone. 

He is ready to use all situations 
and doesn’t waste anything. 

This is called embodying the light. 

What is a good man but a bad man’s teacher? 

What is a bad man but a good man’s job? 

If you don’t understand this, you will get lost, 
however intelligent you are. 

It is the great secret. 

The reader will notice that in the many passages where 
Lao-tzu describes the Master, I have used the pronoun "she" 
at least as often as "he." The Chinese language doesn’t make 
this kind of distinction; in English we have to choose. But 
since we are all, potentially, the Master (since the Master is, 
essentially, us), I felt it would be untrue to present a male 
archetype, as other versions have, ironically, done. Ironically, 
because of all the great world religions the teaching of 









Lao-tzu is by far the most female. Of course, you should feel 
free, throughout the book, to substitute “he” for ’’she” or 
vice versa. 

As to method: I worked from Paul Carus’s literal version, 
which provides English equivalents (often very quaint ones) 
alongside each of the Chinese ideograms. I also consulted 
dozens of translations into English, German, and French. 
But the most essential preparation for my work was a four¬ 
teen-year-long course of Zen training, which brought me 
face to face with Lao-tzu and his true disciples and heirs, the 
early Chinese Zen Masters. 

With great poetry, the freest translation is sometimes the 
most faithful. “We must try its effect as an English poem,” 
Dr. Johnson said; “that is the way to judge of the merit of a 
translation.” I have often been fairly literal—or as literal as 
one can be with such a subtle, kaleidoscopic book as the Tao 
Te Ching. But I have also paraphrased, expanded, con¬ 
tracted, interpreted, worked with the text, played with it, 
until it became embodied in a language that felt genuine to 
me. If 1 haven’t always translated Lao-tzu’s words, my inten¬ 
tion has always been to translate his mind. 


TaoTe Ching 













1 


The tao that can be told 
is not the eternal Tao. 

The name that can be named 
is not the eternal Name. 

The unnamable is the eternally real. 

Naming is the origin 
of all particular things. 

Free from desire, you realize the mystery. 

Caught in desire, you see only the manifestations. 

Yet mystery and manifestations 
arise from the same source. 

This source is called darkness. 

Darkness within darkness. 

The gateway to all understanding. 










2 


When people see some things as beautiful, 
other things become ugly. 

When people see some things as good, 
other things become bad. 

Being and non-being create each other. 
Difficult and easy support each other. 
Long and short define each other. 

High and low depend on each other. 
Before and after follow each other. 

Therefore the Master 

acts without doing anything 

and teaches without saying anything. 

Things arise and she lets them come; 

things disappear and she lets them go. 

She has but doesn’t possess, 
acts but doesn’t expect. 

When her work is done, she forgets it. 
That is why it lasts forever. 


If you overesteem great men, 
people become powerless. 

If you overvalue possessions, 
people begin to steal. 

The Master leads 
by emptying people’s minds 
and filling their cores, 
by weakening their ambition 
and toughening their resolve. 

He helps people lose everything 
they know, everything they desire, 
and creates confusion 
in those who think that they know. 

Practice not-doing, 

and everything will fall into place. 













4 


The Tao is like a well: 
used but never used up. 

It is like the eternal void: 
filled with infinite possibilities. 

It is hidden but always present. 

I don’t know who gave birth to it. 
It is older than God. 


5 


The Tao doesn’t take sides; 
it gives birth to both good and evil. 

The Master doesn’t take sides; 
she welcomes both saints and sinners. 

The Tao is like a bellows: 

it is empty yet infinitely capable. 

The more you use it, the more it produces; 
the more you talk of it, the less you understand. 


Hold on to the center. 












6 


The Tao is called the Great Mother: 
empty yet inexhaustible, 
it gives birth to infinite worlds. 

It is always present within you. 

You can use it any way you want. 


The Tao is infinite, eternal. 

Why is it eternal? 

It was never born; 
thus it can never die. 

Why is it infinite? 

It has no desires for itself; 
thus it is present for all beings. 

The Master stays behind; 
that is why she is ahead. 

She is detached from all things; 
that is why she is one with them. 
Because she has let go of herself, 
she is perfectly fulfilled. 



















8 


The supreme good is like water, 

which nourishes all things without trying to. 

It is content with the low places that people disdain. 
Thus it is like the Tao. 

In dwelling, live close to the ground. 

In thinking, keep to the simple. 

In conflict, be fair and generous. 

In governing, don't try to control. 

In work, do what you enjoy. 

In family life, be completely present. 

When you are content to be simply yourself 
and don’t compare or compete, 
everybody will respect you. 



Fill your bowl to the brim 
and it will spill. 

Keep sharpening your knife 
and it will blunt. 

Chase after money and security 
and your heart will never unclench. 
Care about people’s approval 
and you will be their prisoner. 

Do your work, then step back. 

The only path to serenity. 













10 


Can you coax your mind from its wandering 
and keep to the original oneness? 

Can you let your body become 
supple as a newborn child’s? 

Can you cleanse your inner vision 
until you see nothing but the light? 

Can you love people and lead them 
without imposing your will? 

Can you deal with the most vital matters 
by letting events take their course? 

Can you step back from your own mind 
and thus understand all things? 

Giving birth and nourishing, 
having without possessing, 
acting with no expectations, 
leading and not trying to control: 
this is the supreme virtue. 



We join spokes together in a wheel, 
but it is the center hole 
that makes the wagon move. 

We shape clay into a pot, 
but it is the emptiness inside 
that holds whatever we want. 

We hammer wood for a house, 
but it is the inner space 
that makes it livable. 

We work with being, 

but non-being is what we use. 














12 


Colors blind the eye. 

Sounds deafen the ear. 

Flavors numb the taste. 

Thoughts weaken the mind. 
Desires wither the heart. 

The Master observes the world 
but trusts his inner vision. 

He allows things to come and go. 
His heart is open as the sky. 


13 


Success is as dangerous as failure. 

Hope is as hollow as fear. 

What does it mean that success is as dangerous as failure? 
Whether you go up the ladder or down it, 
your position is shaky. 

When you stand with your two feet on the ground, 
you will always keep your balance. 

What does it mean that hope is as hollow as fear? 

Hope and fear are both phantoms 
that arise from thinking of the self. 

When we don’t see the self as self, 
what do we have to fear? 

See the world as your self. 

Have faith in the way things are. 

Love the world as your self; 
then you can care for all things. 














14 


Look, and it can’t be seen. 

Listen, and it can’t be heard. 

Reach, and it can’t be grasped. 

Above, it isn’t bright. 

Below, it isn’t dark. 

Seamless, unnamable, 
it returns to the realm of nothing. 
Form that includes all forms, 
image without an image, 
subtle, beyond all conception. 

Approach it and there is no beginning; 
follow it and there is no end. 

You can’t know it, but you can be it, 
at ease in your own life. 

Just realize where you come from: 
this is the essence of wisdom. 


15 


The ancient Masters were profound and subtle. 
Their wisdom was unfathomable. 

There is no way to describe it; 

all we can describe is their appearance. 

They were careful 

as someone crossing an iced-over stream. 

Alert as a warrior in enemy territory. 

Courteous as a guest. 

Fluid as melting ice. 

Shapable as a block of wood. 

Receptive as a valley. 

Clear as a glass of water. 

Do you have the patience to wait 

till your mud settles and the water is clear? 

Can you remain unmoving 

till the right action arises by itself? 

The Master doesn’t seek fulfillment. 

Not seeking, not expecting, 

she is present, and can welcome all things. 














16 


Empty your mind of all thoughts. 

Let your heart be at peace. 

Watch the turmoil of beings, 
but contemplate their return. 

Each separate being in the universe 
returns to the common source. 

Returning to the source is serenity. 

If you don’t realize the source, 
you stumble in confusion and sorrow. 
When you realize where you come from, 
you naturally become tolerant, 
disinterested, amused, 
kindhearted as a grandmother, 
dignified as a king. 

Immersed in the wonder of the Tao, 
you can deal with whatever life brings you, 
and when death comes, you are ready. 


17 


When the Master governs, the people 
are hardly aware that he exists. 

Next best is a leader who is loved. 
Next, one who is feared. 

The worst is one who is despised. 

If you don’t trust the people, 
you make them untrustworthy. 

The Master doesn’t talk, he acts. 
When his work is done, 
the people say, "Amazing: 
we did it, all by ourselves!” 














18 


When the great Tao is forgotten, 
goodness and piety appear. 

When the body’s intelligence declines, 
cleverness and knowledge step forth. 
When there is no peace in the family, 
filial piety begins. 

When the country falls into chaos, 
patriotism is born. 


19 


Throw away holiness and wisdom, 
and people will be a hundred times happier. 
Throw away morality and justice, 
and people will do the right thing. 

Throw away industry and profit, 
and there won’t be any thieves. 

If these three aren’t enough, 
just stay at the center of the circle 
and let all things take their course. 















20 


Stop thinking, and end your problems. 

What difference between yes and no? 

What difference between success and failure? 
Must you value what others value, 
avoid what others avoid? 

How ridiculous! 

Other people are excited, 
as though they were at a parade. 

I alone don’t care, 

I alone am expressionless, 
like an infant before it can smile. 

Other people have what they need; 

I alone possess nothing. 

I alone drift about, 

like someone without a home. 

I am like an idiot, my mind is so empty. 

Other people are bright; 

I alone am dark. 

Other people are sharp; 

1 alone am dull. 

Other people have a purpose; 

I alone don’t know. 

I drift like a wave on the ocean, 

I blow as aimless as the wind. 

I am different from ordinary people. 

I drink from the Great Mother’s breasts. 


21 


The Master keeps her mind 
always at one with the Tao; 
that is what gives her her radiance. 

The Tao is ungraspable. 

How can her mind be at one with it? 
Because she doesn't cling to ideas. 

The Tao is dark and unfathomable. 
How can it make her radiant? 
Because she lets it. 

Since before time and space were, 
the Tao is. 

It is beyond is and is not . 

How do I know this is true? 

I look inside myself and see. 

















22 


If you want to become whole, 
let yourself be partial. 

If you want to become straight, 
let yourself be crooked. 

If you want to become full, 
let yourself be empty. 

If you want to be reborn, 
let yourself die. 

If you want to be given everything, 
give everything up. 

The Master, by residing in the Tao, 
sets an example tor all beings. 
Because he doesn’t display himself, 
people can see his light. 

Because he has nothing to prove, 
people can trust his words. 

Because he doesn’t know who he is, 
people recognize themselves in him. 
Because he has no goal in mind, 
everything he does succeeds. 

When the ancient Masters said, 

“If you want to be given everything, 
give everything up,” 
they weren’t using empty phrases. 
Only in being lived by the Tao 
can you be truly yourself. 


23 


Express yourself completely, 
then keep quiet. 

Be like the forces of nature: 

when it blows, there is only wind; 

when it rains, there is only rain; 

when the clouds pass, the sun shines through. 

If you open yourself to the Tao, 
you are at one with the Tao 
and you can embody it completely. 

If you open yourself to insight, 
you are at one with insight 
and you can use it completely. 

If you open yourself to loss, 

you are at one with loss 

and you can accept it completely. 

Open yourself to the Tao, 
then trust your natural responses; 
and everything will fall into place. 











24 


He who stands on tiptoe 
doesn’t stand firm. 

He who rushes ahead 
doesn’t go far. 

He who tries to shine 
dims his own light. 

He who defines himself 
can’t know who he really is. 

He who has power over others 
can’t empower himself. 

He who clings to his work 
will create nothing that endures. 

If you want to accord with the Tao, 
just do your job, then let go. 


25 


There was something formless and perfect 
before the universe was born. 

It is serene. Empty. 

Solitary. Unchanging. 

Infinite. Eternally present. 

It is the mother of the universe. 

For lack of a better name, 

I call it the Tao. 

It flows through all things, 
inside and outside, and returns 
to the origin of all things. 

The Tao is great. 

The universe is great. 

Earth is great. 

Man is great. 

These are the four great powers. 

Man follows the earth. 

Earth follows the universe. 

The universe follows the Tao. 

The Tao follows only itself. 













26 


The heavy is the root of the light. 

The unmoved is the source of all movement. 

Thus the Master travels all day 
without leaving home. 

However splendid the views, 
she stays serenely in herself 

Why should the lord of the country 
flit about like a fool? 

If you let yourself be blown to and fro, 
you lose touch with your root. 

If you let restlessness move you, 
you lose touch with who you are. 


_ 27 _ 

- 

A good traveler has no fixed plans 
and is not intent upon arriving. 

A good artist lets his intuition ,! 

lead him wherever it wants. 

A good scientist has freed himself of concepts 
and keeps his mind open to what is. 

Thus the Master is available to all people 
and doesn’t reject anyone. 

He is ready to use all situations 
and doesn’t waste anything. 

This is called embodying the light. 

What is a good man but a bad man’s teacher? 

What is a bad man but a good man’s job? 

If you don’t understand this, you will get lost, 
however intelligent you are. 

It is the great secret. 



























28 


Know the male, 

yet keep to the female: 

receive the world in your arms. 

If you receive the world, 
the Tao will never leave you 
and you will be like a little child. 

Know the white, 

yet keep to the black: 

be a pattern for the world. 

If you are a pattern for the world, 
the Tao will be strong inside you 
and there will be nothing you can’t do. 

Know the personal, 

yet keep to the impersonal: 

accept the world as it is. 

If you accept the world, 

the Tao will be luminous inside you 

and you will return to your primal self. 

The world is formed from the void, 
like utensils from a block of wood. 

The Master knows the utensils, 
yet keeps to the block: 
thus she can use all things. 


29 


Do you want to improve the world? 

I don’t think it can be done. 

The world is sacred. 

It can’t be improved. 

If you tamper with it, you’ll ruin it. 

If you treat it like an object, you’ll lose it. 

There is a time for being ahead, 
a time for being behind; 
a time for being in motion, 
a time for being at rest; 
a time for being vigorous, 
a time for being exhausted; 
a time for being safe, 
a time for being in danger. 

The Master sees things as they are, 
without trying to control them. 

She lets them go their own way, 
and resides at the center of the circle. 













30 


Whoever relies on the Tao in governing men 
doesn’t try to force issues 
or defeat enemies by force of arms. 

For every force there is a counterforce. 
Violence, even well intentioned, 
always rebounds upon oneself. 

The Master does his job 
and then stops. 

He understands that the universe 
is forever out of control, 
and that trying to dominate events 
goes against the current of the Tao. 

Because he believes in himself, 
he doesn’t try to convince others. 

Because he is content with himself, 
he doesn’t need others’ approval. 

Because he accepts himself, 
the whole world accepts him. 


31 


Weapons are the tools of violence; 
all decent men detest them. 

Weapons are the tools of fear; 
a decent man will avoid them 
except in the direst necessity 
and, if compelled, will use them 
only with the utmost restraint. 

Peace is his highest value. 

If the peace has been shattered, 
how can he be content? 

His enemies are not demons, 
but human beings like himself. 

He doesn’t wish them personal harm. 
Nor does he rejoice in victory. 

How could he rejoice in victory 
and delight in the slaughter of men? 

He enters a battle gravely, 

with sorrow and with great compassion, 

as if he were attending a funeral. 













32 


The Tao can’t be perceived, 

Smaller than an electron, 
it contains uncountable galaxies. 

If powerful men and women 
could remain centered in the Tao, 
all things would be in harmony. 

The world would become a paradise. 

All people would be at peace, 

and the law would be written in their hearts. 

When you have names and forms, 
know that they are provisional. 

When you have institutions, 
know where their functions should end. 
Knowing when to stop, 
you can avoid any danger. 

All things end in the Tao 
as rivers flow into the sea. 


33 


Knowing others is intelligence; 
knowing yourself is true wisdom. 
Mastering others is strength; 
mastering yourself is true power. 

If you realize that you have enough, 
you are truly rich. 

If you stay in the center 

and embrace death with your whole heart, 

you will endure forever. 



















34 


The great Tao flows everywhere. 
All things are born from it, 
yet it doesn’t create them. 

It pours itself into its work, 
yet it makes no claim. 

It nourishes infinite worlds, 
yet it doesn’t hold on to them. 
Since it is merged with all things 
and hidden in their hearts, 
it can be called humble. 

Since all things vanish into it 
and it alone endures, 
it can be called great. 

It isn’t aware of its greatness; 
thus it is truly great. 


35 


She who is centered in the Tao 

can go where she wishes, without danger. 

She perceives the universal harmony, 

even amid great pain, 

because she has found peace in her heart. 

Music or the smell of good cooking 
may make people stop and enjoy. 

But words that point to the Tao 
seem monotonous and without flavor. 

When you look for it, there is nothing to see. 
When you listen for it, there is nothing to hear. 
When you use it, it is inexhaustible. 












36 


If you want to shrink something, 
you must first allow it to expand. 

If you want to get rid of something, 
you must first allow it to flourish. 

If you want to take something, 
you must first allow it to be given. 
This is called the subtle perception 
of the way things are. 

The soft overcomes the hard. 

The slow overcomes the fast. 

Let your workings remain a mystery. 
Just show people the results. 


37 . 


The Tao never does anything, 
yet through it all things are done. 

If powerful men and women 
could center themselves in it, 
the whole world would be transformed 
by itself, in its natural rhythms. 

People would be content 
with their simple, everyday lives, 
in harmony, and free of desire. 

When there is no desire, 
all things are at peace. 













38 


The Master doesn’t try to be powerful; 
thus he is truly powerful. 

The ordinary man keeps reaching for power; 
thus he never has enough. 

The Master does nothing, 
yet he leaves nothing undone. 

The ordinary man is always doing things, 
yet many more are left to be done. 

The kind man does something, 
yet something remains undone. 

The just man does something, 
and leaves many things to be done. 

The moral man does something, 

and when no one responds 

he rolls up his sleeves and uses force. 

When the Tao is lost, there is goodness. 
When goodness is lost, there is morality. 
When morality is lost, there is ritual. 

Ritual is the husk of true faith, 
the beginning of chaos. 

Therefore the Master concerns himself 
with the depths and not the surface, 
with the fruit and not the flower. 

He has no will of his own. 

He dwells in reality, 
and lets all illusions go. 


39 


In harmony with the Tao, 
the sky is clear and spacious, 
the earth is solid and full, 
all creatures flourish together, 
content with the way they are, 
endlessly repeating themselves, 
endlessly renewed. 

When man interferes with the Tao, 
the sky becomes filthy, 
the earth becomes depleted, 
the equilibrium crumbles, 
creatures become extinct. 

The Master views the parts with compassion, 
because he understands the whole. 

His constant practice is humility. 

He doesn’t glitter like a jewel 

but lets himself be shaped by the Tao, 

as rugged and common as a stone. 












40 


Return is the movement of the Tao. 
Yielding is the way of the Tao. 


All things are born of being. 
Being is born of non-being. 


41 


When a superior man hears of the Tao, 
he immediately begins to embody it. 
When an average man hears of the Tao, 
he half believes it, half doubts it. 

When a foolish man hears of the Tao, 
he laughs out loud. 

If he didn’t laugh, 
it wouldn’t be the Tao. 

Thus it is said: 

The path into the light seems dark, 

the path forward seems to go back, 

the direct path seems long, 

true power seems weak, 

true purity seems tarnished, 

true steadfastness seems changeable, 

true clarity seems obscure, 

the greatest art seems unsophisticated, 

the greatest love seems indifferent, 

the greatest wisdom seems childish. 

The Tao is nowhere to be found. 

Yet it nourishes and completes ail things. 














42 


The Tao gives birth to One. 

One gives birth to Two. 

Two gives birth to Three. 

Three gives birth to all things. 

All things have their backs to the female 
and stand facing the male. 

When male and female combine, 
all things achieve harmony. 

Ordinary men hate solitude. 

But the Master makes use of it, 
embracing his aloneness, realizing 
he is one with the whole universe. 


I 





43 


The gentlest thing in the world 
overcomes the hardest thing in the world. 
That which has no substance 
enters where there is no space. 

This shows the value of non-action. 

Teaching without words, 
performing without actions: 
that is the Master’s way. 




















44 


Fame or integrity: which is more important? 
Money or happiness: which is more valuable? 
Success or failure: which is more destructive? 

If you look to others for fulfillment, 
you will never truly be fulfilled. 

If your happiness depends on money, 
you will never be happy with yourself 

Be content with what you have; 
rejoice in the way things are. 

When you realize there is nothing lacking, 
the whole world belongs to you. 


45 


True perfection seems imperfect, 
yet it is perfectly itself. 

True fullness seems empty, 
yet it is fully present. 

True straightness seems crooked. 
True wisdom seems foolish. 

True art seems artless. 

The Master allows things to happen. 
She shapes events as they come. 

She steps out of the way 
and lets the Tao speak for itself. 













46 


When a country is in harmony with the Tao, 
the factories make trucks and tractors. 

When a country goes counter to the Tao, 
warheads are stockpiled outside the cities. 

There is no greater illusion than fear, 

no greater wrong than preparing to defend yourself, 

no greater misfortune than having an enemy. 

Whoever can see through all fear 
will always be safe. 


47 . 


Without opening your door, 
you can open your heart to the world. 
Without looking out your window, 
you can see the essence of the Tao. 

The more you know, 
the less you understand. 

The Master arrives without leaving, 
sees the light without looking, 
achieves without doing a thing. 













48 


In the pursuit of knowledge, 
every day something is added. 

In the practice of the Tao, 
every day something is dropped. 

Less and less do you need to force things, 
until finally you arrive at non-action. 
When nothing is done, 
nothing is left undone. 

True mastery can be gained 
by letting things go their own way. 

It can’t be gained by interfering. 


49 


The Master has no mind of her own. 

She works with the mind of the people. 

She is good to people who are good. 

She is also good to people who aren’t good. 
This is true goodness. 

She trusts people who are trustworthy. 

She also trusts people who aren't trustworthy. 
This is true trust. 

The Master's mind is like space. 

People don’t understand her. 

They look to her and wait. 

She treats them like her own children. 












50 


The Master gives himself up 
to whatever the moment brings. 

He knows that he is going to die, 
and he has nothing left to hold on to: 
no illusions in his mind, 
no resistances in his body. 

He doesn’t think about his actions; 
they flow from the core of his being. 
He holds nothing back from life; 
therefore he is ready for death, 
as a man is ready for sleep 
after a good day’s work. 


51 


Every being in the universe 
is an expression of the Tao. 

It springs into existence, 
unconscious, perfect, free, 
takes on a physical body, 
lets circumstances complete it. 

That is why every being 
spontaneously honors the Tao. 

The Tao gives birth to all beings, 

nourishes them, maintains them, 

cares for them, comforts them, protects them, 

takes them back to itself, 

creating without possessing, 

acting without expecting, 

guiding without interfering. 

That is why love of the Tao 
is in the very nature of things. 



















52 


In the beginning was the Tao. 

All things issue from it; 
all things return to it. 

To find the origin, 

trace back the manifestations. 

When you recognize the children 
and find the mother, 
you will be free of sorrow. 

If you close your mind in judgments 
and traffic with desires, 
your heart will be troubled. 

If you keep your mind from judging 
and aren’t led by the senses, 
your heart will find peace. 

Seeing into darkness is clarity. 
Knowing how to yield is strength. 
Use your own light 
and return to the source of light. 
This is called practicing eternity. 


53 


The great Way is easy, 

yet people prefer the side paths. 

Be aware when things are out of balance. 

Stay centered within the Tao. 

When rich speculators prosper 
while farmers lose their land; 
when government officials spend money 
on weapons instead of cures; 

when the upper class is extravagant and irresponsible 
while the poor have nowhere to turn— 
all this is robbery and chaos. 

It is not in keeping with the Tao. 













54 


Whoever is planted in the Tao 
will not be rooted up. 

Whoever embraces the Tao 
will not slip away. 

Her name will be held in honor 
from generation to generation. 

Let the Tao be present in your life 
and you will become genuine. 

Let it be present in your family 
and your family will flourish. 

Let it be present in your country 
and your country will be an example 
to all countries in the world. 

Let it be present in the universe 
and the universe will sing. 

How do I know this is true? 

By looking inside myself. 


55 


He who is in harmony with the Tao 
is like a newborn child. 

Its bones are soft, its muscles are weak, 
but its grip is powerful. 

It doesn't know about the union 
of male and female, 
yet its penis can stand erect, 
so intense is its vital power. 

It can scream its head off all day, 
yet it never becomes hoarse, 
so complete is its harmony. 

The Master’s power is like this. 

He lets all things come and go 
effortlessly, without desire. 

He never expects results; 
thus he is never disappointed. 

He is never disappointed; 
thus his spirit never grows old. 












56 


Those who know don’t talk. 

Those who talk don’t know. 

Close your mouth, 
block off your senses, 
blunt your sharpness, 
untie your knots, 
soften your glare, 
settle your dust. 

This is the primal identity. 

Be like the Tao. 

It can’t be approached or withdrawn from, 

benefited or harmed, 

honored or brought into disgrace. 

It gives itself up continually. 

That is why it endures. 


57 . 


If you want to be a great leader, 
you must learn to follow the Tao. 

Stop trying to control. 

Let go of fixed plans and concepts, 
and the world will govern itself. 

The more prohibitions you have, 
the less virtuous people will be. 

The more weapons you have, 
the less secure people will be. 

The more subsidies you have, 
the less self-reliant people will be. 

Therefore the Master says: 

I let go of the law, 

and people become honest. 

I let go of economics, 

and people become prosperous. 

I let go of religion, 
and people become serene. 

I let go of all desire for the common good, 
and the good becomes common as grass. 













58 


If a country is governed with tolerance, 
the people are comfortable and honest. 

If a country is governed with repression, 
the people are depressed and crafty. 

When the will to power is in charge, 

the higher the ideals, the lower the results. 

Try to make people happy, 

and you lay the groundwork for misery. 

Try to make people moral, 

and you lay the groundwork for vice. 

Thus the Master is content 
to serve as an example 
and not to impose her will. 

She is pointed, but doesn’t pierce. 
Straightforward, but supple. 

Radiant, but easy on the eyes. 


59 


For governing a country well 

there is nothing better than moderation. 

The mark of a moderate man 
is freedom from his own ideas. 

Tolerant like the sky, 
all-pervading like sunlight, 
firm like a mountain, 
supple like a tree in the wind, 
he has no destination in view 
and makes use of anything 
life happens to bring his way. 

Nothing is impossible for him. 

Because he has let go, 

he can care for the people’s welfare 

as a mother cares for her child. 












60 


Governing a large country 
is like frying a small fish. 

You spoil it with too much poking. 

Center your country in the Tao 
and evil will have no power. 

Not that it isn’t there, 

but you’ll be able to step out of its way. 

Give evil nothing to oppose 
and it will disappear by itself. 


61 


When a country obtains great power, 

it becomes like the sea: 

all streams run downward into it. 

The more powerful it grows, 
the greater the need for humility. 

Humility means trusting the Tao, 
thus never needing to be defensive. 

A great nation is like a great man: 

When he makes a mistake, he realizes it. 
Having realized it, he admits it. 

Having admitted it, he corrects it. 

He considers those who point out his faults 
as his most benevolent teachers. 

He thinks of his enemy 

as the shadow that he himself casts. 

If a nation is centered in the Tao, 

if it nourishes its own people 

and doesn’t meddle in the affairs of others, 

it will be a light to all nations in the world. 





















62 


The Tao is the center of the universe, 
the good man’s treasure, 
the bad man’s refuge. 

Honors can be bought with fine words, 
respect can be won with good deeds; 
but the Tao is beyond all value, 
and no one can achieve it. 

Thus, when a new leader is chosen, 

don’t offer to help him 

with your wealth or your expertise. 

Offer instead 

to teach him about the Tao. 

Why did the ancient Masters esteem the Tao? 
Because, being one with the Tao, 
when you seek, you find; 

and when you make a mistake, you are forgiven. 
That is why everybody loves it. 


63 


Act without doing; 
work without effort. 

Think of the small as large 
and the few as many. 

Confront the difficult 
while it is still easy; 
accomplish the great task 
by a series of small acts. 

The Master never reaches for the great; 
thus she achieves greatness. 

When she runs into a difficulty, 
she stops and gives herself to it. 

She doesn’t cling to her own comfort; 
thus problems are no problem for her. 

















64 


What is rooted is easy to nourish. 
What is recent is easy to correct. 

What is brittle is easy to break. 

What is small is easy to scatter. 

Prevent trouble before it arises. 

Put things in order before they exist. 
The giant pine tree 
grows from a tiny sprout. 

The journey of a thousand miles 
starts from beneath your feet. 

Rushing into action, you fail. 

Trying to grasp things, you lose them. 
Forcing a project to completion, 
you ruin what was almost ripe. 

Therefore the Master takes action 
by letting things take their course. 

He remains as calm 

at the end as at the beginning. 

He has nothing, 

thus has nothing to lose. 

What he desires is non-desire; 
what he learns is to unlearn. 

He simply reminds people 
of who they have always been. 

He cares about nothing but the Tao. 
Thus he can care for all things. 


65 


The ancient Masters 

didn’t try to educate the people, 

but kindly taught them to not-know. 

When they think that they know the answers, 
people are difficult to guide. 

When they know that they don’t know, 
people can find their own way. 

Jf you want to learn how to govern, 
avoid being clever or rich. 

The simplest pattern is the clearest. 

Content with an ordinary life, 
you can show all people the way 
back to their own true nature. 












66 


All streams flow to the sea 
because it is lower than they are. 
Humility gives it its power. 

If you want to govern the people, 
you must place yourself below them. 
If you want to lead the people, 
you must learn how to follow them. 

The Master is above the people, 
and no one feels oppressed. 

She goes ahead of the people, 
and no one feels manipulated. 

The whole world is grateful to her. 
Because she competes with no one, 
no one can compete with her. 


67 


Some say that my teaching is nonsense. 

Others call it lofty but impractical. 

But to those who have looked inside themselves, 
this nonsense makes perfect sense. 

And to those who put it into practice, 
this loftiness has roots that go deep. 

I have just three things to teach: 
simplicity, patience, compassion. 

These three are your greatest treasures. 

Simple in actions and in thoughts, 
you return to the source of being. 

Patient with both friends and enemies, 
you accord with the way things are. 
Compassionate toward yourself, 
you reconcile all beings in the world. 















68 


The best athlete 

wants his opponent at his best. 

The best general 

enters the mind of his enemy. 

The best businessman 
serves the communal good. 

The best leader 

follows the will of the people. 

All of them embody 

the virtue of non-competition. 

Not that they don’t love to compete, 
but they do it in the spirit of play. 

In this they are like children 
and in harmony with the Tao. 


69 


The generals have a saying: 

“Rather than make the first move 
it is better to wait and see. 

Rather than advance an inch 
it is better to retreat a yard.” 

This is called 

going forward without advancing, 
pushing back without using weapons. 

There is no greater misfortune 
than underestimating your enemy. 
Underestimating your enemy 
means thinking that he is evil. 

Thus you destroy your three treasures 
and become an enemy yourself. 

When two great forces oppose each other, 

the victory will go 

to the one that knows how to yield. 













70 


My teachings are easy to understand 
and easy to put into practice. 

Yet your intellect will never grasp them, 
and if you try to practice them, you’ll fail. 

My teachings are older than the world. 
How can you grasp their meaning? 

If you want to know me, 
look inside your heart. 


71 


Not-knowing is true knowledge. 
Presuming to know is a disease. 

First realize that you are sick; 
then you can move toward health. 

The Master is her own physician. 

She has healed herself of all knowing. 
Thus she is truly whole. 
















72 


When they lose their sense of awe, 
people turn to religion. 

When they no longer trust themselves, 
they begin to depend upon authority. 

Therefore the Master steps back 
so that people won’t be confused. 

He teaches without a teaching, 

so that people will have nothing to learn. 


73 


The Tao is always at ease. 

It overcomes without competing, 
answers without speaking a word, 
arrives without being summoned, 
accomplishes without a plan. 

Its net covers the whole universe. 
And though its meshes are wide, 
it doesn’t let a thing slip through. 















74 


If you realize that all things change, 
there is nothing you will try to hold on to. 

If you aren’t afraid of dying, 
there is nothing you can’t achieve. 

Trying to control the future 

is like trying to take the master carpenter’s place. 
When you handle the master carpenter’s tools, 
chances are that you’ll cut yourself. 


75 


When taxes are too high, 
people go hungry. 

When the government is too intrusive, 
people lose their spirit. 

Act for the people’s benefit. 

Trust them; leave them alone. 

















76 


Men are born soft and supple; 
dead, they are stiff and hard. 

Plants are born tender and pliant; 
dead, they are brittle and dry. 

Thus whoever is stiff and inflexible 
is a disciple of death. 

Whoever is soft and yielding 
is a disciple of life. 

The hard and stiff will be broken. 
The soft and supple will prevail. 


77 . 


As it acts in the world, the Tao 
is like the bending of a bow. 

The top is bent downward; 
the bottom is bent up. 

It adjusts excess and deficiency 
so that there is perfect balance. 

It takes from what is too much 
and gives to what isn’t enough. 

Those who try to control, 

who use force to protect their power, 

go against the direction of the Tao. 

They take from those who don’t have enough 
and give to those who have far too much. 

The Master can keep giving 
because there is no end to her wealth. 

She acts without expectation, 
succeeds without taking credit, 
and doesn’t think that she is better 
than anyone else. 



















78 


Nothing in the world 

is as soft and yielding as water. 

Yet for dissolving the hard and inflexible, 
nothing can surpass it. 

The soft overcomes the hard; 
the gentle overcomes the rigid. 

Everyone knows this is true, 
but few can put it into practice. 

Therefore the Master remains 
serene in the midst of sorrow. 

Evil cannot enter his heart. 

Because he has given up helping, 
he is people’s greatest help. 


True words seem paradoxical. 


79 


Failure is an opportunity. 

If you blame someone else, 
there is no end to the blame. 

Therefore the Master 
fulfills her own obligations 
and corrects her own mistakes. 
She does what she needs to do 
and demands nothing of others. 



















80 


If a country is governed wisely, 
its inhabitants will be content. 

They enjoy the labor of their hands 
and don’t waste time inventing 
labor-saving machines. 

Since they dearly love their homes, 
they aren’t interested in travel. 

There may be a few wagons and boats, 
but these don’t go anywhere. 

There may be an arsenal of weapons, 
but nobody ever uses them. 

People enjoy their food, 
take pleasure in being with their families, 
spend weekends working in their gardens, 
delight in the doings of the neighborhood. 
And even though the next country is so close 
that people can hear its roosters crowing and 
its dogs barking, 
they are content to die of old age 
without ever having gone to see it. 


81 


True words aren’t eloquent; 
eloquent words aren’t true. 

Wise men don t need to prove their point; 
men who need to prove their point aren’t wise. 

The Master has no possessions. 

The more he does for others, 
the happier he is. 

The more he gives to others, 
the wealthier he is. 

The Tao nourishes by not forcing. 

By not dominating, the Master leads.