home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1994-06-10 | 93.1 KB | 2,399 lines |
- The Tao Teh King, Liber CLVII: THE EQUINOX Vol. III. No. VIII.
- ASCII VERSION
-
- January 18, 1990 e.v. original key entry by Soror OYAHBE, O.T.O.
- (British Columbia Branch) Camp TA-NECH, from the 1st edition by
- Thelema Publications and Soror Grimaud, 1975 e.v. First proofreading
- and edit to conform to text and format indication of the original
- typscript (1923/4, TS copy presented by Crowley to Lady Harris), with
- deletion of non-Crowley copyright material, 11/18/91 e.v. by Bill
- Heidrick --- could benefit from further proof reading.
-
- Copyright (c) O.T.O.
-
- O.T.O.
- P.O.Box 430
- Fairfax, CA 94978
- USA
-
- (415) 454-5176 ---- Messages only.
-
- Page designations in the TS original are here marked thus at the
- bottom: {page number}. Comments and descriptions are also set off by
- curly brackets {} Comments and notes not in the original are
- identified with the initials of the source: e.g. WEH note = Bill
- Heidrick note, etc.
-
- Soror Grimaud has designated this Liber as Equinox III, No. VIII,
- in posthumous interpretation of Crowley's intent.
- The endnotes from the TS have been collected to the page citation
- points. All footnotes have been moved up to the place in text indexed
- and set off in double wedge brackets, viz. <<note...>>
-
- LIMITED LICENSE
- Except for notations added to the history of modification, the text
- on this diskette down to the next row of asterisks must accompany all
- copies made of this file. In particular, this paragraph and the
- copyright notice are not to be deleted or changed on any copies or
- print-outs of this file. With these provisos, anyone may copy this
- file for personal use or research. Copies may be made for others at
- reasonable cost of copying and mailing only, no additional charges may
- be added.
-
- ************************************************************************
- THE TAO TEH KING
- (LIBER CLVII)
-
- A New Translation By
- KO YUEN
- (ALEISTER CROWLEY)
-
- THE EQUINOX (Volume III, No. VIII.)
- INTRODUCTION
-
-
- I bound myself to devote my life to Magick at Easter 1898, and
- received my first initiation on November 18 of that year.
- My friend and climbing companion, Oscar Eckenstein, gave me my
- first instructions in learning the control of the mind early in 1901
- in Mexico City. Shri Parananda, Solicitor General of Ceylon and an
- eminent writer upon and teacher of Yoga from the orthodox Shaivite
- standpoint, and Bhikkhu Ananda Metteya, the great English Adept, who
- was one of my earliest instructors in Magick and joined the Sangha in
- Burma in 1902, gave me my first groundings in mystical theory and
- practice. I spent some months of 1901 in Kandy, Ceylon, with the
- latter until success crowned my work.
- I also studied all varieties of Asiatic philosophy, especially
- with regard to the practical question of spiritual development, the
- Sufi doctrines, the Upanishads, the Sankhya, Vedanta, the Bagavad Gita
- and Purana, the Dhammapada, and many other classics, together with
- numerous writings on the Tantra and Yoga of such men as Patanjali,
- Vivekananda, etc. etc. Not a few of these teachings are as yet wholly
- unknown to scholars. I made the scope of {1} my studies as
- comprehensive as possible, omitting no school of thought however
- unimportant or repugnant.
- I made a critical examination of all these teachers in the light
- of my practical experiences. The physiological and psychological
- uniformity of mankind guaranteed that the diversity of expression
- concealed a unity of significance. This discovery, furthermore, was
- confirmed by reference to Jewish, Greek and Celtic traditions. One
- quintessential truth was common to all cults, from the Hebrides to the
- Yellow Sea, and even the main branches proved essentially identical.
- It was only the foliage that exhibited incompatibility.
- When I walked across China in 1905-6, I was fully armed and
- accoutred by the above qualifications to attack the
- till-then-insoluble problem of the Chinese conception of religious
- truth. Practical studies of the psychology of such Mongolians as I
- had met in my travels, had already suggested to me that their acentric
- conception of the universe might represent the correspondence in
- consciousness of their actual psychological characteristics. I was
- therefore prepared to examine the doctrines of their religious and {2}
- philosophical Masters without prejudice such as had always rendered
- nugatory the efforts of missionary sinologists and indeed all oriental
- scholars with the single exception of Rhys Davids. Until his time
- translators had invariably assumed, with absurd naivite, or more often
- arrogant bigotry, that a Chinese writer must either be putting forth a
- more or less distorted and degraded variation of some Christian
- conception, or utterly puerile absurdities. Even so great a man as
- Max Muller in his introduction to the Upanishads seems only half
- inclined to admit that the apparent triviality and folly of many
- passages in these so-called sacred writings might owe their appearance
- to our ignorance of the historical and religious circumstances, a
- knowledge of which would render them intelligible.
- During my solitary wanderings among the mountainous wastes of Yun
- Nan, the spiritual atmosphere of China penetrated my consciousness,
- thanks to the absence of any intellectual impertinences from the organ
- of knowledge. The TAO TEH KING revealed its simplicity and sublimity
- to my soul, little by little, as the conditions of my physical life,
- no less than of my spiritual, penetrated the {3} sanctuaries of my
- spirit. The philosophy of Lao Tze communicated itself to me, in
- despite of the persistent efforts of my mind to compel it to conform
- with my preconceived notions of what the text must mean. This process,
- having thus taken root in my innermost intuition during those
- tremendous months of wandering across Yun Nan, grew continually
- throughout succeeding years. Whenever I found myself able once more
- to withdraw myself from the dissipations and distractions which
- contact with civilisation forces upon one, no matter how vigorously he
- may struggle against their insolence, to the sacred solitude of the
- desert, whether among the sierras of Spain, or the sands of the
- Sahara, I found that the philosophy of Lao Tze resumed its sway upon
- my soul, subtler and stronger on each successive occasion.
- But neither Europe nor Africa can show such desolation as
- America. The proudest, stubbornest, bitterest peasant of deserted
- Spain; the most primitive and superstitious Arab of the remotest
- oases, these are a little more than kin and never less than kind at
- their worst; whereas in the United States one is almost always
- conscious of an instinctive lack of sympathy and understanding with
- even the {4} most charming and cultured people. It was therefore
- during my exile in America that the doctrines of Lao Tze developed
- most rapidly in my soul, even forcing their way outwards until I felt
- it imperious, nay inevitable, to express them in terms of conscious
- thought.
- No sooner had this resolve taken possession of me than I realized
- that the task approximated to impossibility. His very simplest ideas,
- the primitive elements of his thought, had no true correspondences in
- any European terminology. The very first word "Tao" presented a
- completely insoluble problem. It had been translated "Reason," the
- "Way," "TO ON." None of these covey the faintest conception of the
- Tao.
- The Tao is "Reason" in this sense, that the substance of things
- may be in part apprehended as being that necessary relation between
- the elements of thought which determines the laws of reason. In other
- words, the only reality is that which compels us to connect the
- various forms of illusion as we do. It is thus evidently unknowable,
- and expressible neither by speech nor by silence. All that we can
- know about it is that there is inherent in it a {5} power (which,
- however, is not itself) by virtue whereof all beings appear in forms
- congruous with the nature of necessity.
- The Tao is also the Way -- in the following sense. Nothing
- exists except as a relation with other similarly postulated ideas.
- Nothing can be known in itself, but only as one of the participants in
- a series of events. Reality is therefore in the motion, not in the
- things moved. We cannot apprehend anything except as one postulated
- element of an observed impression of change. We may express this in
- other terms as follows. Our knowledge of anything is in reality the
- sum of our observations of its successive movements, that is to say,
- of its path from event to event. In this sense the Tao may be
- translated as the Way. It is not a thing in itself in the sense of
- being an object susceptible of apprehension by sense or mind. It is
- not the cause of any thing, but the category underlying all existence
- or event, and therefore true and real as they are illusory, being
- merely landmarks invented for convenience in describing our
- experiences. The Tao possesses no power to cause anything to exist or
- to take place. Yet our experience when analyzed tells {6} us that the
- only reality of which we may be sure is this path or Way which resumes
- the whole of our knowledge.
- As for TO ON, which superficially might seem the best translation
- of Tao as described in the text, it is the most misleading of the
- three. For TO ON possesses an extensive connotation implying a whole
- system of Platonic concepts than which nothing can be more alien to
- the essential quality of the Tao. Tao is neither being nor not-being
- in any sense which Europe could understand. It is neither existence
- nor a condition or form of existence. At the same time, TO MH ON
- gives no idea of Tao. Tao is altogether alien to all that class of
- thought. From its connection with "that principle which necessarily
- underlies the fact that events occur" one might suppose that the
- "Becoming" of Heraclitus might assist us to describe the Tao. But the
- Tao is not a principle at all of that kind. To understand it requires
- an altogether different state of mind to any with which European
- thinkers in general are familiar. It is necessary to pursue
- unflinchingly the path of spiritual development on the lines indicated
- by the Sufis, the Hindus and the Buddhists; {7} and having reached the
- Trance called Nerodha-Sammapati, in which are destroyed all forms
- soever of consciousness, there appears in that abyss of annihilation
- the germ of an entirely new type of idea, whose principal
- characteristic is this: that the entire concatention of one's previous
- experiences and conceptions could not have happened at all, save by
- virtue of this indescribable necessity.
- I am only too painfully aware that the above exposition is faulty
- in every respect. In particular it presupposes in the reader
- considerable familiarity with the substance, thus practically begging
- the question. It must also prove almost wholly unintelligible to the
- average reader, him in fact whom I especially aim to interest. For
- his sake I will try to elucidate the matter by an analogy. Consider
- electricity. It would be absurd to say that electricity is any of the
- phenomena by which we know it. We take refuge in the petitio
- principii of saying that electricity is that form of energy which is
- the principle cause of such and such phenomena. Suppose now that we
- eliminate this idea as evidently illogical. What remains? We must
- not hastily answer, "Nothing {8} remains." There is some thing
- inherent in the nature of consciousness, reason, perception,
- sensation, and of the universe of which they inform us, which is
- responsible for the fact that we observe these phenomena and not
- others; that we reflect upon them as we do, and not otherwise. But
- even deeper than this, part of the reality of the inscrutable energy
- which determines the form of our experience, consists in determining
- that experience should take place at all. It should be clear that
- this has nothing to do with any of the Platonic conceptions of the
- nature of things.
- The least abject asset in the intellectual bankruptcy of European
- thought is the Hebrew Qabalah. Properly understood it is a system of
- symbolism infinitely elastic, assuming no axioms, postulating no
- principles, asserting no theorems, and therefore adaptable, if managed
- adroitly, to describe any conceivable doctrine. It has been my
- continual study since 1898, and I have found it of infinite value in
- the study of the Tao Teh King. By its aid I was able to attribute the
- ideas of Lao Tze to an order with which I was exceedingly familiar,
- and whose practical worth I had repeatedly proved by using {9} it as
- the basis of the analysis and classification of all Aryan and Semitic
- religions and philosophies. Despite the essential difficulty of
- correlating the ideas of Lao Tze with any others, the persistent
- application of the Qabalistic keys eventually unlocked his
- treasure-house. I was able to explain to myself his teachings in
- terms of familiar systems.
- This achievement broke the back of my Sphinx. Having once reduce
- Lao Tze to Qabalistic form, it was easy to translate the result into
- the language of philosophy. I had already done much to create a new
- language based on English with the assistance of a few technical terms
- borrowed from Asia, and above all by the use of a novel conception of
- the idea of Number and algebraic and arithmetical proceedings, to
- convey the results of spiritual experience to intelligent students.
- It is therefore not altogether without confidence that I present
- this translation of the Tao Teh King to the public. I hope and
- believe that careful study of the text, as elucidated by my
- commentary, will enable serious aspirants to the hidden wisdom to
- understand with fair accuracy what Lao Tze taught. It must however be
- laid to {10} heart that the essence of his system will inevitably
- elude intellectual apprehension unless it be illuminated from above by
- actual living experience of the truth. Such experience is only to be
- attained by unswerving application to the practices which he
- advocates. Nor must the aspirant content himself with the mere
- attainment of spiritual enlightenment, however sublime. All such
- achievements are barren unless they be regarded as the means rather
- than the end of spiritual progress, and allowed to infiltrate every
- detail of the life, not only of the spirit, but of the senses. The
- Tao can never be known until it interpret the most trivial actions of
- everyday routine. It is a fatal mistake to discriminate between the
- spiritual importance of meditation and playing golf. To do so is to
- create an internal conflict. "Let there be no difference made among
- you between any one thing & any other thing; for thereby there cometh
- hurt."<<WEH NOTE: Quote from AL I,22 corrected slightly.>> He who
- knows the Tao knows it to be the source of all things soever; the most
- exalted spiritual ecstasy and the most trivial internal impression are
- from our point of view equally illusions, worthless masks, which hide,
- with grotesque painted pasteboard false and lifeless, {11} the living
- face of truth. Yet, from another point of view, they are equally
- expressions of the ecstatic genius of truth -- natural images of the
- reaction between the essence of onesself and one's particular
- environment at the moment of their occurrence. They are equally
- tokens of the Tao, by whom, in whom, and of whom, they are. To value
- them for themselves is deny the Tao and to be lost in delusion. To
- despise them is to deny the omnipresence of the Tao, and to suffer the
- illusion of sorrow. To discriminate between them is to set up the
- accursed dyad, to permit the insanity of intellect, to overwhelm the
- intuition of truth, and to create civil war in the consciousness.
- From 1908 to 1918, the Tao Teh King was my continual study. I
- constantly recommended it to my friends as the supreme masterpiece of
- initiated wisdom, and I was as constantly disappointed when they
- declared that it did not impress them, especially as my preliminary
- descriptions of the book had aroused their keenest interest. I thus
- came to see that the fault lay with Legge's translation, and I felt
- myself impelled to undertake the {12} task of presenting Lao Tze in
- language informed by the sympathetic understanding which initiation
- and spiritual experience had conferred on me. During my Great Magical
- Retirement on Aesopus Island in the Hudson River during the summer of
- 1918, I set myself to this work, but I discovered immediately that I
- was totally incompetent. I therefore appealed to an Adept named
- Amalantrah, with whom I was at that time in almost daily
- communion.<<WEH NOTE: Amalantrah appears to be an astral being.
- Crowley's Amalantrah working with Rodey Minor and others does not
- settle the question of Amalantrah being physical or incorporeal. This
- consultation took the form of ritual questioning of a spirit, and
- attendant visions of which the "codex" would be one.>> He came readily
- to my aid and exhibited to me a codex of the original, which conveyed
- to me with absolute certitude the exact significance of the text. I
- was able to divine without hesitation or doubt the precise manner in
- which Legge had been deceived. He had translated the Chinese with
- singular fidelity, yet in almost every verse the interpretation was
- altogether misleading. There was no need to refer to the text from
- the point of view of scholarship. I had merely to paraphrase his
- translation in the light of actual knowledge of the true significance
- of the terms employed. Anyone who cares to take the trouble to
- compare the two versions will be astounded to see how slight a
- remodeling of a paragraph is sufficient to disperse the obstinate {13}
- obscurity of prejudice, and let loose a fountain and a flood of living
- light, to kindle the gnarled prose of stolid scholarship into the
- burgeoning blossom of lyrical flame.<<WEH NOTE: In other words,
- Crowley used meditation and visions to attain a mental unity with the
- text and Lao Tzu's mind at the point of the original writing. This may
- account for Crowley's strange way of identifying Ko Yuen (Lao-Tzu) as
- himself in his Liber XXI and elsewhere. This also sheds light on
- Crowley's concept of incarnation from past lives -- not necessarily
- literally so, but incarnation of the spirit of the former living
- being. This state of mental unity with an author or sage is not
- uncommon in the case of students who hand copy works by others. One
- comes to feel what the next sentence will be. There is a natural sense
- of being the one writing it, and criticisms may arise in the mind of
- the form: "Now why did I write that ... I should have written ..."
- --- this tendency is valuable for insight, but must be checked in
- making true copies. It is properly expressed by calligraphy and by
- careful notes and commentaries.>>
-
- I completed my translation within three days, but during the last
- five years I have constantly reconsidered every sentence. The
- manuscript has been lent to a number of friends<<WEH NOTE: Lady Harris
- would be one of these. Hence, there may be other typescripts beside
- the one used for this proof- reading, with later alterations by
- Crowley.>>, scholars who have commended my work, and aspirants who
- have appreciated its adequacy to present the spirit of the Master's
- teaching. Those who had been disappointed with Legge's version were
- enthusiastic about mine. This circumstance is in itself sufficient to
- assure me that Love's labour has not been lost, and to fill me with
- enthusiastic confidence that the present publication will abundantly
- contribute to the fulfillment of my True Will for which I came to
- earth, and wring labour and sorrow to the utmost of which humanity is
- capable, the Will to open the portals of spiritual attainment to my
- fellow men, and bring them to the enjoyment of that realisation of
- Truth, beneath all veils of temporal falsehood, which has enlightened
- mine eyes and filled my mouth with song.
-
-
-
- THE
- TAO
- TEH
- KING.
-
-
- <<WEH NOTE: Pagination re-starts from this point in the TS. The notes
- were collected to the back of the TS under the heading "NOTES",
- beginning as page 88, but have been moved up to citation page in this
- version. Chapter numbers have been placed above chapter titles, but
- this positional distinction is not made in the TS.>>
-
-
- LIBER
- LXXXI
-
- THE TAO TEH KING
- a new translation
- by
- KO YUEN.
-
- CHAPTER I
- THE NATURE OF THE TAO.
-
-
- 1. The Tao-Path is not the All-Tao. The Name is not the Thing
- named.<<Tao parallels Pleroma, Shiva, Jod, etc. Teh parallels Logos,
- Sakti, He, etc. But the conception of Laotze unites all these at
- their highest. The best parallel is given in Liber CCXX, Caps. I. and
- II., where Hadit is Tao and Nuit, Teh -- (Yet these are in certain
- aspects interchanged!) The point of this paragraph is to make
- discrimination or definition, not to assert the superiority of either
- conception. The illusion of any such preference would depend on the
- Grade of Initiation of a Student. A Magus 9 Degree = 2 Square of A.'.
- A.'. would doubtless esteem the Path of "Becoming" as his Absolute,
- for the law of his Grade is Change (see Liber I. vel Magi.) But -- who
- knows? -- an ipsissimus 10 Degree = 1 Square might find a conception
- to transcend even this. For instance, one might interpret this first
- paragraph as saying that Becoming is not Tao, but that Tao is a Being
- whose nature is Becoming. Matter and Motion cannot exist separately.
- The reader should regard every verse of this Book as a text worth of
- the most intense and prolonged meditation. He will not understand the
- Book thoroughly until he has wrought his mind into its proper shape in
- the great Forge of Samadhi.>>
-
- 2. Unmanifested, it is the Secret Father of
- ########## #### ####
- Heaven ########## and Earth #### ####
- ########## #### ####;
-
- manifested, it is their Mother.<<This doctrine is the initiated teaching
- to hint at which priests invented legends of parthenogenesis. ---{WEH
- NOTE: This footnote includes the diagram of the Trigrams on the Tree of
- Life, but the diagram has been moved to the next page for reasons of
- space.}>>
-
- 3. To understand this Mystery, one must be fulfilling one's will,<<In a
- moral state, therefore, without desire, frictionless.>> and if one is not
- thus free, one will but gain a smattering of it.
-
- 4. The Tao is one, and the Teh but a phase thereof. The abyss of this
- Mystery is the Portal of Serpent-Wonder.<<Cf. Berashith for the identity
- of the phases of "O Degree" and "something." Serpent-Wonder refers to
- the Magical Force called Kundalini.>>
-
-
-
-
- {WEH NOTE: Footnote #2 above, extended here. In the original each of the
- eleven places is enclosed in a circle for one of the ten Sephiroth and
- Da'at. This chart presents problems. Crowley did not properly draw the
- trigrams, but mostly with unbroken lines. He also appears to have
- written in the wrong names for some of the Trigrams. These difficulties
- have been corrected by reference to the diagram Crowley made on the blank
- page preceding the table of content in his copy of the Legge Yi King.
- See OTO NEWSLETTER, V. I, No. 3, p. 15.}
-
- The Tao
- .
-
- The Teh, The Tao,
- source of the Mother source of the Father
- #### #### ##########
-
-
-
-
- Heaven
- ##########
- ##########
- ##########
- Ch'ien
-
- #### #### {had #### #### Water
- Fire #### #### Li, this ########## Tui {water
- ########## is Chen} ########## usually
- is K'an}
- Sun
- ########## {had Chen,
- #### #### this is Li}
- ##########
-
-
- ########## ##########
- Air ########## Sun #### #### Earth
- #### #### #### #### Ken
-
- Moon
- #### ####
- ########## K'an
- #### ####
-
-
-
-
-
- Earth
- #### ####
- #### #### K'un
- #### ####
- {1}
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
-
- THE ENERGY - SOURCE OF THE SELF.
-
-
- 1. All men know that beauty and ugliness are correlatives, as are skill and
- clumsiness; one implies and suggests the other.
-
- 2. So also existence and non-existence pose the one the other;<<I.e., the
- thought of either implies its opposite.>> so also is it with ease and
- difficulty, length and shortness; height and lowness. Also Musick exists
- through harmony of opposites;<<nay, even.
- This shows how the Tao realizes itself through its projection in
- correlative phases, expressing 0 as + 1 + (-1); to speak like a Qabalist
- or an electrician.>> time and space depend upon contraposition.
-
- 3. By the use of this method, the sage can fulfil his will without action,
- and utter his word without speech.<<Our activity is due to the
- incompleteness of the summing-up of Forces. Thus a man proceeds to walk
- East at four miles an hour, though he is already traveling in that
- direction at over 1,000 miles and hour! The end of the Meditation on
- Action is the realization of Hadit; wherefore any action would be a
- disturbance of that perfection. This being understood of the True Self,
- the Mind and Body proceed untrammeled in their natural path without
- desire on the part of the Self.>>
-
- 4. All things arise without diffidence; they grow, and none interferes; they
- change according to their natural order, without lust of result. The
- work is accomplished; yet continueth in its orbit, without goal. This
- work is done unconsciously; this is {2} why its energy is indefatigable.
- {3}
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
-
- QUIETING FOLK.
-
-
- 1. To reward merit is to stir up emulation; to prize rarities is to
- encourage robbery; to display desirable things is to excite the disorder
- of covetousness.
-
- 2. Therefore, the sage governeth men by keeping their minds and their bodies
- at rest, contenting the one by emptiness, the other by fullness. He
- satisfieth their desires, thus fulfilling their wills, and making them
- frictionless; and he maketh them strong in body, to a similar end.
-
- 3. He delivereth them from the restlessness of knowledge and the cravings of
- discontent. As to those who have knowledge already, he teacheth them the
- way of non-action. This being assured, there is no disorder in the
- world.<<A lecture on the Labour Problem.>> {4}
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
-
- THE SPRING WITHOUT SOURCE.
-
-
- 1. The Tao resembleth the emptiness of Space; to employ it, we must avoid
- creating ganglia.<<See Liber CCXX...I.22, "let there be no difference
- made among you between any one thing & any other thing." {WEH NOTE:
- Quotation corrected from: "make no difference between any one thing and
- any other thing"} Inequality (an Illusion) and disorder necessarily
- result from the departure from homogeneity.>> Oh Tao, how vast art Thou,
- the Abyss of Abysses, thou Holy and Secret Father of all Fatherhoods of
- Things!
-
- 2. Let us make our sharpness blunt;<<For sharpness implies a
- concentration.>> let us loosen our complexes;<<For these are the ganglia
- of thought, which must be destroyed.>> let us<<On the same principles.
- Cf. the Doctrine in CCXX as to the "space-marks". The stars are
- blemishes, so to speak, on the continuity of Nuit. >> tone down our
- brightness to the general obscurity. Oh Tao, how still art thou, how
- pure, continuous One beyond Heaven!
-
- 3. This Tao hath no Father; it is beyond all other conceptions, higher than
- the highest. {5}
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
-
- THE FORMULA OF THE VACUUM.
-
-
- 1. Heaven and earth proceed without motive, but casually in their order of
- nature, dealing with all things carelessly, like used talismans. So also
- the sages deal with their people, not exercising benevolence, but
- allowing the nature of all to move without friction.
-
- 2. The Space between heaven and earth<<I.e., the six trigrams between
- ########## #### ####
- ########## #### ####
- ########## #### ####>>
- is their breathing apparatus:<<and so these must not be interfered with.>>
- Exhalation is not exhaustion, but the complement of Inhalation, and this
- equally of that. Speech<<by interfering with this regular order of
- breathing.
- References to the trigrams of the Yi King must be explained by that
- Book. It would be impossible to elucidate such passages in a note. Ko
- Yuen is now at work to prepare an edition of the Yi.>> exhausteth; guard
- thyself, therefore, maintaining the perfect freedom of thy nature. {6}
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
-
- THE PERFECTING OF FORM.
-
-
- 1. The Teh is the immortal enemy of the Tao, its feminine aspect. Heaven
- and Earth issued from her Gate; this Gate is the Root of their World-
- Sycamore. Its operation is of pure Joy and Love, and faileth never.<<Cf.
- in The Book of Wisdom or Folly, the doctrine of "The Play of Nuit.">> {7}
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
-
- THE CONCEALMENT OF THE LIGHT.
-
-
- 1. Heaven and Earth are mighty in continuance, because their work is
- delivered from the lust of result.
-
- 2. Thus also the sage, seeking not any goal, attaineth all things; he doth
- not interfere in the affairs of his body, and so that body acteth without
- friction. It is because he meddleth not with personal aims that these
- come to pass with simplicity.<<See CCXX as to "lust of result." The
- general idea of the Way of the Tao is that all evil is interference. It
- is unnatural action which is error. None {sic} action is commendable
- only as a corrective of such; to interfere with one's own true Way is
- Restriction, the word of Sin.>> {8}
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
-
- THE NATURE OF PEACE.
-
-
- 1. Admire thou the High Way of Water! Is not Water the soul of the life of
- things, whereby they change? Yet it seeketh its level, and abideth
- content in obscurity. So also it resembleth the Tao, in this Way
- thereof!<<Hydrogen and chlorine (for example) will not unite when
- perfectly dry. Dryness is immobility or death. (Cf. Book of Wisdom or
- Folly, the doctrine concerning Change.)>>
-
- 2. The virtue of a house is to be well-placed; of the mind, to be at ease in
- silence as of Space; of societies, to be well-disposed; of governments,
- to maintain quietude; of work, to be skillfully performed; and of all
- motion, to be made at the right time.<<In all these illustrations, Laotze
- deprecates restlessness or friction.>>
-
- 3. Also it is the virtue of a man to abide in his place without discontent;
- thus offendeth he no man.<<This gives point to the previous paragraph.
- It is all another way of saying "Do what thou wilt." >> {9}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
-
- THE WAY OF RETICENCE.
-
-
- 1. Fill not a vessel, lest it spill in carrying. Meddle not with a
- sharpened point by feeling it constantly, or it will soon become
- blunted.<<Moderation. Let well alone.>>
-
- 2. Gold and jade endanger the house of their possessor. Wealth and honors
- lead to arrogance and envy, and bring ruin. Is thy way famous and thy
- name becoming distinguished? Withdraw, thy work once done, into
- obscurity; this is the way of Heaven.<<Attend to the work; ignore the
- byproducts thereof.>> {10}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
-
- THINGS ATTAINABLE.
-
-
- 1. When soul<<Neschamah.>> and body<<Nephesch.>> are in the bond of love,
- they can be kept together. By concentration on the breath<<Prana.>> it
- is brought to perfect elasticity, and one becomes as a babe. By
- purifying oneself from Samadhi one becomes whole.<<Here we see once more
- the doctrine of being without friction. Internal conflict leads to
- rupture. Again, one's Pranayama is to result perfect pliability and
- exact adjustment to one's environment. Finally, even Sammasamadhi is a
- defect, so long as it is an experience instead of a constant state. So
- long as there are two to become one, there are two.>>
-
- 2. In his dealing with individuals and with society, let him move without
- lust of result. In the management of his breath, let him be like the
- mother-bird.<<I.e., brooding like the Spirit, quiet, without effort.>>
- Let his intelligence<<Binah.>> comprehend every quarter; but let his
- knowledge<<Daath.>> cease.<<He must absorb (or understand) everything
- without conscious knowledge, which is a shock, implying duality, like
- flint and steel, while understanding is like a sponge, or even like ocean
- absorbing rivers.>>
-
- 3. Here is the Mystery of Virtue.<<Of the Tao and of him that hath it.
- Virtue -- the Teh.>> It createth all and nourisheth all; yet it doth not
- adhere to them; it operateth all, but knoweth not of it, nor proclaimeth
- it; it directeth all, but without conscious control. {11}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
-
- THE VALUE OF THE UNEXPRESSED.
-
-
- 1. The thirty spokes join in their nave, that is one; yet the wheel
- dependeth for use upon the hollow place for the axle. Clay is shapen to
- make vessels; but the contained space is what is useful. Matter is
- therefore of use only to mark the limits of the space which is the thing
- of real value.<<This introduces the doctrine of the Fourth Dimension.
- Matter is like the lines bounding a plane. The plane is the real thing,
- the lines infinitely small in comparison, and serving only to define it.
- So also the "Self" is an imaginary limit marking off the divisions of the
- Body of God. The errors of Ahamkara (the ego-making faculty) is to take
- the illusory surface for the Sphere.
- Cf. Liber CCXX concerning the Nature of Nuit.>> {12}
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
-
- THE WITHDRAWAL FROM THE EXTERNAL.
-
-
- 1. The five colors film over Sight; The five sounds make Hearing dull; The
- five flavours conceal Taste; occupation with motion and action bedevil
- Mind; even so the esteem of rare things begetteth covetousness and
- disorder.<<This is the regular Yogi doctrine, and may be tested by
- experience of various Bhavanas and other proper concentrations. But
- Laotze draws a parallel for social or political use. To excite cupidity
- leads to theft at home, and war abroad. It is only too evident to day
- how neglect of this rule has destroyed civilization; I need not insist on
- examples of how A's potash, B's iron, C's coal and D's trade routes have
- caused E to set the world ablaze.>>
-
- 2. The wise man seeketh therefore to content the actual needs of the people;
- not to excite them by the sight of luxuries. He banneth these, and
- concentrateth on those.<<The present labour troubles are due to the
- absurd cult of material complexities miscalled prosperity.>> {13}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
-
- THE CONTEMPT FOR CIRCUMSTANCE.
-
-
- 1. Favor and disgrace are equally to be shunned; honour and calamity to be
- alike regarded as adhering to the personality.<<And, therefore, "ganglia"
- to be loosened is written, as stated above.>>
-
- 2. What is this which is written concerning favour and disgrace? Disgrace
- is the fall from favour. He then that hath favour hath fear, and its
- loss begetteth fear yet greater of a further fall. What is this which is
- written concerning honour and calamity? It is this attachment to the
- body which maketh calamity possible; for were one bodiless, what evil
- could befall him?
-
- 3. Therefore let him that regardeth himself rightly administer also a
- kingdom; and let him govern it who loveth it as another man loveth
- himself.<<This does not mean with extreme devotion, but rather with
- passionless indifference.>> {14}
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
-
- THE SHEWING-FORTH OF THE MYSTERY.
-
-
- 1. We look at it, and see it not; though it is Omnipresent; and we name it
- the Root-Balance.<<Hadit, the root of Yod.>>
- We listen for it, and hear it not, though it is Omniscient; and we name
- it the Silence.<<Nuit, the root of He.>>
- We feel for it, and touch it not, though it is Omnipotent; and we name it
- the Concealed.<<Ra-Hoor-Khuit, Kether, the root of Vau. {WEH NOTE: This
- appears questionable, as the root of Vau and the Sun god both pertain to
- Tipheret.}>>
- These three Virtues hath it, yet we cannot describe it as consisting of
- them; but, mingling them aright, we apprehend the One.
-
- 2. Above, it shineth not; below, it is not dark. It moveth all
- continuously, without Expression, returning into Naught. It is the Form
- of That which is beyond Form; it is the Image of the Invisible; it is
- Change, and Without Limit.<<Cf. Ain, Ain Soph, Ain Soph Aur. Also see
- "Book of Wisdom or Folly".>>
-
- 3. We confront it, and see not its Face; {15} we pursue it, and its Back is
- hidden from us. Ah! but apply the Tao as in old Time to the work of the
- present; know it as it was known in the Beginning; follow fervently the
- Thread of the Tao. {16}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
-
- THE APPEARANCE OF THE TRUE NATURE.
-
-
- 1. The adepts of past ages were subtle and keen to apprehend this Mystery,
- and their profundity was obscurity unto men. Since then they were not
- known, let me declare their nature.
-
- 2. To all seeming, they were fearful as men that cross a torrent in winter
- flood; they were hesitating like a man in apprehension of them that are
- about him; they were full of awe like a guest in a great house; they were
- ready to disappear like ice in thaw; they were unassuming like unworked
- wood; they were empty as a valley; and dull as the waters of a marsh.
-
- 3. Who can clear muddy water? Stillness will accomplish this. Who can
- obtain rest? Let motion continue equably, and it will itself be peace.
-
- 4. The adepts of the Tao, conserving its way, seek not to be actively self-
- conscious. By their emptiness of Self {17} they have no need to show
- their youth and perfection; to appear old and imperfect is their
- privilege. {18}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
-
- THE WITHDRAWAL TO THE ROOT.
-
-
- 1. Emptiness must be perfect, and Silence made absolute with tireless
- strength. All things pass through the period of action; then they return
- to repose. They grow, bud, blossom and fruit; then they return to the
- root. This return to the root is this state which we name Silence; and
- this Silence is Witness of their Fulfilment.
-
- 2. This cycle is the universal law. To know<<and acquiescence in>> it is
- the part of intelligence; to ignore it<<or to rebel against it.>>
- bringeth folly of action, whereof the end is madness. To know it
- bringeth understanding and peace; and these lead to the identification of
- the Self with the Not-Self. This identification maketh man a king; and
- this kingliness groweth unto godhood. That godhood beareth fruit in the
- mastery of the Tao. Then the man, the Tao permeating him, endureth; and
- his bodily principles are in harmony, {19} proof against decay, until the
- hour of his Change. {20}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
-
- THE PURITY OF THE CURRENT.
-
-
- 1. In the Age of Gold, the people were not conscious of their rulers; in the
- Age of Silver, they loved them, with songs; in the Age of Brass, they
- feared them; in the Age of Iron, they despised them. As the
- rulers<<becoming self-conscious.>> lost confidence, so also did the
- people lose confidence in them.
-
- 2. How hesitating did they seem, the Lords of the Age of Gold, speaking with
- deliberation, aware of the weight of their word! Thus they accomplished
- all things with success; and the people deemed their well-being to be the
- natural course of events. {21}
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
-
- THE DECAY OF MANNERS.
-
-
- 1. When men abandoned the Way of the Tao, benevolence and justice became
- necessary. Then also was need of wisdom and cunning, and all fell into
- illusion. When harmony ceased to prevail in the six spheres<<The solar
- system.>> it was needful to govern them by manifesting Sons.<<Dhyana --
- buddhas.>>
-
- When the kingdoms and races<<elements, signs, etc.>> became<<Self-
- conscious and therefore.>> confused, loyal ministers<<archangels.
- It is hard at first for the student to grasp the disdain of Laotze for
- what we call good qualities. But the need for this "good" is created by
- the existence of "evil", i.e., the restriction of anything from doing its
- own will without friction. Good is then merely a symptom of evil, and so
- itself a poison. A man who finds Mercury and Potassium Iodide "good" for
- him, is a sick man. Frictionless Nourishment is the order of Change, or
- Life.>> had to appear. {22}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
-
- RETURNING TO THE PURITY OF THE CURRENT.
-
-
- 1. If we forgot our statesmanship and our wisdom, it would be an hundred
- times better for the people. If we forgot our benevolence and our
- justice, they would become again like sons, folk of good will. If we
- forget our machines and our business, there would be no knavery.
-
- 2. These new methods despised the olden Way, inventing fine names to
- disguise their baneness. But simplicity in the doing of the will of
- every man would put an end to vain ambitions and desires.<<Samuel Butler
- in Erewhon describes a people who had sense enough to forbid all
- machinery. Wells, in the War in the Air prophesies the results of not
- doing so; at the hour of writing, An XV Sun in Scorpio, we are facing the
- fulfilment of most of this prophecy. And still we make haste to arm!>>
- {23}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
-
- THE WITHDRAWAL FROM THE COMMON WAY.
-
-
- 1. To forget learning is to end trouble. The smallest difference in words,
- such as "yes" and "yea", can make endless controversy for the
- scholar.<<Consider the "homoiousios -- homoiousios" quarrel of early
- Christianity.>> Fearful indeed is death, since all men fear it; but the
- abyss of questionings, shoreless and bottomless, is worse!
-
- 2. Consider the profane man, how he preeneth, as if at feast, or gazing upon
- Spring from a tower! But as for me, I am as one who yawneth, without any
- trace of desire. I am like a babe before its first smile. I appear sad
- and forlorn, like a man homeless. The profane man hath his need filled,
- ay, and more also. For me, I seem to have lost all I had. My mind is as
- it were stupefied; it hath no definite shape. The profane man looketh
- lively and keen-witted; I alone appear blank in my mind. They seem
- eagerly critical; I appear careless and without perception. I seem to be
- as one adrift upon the sea, with {24} no thought of an harbor. The
- profane have each one his definite course of action; I alone appear
- useless and uncomprehending, like a man from the border. Yea, thus I
- differ from all other men: but my jewel is the All-Mother!<<Cf. "Afloat
- in the aether, O my God, my God!" Liber VII. It is the "aimless winging"
- which gives "joy ineffable" to the self-supported Absolute.>> {25}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
-
-
- THE INFINITE WOMB.
-
-
- 1. The sole source of energy is the Tao. Who may declare its nature? It is
- beyond Sense, yet all form is hidden within it. It is beyond Sense, yet
- all Perceptibles are hidden within it. It is beyond Sense, yet all
- Perceptibles are hidden within it. It is beyond Sense, yet all Being is
- hidden within it. This Being excites Perception, and the Word thereof.
- As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, its Name<<Teh.
- Zero contains all possibilities, for it may be written 0= X (-X), where
- X is anything soever and -X its opposite. However complex X may be, it
- is always to be cancelled by its -X. Thus the universe is always
- potentially anything and everything, yet actually Nothing.>> operateth
- continuously, causing all to flow in the cycle of Change, which is Love
- and Beauty. How do I know this? By my comprehension of the Tao. {26}
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
-
-
- THE GUERDON OF MODESTY.
-
-
- 1. The part becometh the whole. The curve becometh straight; the void
- becometh full; the old becometh new. He who desireth little
- accomplisheth his Will with ease; who desireth many things becometh
- distracted.<<Thus he hath none of them.>>
-
- 2. Therefore, the sage concentrateth upon one Will, and it is as a light to
- the whole world. Hiding himself, he shineth; withdrawing himself, he
- attracteth notice; humbling himself, he is exalted; dissatisfied with
- himself,<<since the one Will is not yet attained.>> he gaineth force to
- achieve his Will. Because he striveth not, no man may contend against
- him.
-
- 3. That is no idle saw of the men of old; "The part becometh the whole"; it
- is the Canon of Perfection.<<Any part X becomes the whole Zero, by
- cancelling itself through "love" of -X.>> {27}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
-
-
- THE VOID OF NAUGHT.
-
-
- 1. To keep silence is the mark of one who is acting in full accordance with
- his Will. A fierce wind soon falleth; a storm-shower doth not last all
- day. Yet Heaven and Earth cause these; and if they fail to make violence
- continue, how much less can man abide in spasm of passion!
-
- 2. With him that devoteth him to Tao, the devotees of Tao are in accord; so
- also are the devotees of Teh,<<Because Teh is part of Tao.>> yea, even
- they who fail in seeking those are in accord.<<because to him who has Tao
- all things are realized as harmonious.>>
-
- 3. So then his brothers in the Tao are joyful, attaining it; and his
- brothers in the Teh are joyful, attaining it; and they who fail in
- seeking these are joyful, partaking of it. But if he himself realize not
- the Tao with calm of confidence, then they also appear lacking in
- confidence.<<He who has Tao all things rightly disposed; his own failure
- creates the illusion of general failure.>> {28}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
-
-
- EVIL MANNERS.
-
-
- 1. He who standeth a-tiptoe standeth not firm; he who maketh rigid his legs
- walketh ill. He who preeneth himself shineth not; he who talketh
- positively is vulgar; he who boastheth is refused acceptance; he who is
- wise in his own conceit is thought inferior. Such attitudes, to him that
- hath the view given by understanding the Tao, seem like garbage or like
- cancer, abhorrent to all. They then who follow the Way<<of Tao.>> do not
- admit them. {29}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV
-
-
- IMAGES OF THE MYSTERY.
-
-
- 1. Without Limit and Perfect, there is a Becoming, beyond Heaven and Earth.
- It hath nor motion nor Form; it is alone, it changeth not;<<because it
- comprehendeth Change.>> it extendeth all ways; it hath no Adversary. It
- is like the All-Mother.
-
- 2. I know not its Name, but I call it the Tao. Moreover, I exert myself,
- and call it Vastness.
-
- 3. Vastness, the Becoming! Becoming, it flieth afar. Afar, it draweth
- near. Vast is this Tao; Heaven also is Vast; Earth is vast; and the Holy
- King is vast also.<<for they conform to the Tao.>> In the Universe are
- Four Vastnesses, and of these is the Holy King.
-
- 4. Man followeth the<<magick.>> formula of Earth; Earth followeth that of
- Heaven, and Heaven that of the Tao. The formula of the Tao is its own
- Nature. {30}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVI
-
-
- THE NATURE OF MASS.
-
-
- 1. Mass is the fulcrum of mobility; stillness is the father of motion.
-
- 2. Therefore the sage King, though he travel afar, remaineth near his
- supplies. Though opportunity tempt him, he remaineth quietly in proper
- disposition, indifferent. Should the master of an host of chariots bear
- himself frivolously? If he attack without support, he loseth his base;
- if he become a raider, he forfeiteth his throne.<<This is all obvious
- military metaphor. If we depart from the Tao, we become engaged in
- futile activities which lead nowhere, and we find ourselves in the Abyss
- of Choronzon.>> {31}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVII
-
-
- SKILL IN THE METHOD.
-
-
- 1. The experienced traveler concealeth his tracks; the clever speaker giveth
- no chance to the critic; the skilled mathematician useth no abacus; the
- ingenious safesmith baffleth the burglar without the use of bolts, and
- the cunning binder without ropes and knots.<<The reference is to certain
- "puzzles," as we should call them, common in China.>> So also the sage,
- skilled in man-emancipation-craft, useth all men; understanding the value
- of everything, he rejecteth nothing. This is called the Occult Regimen.
-
- 2. The adept is then master to the zelator, and the zelator assisteth and
- honoreth the adept. Yet unless these relations were manifest, even the
- most intelligent observer might be perplexed as to which was which. This
- is called the Crown of Mystery.<<The adept has become so absolutely
- natural that he appears unskillful. Ars est celare artem. It is only he
- who has started on the Path that can divine how sublime is the Master.>>
- {32}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVIII
-
-
- THE RETURN TO SIMPLICITY.
-
-
- 1. Balance thy male strength with thy female weakness and thou shalt attract
- all things, as the ocean absorbeth all rivers; for thou shalt formulate
- the excellence of the Child<<WEH NOTE: The TS has a mark for a footnote
- at this point. None is found in the end notes to match it. Crowley's
- intent cannot be definitely defined, but probably relates to the "Childe"
- of LIBER AL, possibly as Hoor-pa-Kraat.>> eternal, simple, and perfect.
- Knowing the light, remain in the Dark. Manifest not thy Glory, but thine
- obscurity. Clothed in this Child-excellence eternal, thou hast attained
- the Return of the First State. Knowing splendour of Fame, cling to
- Obloquy and Infamy; then shalt thou remain as in the Valley to which flow
- all waters, the lodestone to fascinate all men. Yea, they shall hail in
- thee this Excellence, eternal, simple and perfect, of the Child.
-
- 2. The raw material, wrought into form, produceth vessels.<<Homogeneous
- developed into heterogeneous: 0 Degree understood as"something.">> So
- the sage King formulateth his Wholeness in divers Offices; and his
- Law<<being concordant with the nature of his people.>> is without
- violence or constraint. {33}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIX
-
-
- REFRAINING FROM ACTION.
-
-
- 1. He that, desiring a kingdom, exerteth himself to obtain it, will fail. A
- Kingdom is of the nature of spirit, and yieldeth not to activity. He who
- graspeth it, destroyeth it; he who gaineth it, loseth it.<<The usurper
- merely seizes the throne; the people are not with him, as with one who
- becomes king by virtue of natural fitness. The usurper has but the mask
- of power.>>
-
- 2. The wheel of nature revolveth constantly; the last becometh first, and
- the first last; hot things grow cold, and cold things hot; weakness
- overcometh strength; things gained are lost anon. Hence the wise man
- avoideth effort, desire and sloth.<<Effort is the Rajo-Guna, and makes
- one go faster than is natural. Sloth is the Tamo-Guna, and makes one go
- slower than is natural. Desire is the disturbance of the Satwa-Guna,
- exciting the lust of Change, in one direction or the other, from the
- natural.
- Things gained: see Liber AL cap II vv {WEH NOTE: not in TS, but
- sometimes added: 57-60}.>> {34}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXX
-
-
- A WARNING AGAINST WAR.
-
-
- 1. If a king summon to his aid a Master of the Tao, let Him not advise
- recourse to arms. Such action certainly bringeth the corresponding
- reaction.
-
- 2. Where armies are, are weeds. Bad harvests follow great hosts.
-
- 3. The good general striketh decisively, once and for all. He does not
- risk<<counter-attack.
- In other words, he acts according to the rules of the game, without
- losing his head by vain-glory, ambition or hatred.>> by overboldness. He
- striketh, but doth not vaunt his victory. He striketh according to
- strict law of necessity, not from desire of victory.
-
- 4. Things become strong and ripe, then age. This<<forcing-on of strength,
- instead of allowing natural growth.>> is discord with the Tao; and what
- is not at one with the Tao soon cometh to an end. {35}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXI
-
-
- COMPOSING QUARREL.
-
-
- 1. Arms, though they be beautiful, are of ill omen, abominable to all
- created beings. They who have the Tao love not their use.
-
- 2. The place of honour is on the right in wartime; so thinketh the man of
- distinction. Sharp weapons are ill-omened, unworthy of such a man; he
- useth them only in necessity. He valueth peace and ease, desireth not
- violence of victory. To desire victory is to desire the death of men;
- and to desire that is to fail to propitiate the people.
-
- 3. At feasts, the left hand is the high seat; at funerals, the right. The
- second in command of the army leadeth the left wing, the commander-in-
- chief, the right wing; it is as if the battle were a rite of mourning!
- He that hath slain most men should weep for them most bitterly; so then
- the place of the victor is assigned to him with philosophical propriety.
- {36}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXII
-
-
- THE WISDOM OF TEH.
-
-
- 1. The All-Tao<<comprehending Change within itself.>> hath no name.
-
- 2. It is That Minute Point<<Hadit.>> yet the whole world dare not contend
- against him that hath it. Did a lord or king gain it and guard it, all
- men would obey him of their own accord.
-
- 3. Heaven and Earth combining under its spell, shed forth dew,<<This "dew"
- refers to the Elixir of the Fraternity R.C. and of the O.T.O. It has
- been described, with proper caution, in various passages of "The Equinox"
- and of "The Book of Lies.">> extending throughout all things of its own
- accord, without man's interference.
-
- 4. Tao, in its phase of action, hath a name. Then men can comprehend it;
- when they do this, there is no more risk of wrong or ill-success.
-
- 5. As the great rivers and the oceans are to the valley streams, so is the
- Tao to the whole universe. {37}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIII
-
-
- THE DISCRIMINATION (VIVEKA) OF TEH.
-
-
- 1. He who understandeth others understandeth Two; but he who understandeth
- himself understandeth One. He who conquereth others is strong; but he
- who conquereth himself is stronger yet.<<For the same reason as in the
- first sentence.>>
- Contentment is riches; and continuous action<<equable and carefree;>> is
- Will.
-
- 2. He that adapteth himself perfectly to his environment, continueth for
- long; he who dieth without dying, liveth for ever.<<The last paragraph
- refers once more to a certain secret practice taught by the O.T.O. See,
- in particular, the Book of Lies.>> {38}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIV
-
-
- THE METHOD OF ATTAINMENT.
-
-
- 1. The Tao is immanent; it extendeth to the right hand as to the left.
-
- 2. All things derive from it their being; it createth them, and all comply
- with it. Its work is done, and it proclaimeth it not. It is the
- ornament of all things, yet it claimeth not fief of them; there is
- nothing so small that it inhabiteth not, and informeth it.
- All things return without knowledge of the Cause thereof; there is
- nothing so great that it inhabiteth not, and informeth it.
-
- 3. In this manner also may the Sage perform his Works. It is by not
- thrusting himself forward that he winneth to his success. {39}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXV
-
-
- THE GOOD WILL OF THE TEH.
-
-
- 1. The whole world is drawn to him that hath the likeness of the Tao.<<I.e.,
- the Teh.>> Men flock unto him, and suffer no ill, but gain repose, find
- peace, enjoy all ease.
-
- 2. Sweet sounds and cates lure the traveler from his way. But the Word of
- the Tao; though it appear harsh and insipid, unworthy to hearken or to
- behold; hath his use all inexhaustible. {40}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXVI
-
-
- THE HIDING OF THE LIGHT.
-
-
- 1. In order to draw breath, first empty the lungs; to weaken another, first
- strengthen him; to overthrow another, first exalt him; to despoil
- another, first load him with gifts; this is called the Occult Regimen.
-
- 2. The soft conquereth the hard; the weak pulleth down the strong.
-
- 3. The fish that leaveth ocean is lost; the method of government must be
- concealed from the people.<<The single argument that can be aduced in
- favour of an Enlightened Democracy is that it provides more completely
- for the fooling of the Sovereign People than any other known system.>>
- {41}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXVII
-
-
- THE RIGHT USE OF GOVERNMENT.
-
-
- 1. The Tao proceedeth by its own nature, doing nothing; therefore there is
- no doing which it comprehendeth not.
-
- 2. If kings and princes were to govern in this manner, all things would
- operate aright by their own motion.
-
- 3. If this transmutation were my object, I should call it Simplicity.
- Simplicity hath no name nor purpose; silently and at ease all things go
- well. {42}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- PART II
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXVIII
-
-
- CONCERNING THE TEH.
-
-
- 1. Those who possessed perfectly the powers<<Teh.>> did not manifest them,
- and so they preserved them. Those who possessed them imperfectly feared
- to lose them, and so lost them.
-
- 2. The former did nothing, nor had need to do. The latter did, and had
- need to do.
-
- 3. Those who possessed benevolence exercised it, and had need it; so also
- was it with them who possessed justice.
-
- 4. Those who possessed the conventions displayed them; and when men would
- not agree, they made ready to fight them.<<Teh appears as Chokmah-Binah,
- Benevolence as Chesed, Justice as Geburah, Convention as Tiphereth. Thus
- Kether alone is "safe"; even Chokmah-Binah risks fall unless it keeps
- Silence.>>
-
- 5. Thus, when the Tao was lost, the Magick Powers appeared; then, by
- successive degradations, came Benevolence, Justice, Convention. {43}
-
- 6. Now convention is the shadow of loyalty and good will, and so the herald
- of disorder. Yea, even Understanding is but a Blossom of the Tao, and
- foreshadoweth Stupidity.<<This repeats the doctrine of the danger of
- Binah. The attack on Tipereth is to be regarded as a reference to the
- "Fall", death of Hiram at high noon, etc. etc.>>
-
- 7. So then the Tao-Man holdeth to Mass, and avoideth Motion; he is attached
- to the Root, not to the flower. He leaveth the one, and cleaveth to the
- other.<<That is, if his road be towards the Tao. In our language, he
- adores Nuit; but the Perfect Man, when he needs to manifest, is on the
- opposite curve. Cf. the "Book Of Lies"; "The Brothers of the A.'. A.'.
- are Women; the Aspirants to A.'. A.'. are Men.">> {44}
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIX
-
-
- THE LAW OF THE BEGINNING.
-
-
- 1. These things have possessed the Tao from the beginning: Heaven, clear and
- shining; Earth, steady and easy; Spirits, mighty in Magick;
- Vehicles,<<"Spirits" and "Vehicles" refer to the Lance and Cup,
- correlatives of Heaven and Earth.>> overflowing with Joy; all that hath
- life; and the rulers of men. All these derive their essence from the
- Tao.
-
- 2. Without the Tao, Heaven would dissolve Earth disrupt, Spirits become
- impotent; Vehicles empty; living things would perish and rulers lose
- their power.
-
- 3. The root of grandeur is humility, and the strength of exaltation in its
- base. Thus rulers speak of themselves as "Fatherless," "Virtueless,'
- "Unworthy," proclaiming by this that their Glory is in their shame.<<It
- is the invisible that is all-important: See Cap. II.>> So also the
- virtue of a Chariot is not any of the parts of a Chariot, if they be
- numbered.<<Cf. "The Questions of King Milinda." where is the discussion
- of what a carriage really is.>> They do not seek to appear fine like
- jade, but inconspicuous like common stone.<<English good manners are
- similarly inconspicuous, and were so devised as a protection. Jade is
- liable to be seized and carved; ordinary stone may escape. (Cf. Kwang-
- tze on the rotten tree, etc. Zan Kien Shieh. S. B. E. XXXIX, p.217.>>
- {45}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XL
-
-
- OMITTING UTILITY.
-
-
- 1. The Tao proceeds by correlative curves, and its might is in weakness.
-
- 2. All things arose from the Teh, and the Teh budded from the Tao.<<The law
- of the Tao is constant compensation; its method is always to redress the
- balance, and reduce the equation to zero. In its action it resembles the
- form of Energy which we call gravitation very closely. It is an inertia
- always tending to minimize stress.>> {46}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLI
-
-
- THE IDENTITY OF THE DIFFERENTIAL.
-
-
- 1. The best students, learning of the Tao, set to work earnestly to practice
- the Way. Mediocre students now cherish it, now let it go.
- The worst students mock at it. Were it not thus mocked, it were unworthy
- to be Tao.
-
- 2. Thus spake the makers of Saws: the Tao at its brightest is obscure. Who
- advanceth in that Way, retireth. Its smooth Way is rough. Its summit is
- a valley. Its beauty is ugliness. Its wealth is poverty. Its virtue,
- vice. Its stability is change. Its form is without form. Its fullness
- is vacancy. Its utterance is silence. Its reality is illusion.
-
- 3. Nameless and imperceptible is the Tao; but it informeth and perfecteth
- all things. {47}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLII
-
-
- THE VEILS OF THE TAO.
-
-
- 1. The Tao formulated the One.<<Kether or the First Aethyr.>>
- The One exhaled the Two.<<Chokmah-Binah or Yin and Yang.>>
- The Two were parents of the Three.<<The second Triad.>>
- The Three were parents of all things.<<The third Triad and Malkuth.>>
- All things pass from Obscurity to Manifestation, inspired harmoniously by
- the Breath of the Void.<<The Tao.>>
-
- 2. Men do not like to be fatherless, virtueless, unworthy: yet rulers
- describe themselves by these names. Thus increase bringeth decrease to
- some, and decrease bringeth increase to others.
-
- 3. Others have taught thus; I consent to it. Violent men and strong die not
- by natural death. This fact is the foundation of my law. {48}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLIII
-
-
- THE COSMIC METHOD.
-
-
- 1. The softest substance<<Water-Yoni.>> hunteth down the hardest;<<rock-
- Lingam.>> the unsubstantial<<the Luminiferous ether.>> penetrateth where
- there is no opening. Here is the Virtue of Inertia.
-
- 2. Few are they who attain: whose speech is Silence, whose Work is Inertia.
- {49}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLIV
-
-
- MONITORIAL.
-
-
- 1. What shall it profit a man if he gain fame or wealth, and lose his life?
-
- 2. If a man cling to fame or wealth, he risketh what is worth more.
-
- 3. Be content, not fearing disgrace. Act not, and risk not criticism. Thus
- live thou long, without alarm. {50}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLV
-
-
- THE OVERFLOWING OF TEH.
-
-
- 1. Despise thy masterpieces; thus renew the vigor of thy creation.
- Deem thy fullness emptiness; thus shall thy fullness never be empty.
- Let the straight appear crooked to thee, thy Craft clumsiness; thy Musick
- discord.
-
- 2. Exercise moderateth cold; stillness heat. To be pure<<Brahmacharya --
- Chastity in the secret Parzifal -- O.T.O. sense. See also the Khing Kang
- King.>> and to keep silence, is the True Law of all that are beneath
- Heaven. {51}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLVI
-
-
- THE WITHDRAWAL FROM AMBITION.
-
-
- 1. When the Tao beareth away on Earth, men put swift horses to night-carts.
- When it is neglected, they breed chargers in the border marches.
-
- 2. There is no evil worse than ambition; no misery worse than discontent; no
- crime greater than greed. Content of mind is peace and satisfaction
- eternal. {52}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLVII
-
-
- THE VISION OF THE DISTANT.
-
-
- 1. One need not pass his threshold to comprehend all that is under Heaven,
- nor to look out from his lattice to behold the Tao Celestial. Nay! but
- the farther a man goeth, the less he knoweth.
-
- 2. The sages acquired their knowledge without travel; they named all things
- aright without beholding them; and, acting without aim, fulfilled their
- Wills. {53}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLVIII
-
-
- OBLIVION OVERCOMING KNOWLEDGE.
-
-
- 1. The scholar seeketh daily increase of knowing; the sage of Tao daily
- decrease of doing.
-
- 2. He decreaseth it, again and again, until he doth no act with the lust of
- result. Having attained this Inertia all accomplisheth itself.
-
- 3. He who attracteth to himself all that is under Heaven doth so without
- effort. He who maketh effort is not able to attract it. {54}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLIX
-
-
- THE ADAPTABILITY OF THE TEH.
-
-
- 1. The wise man hath no fixed principle; he adapteth his mind to his
- environment.
-
- 2. To the good I am good, and to the evil I am good also; thus all become
- good. To the true I am true, and to the false I am true; thus all become
- true.
-
- 3. The sage appeareth hesitating to the world, because his mind is detached.
- Therefore the people look and listen to him, as his children; and thus
- doth he shepherd them. {53}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER L
-
-
- THE ESTIMATION OF LIFE.
-
-
- 1. Man cometh into life, and returneth again into death.
-
- 2. Three men in ten conserve life; three men in ten pursue death.
-
- 3. Three men also in ten desire to live, but their acts hasten their journey
- to the house of death. Why is this? Because of their efforts to
- preserve life.
-
- 4. But this I have heard. He that is wise in the economy of his life,
- whereof he is warden for a season, journeyeth with no need to avoid the
- tiger or the rhinoceros, and goeth uncorsleted among the warriors with no
- fear of sword or lance. The rhinoceros findeth in him no place vulnerable
- to its horn, the tiger to its claws, the weapon to its point. Why is
- this? Because there is no house of death in his whole body. {56}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LI
-
-
- THE TEH AS THE NURSE.
-
-
- 1. All things proceed from the Tao, and are sustained by its forth-flowing
- virtue. Every one taketh form according to his nature, and is perfect,
- each in his particular Way. Therefore, each and every one of them
- glorify the Tao, and worship its forth-flowing Virtue.
-
- 2. This glorifying of the Tao, this worship of the Teh, is constantly
- spontaneous, and not by appointment of Law.
-
- 3. Thus the Tao buddeth them out, nurtureth them, developeth them,
- sustaineth them, perfecteth them, ripeneth them, upholdeth them, and
- reabsorbeth them.
-
- 4. It buddeth them forth, and claimeth not lordship over them; it is
- overseer of their changes, and boasteth not of his puissance; perfecteth
- them, and interfereth not with their Ways; this is called the Mystery of
- its Virtue. {57}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LII
-
-
- THE WITHDRAWAL INTO THE SILENCE.
-
-
- 1. The Tao buddeth forth all things under Heaven; it is the Mother of all.
-
- 2. Knowing the Mother, we may know her offspring. He that knoweth his
- Mother, and abideth in Her nature, remaineth in surety all his days.
-
- 3. With the mouth closed, and the Gates of Breath controlled, he remaineth
- at ease all his days. With the mouth open, and the Breath directed to
- outward affairs, he hath no surety all his days.
-
- 4. To perceive that Minute Point<<Hadith.>> is True Vision; to maintain the
- Soft and Gentle<<Nuith.>> is True Strength.
-
- 5. Employing harmoniously the Light Within<<Ra-Hoor-Khuith.
- Paragraphs 3-5 refer to certain technical practices which may be studied
- in "Book 4", "The Equinox" and "Liber AL vel. CCXX".>> so that it
- returneth to its Origin, one guardeth even one's body from evil, and
- keepeth Silence before all men. {58}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LIII
-
-
- THE WITNESS OF GREED.
-
-
- 1. Were I discovered by men, and charged with government, my first would be
- lest I should become proud.
-
- 2. The true Path is level and smooth; but men love by-paths.
-
- 3. They adorn their courts, but they neglect their fields, and leave their
- storehouses empty. They wear elaborate and embroidered robes; they gird
- themselves with sharp swords; they eat and drink with luxury; they heap
- up goods; they are thievish and vainglorious. All this is opposite to
- the Way of Tao. {59}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LIV
-
-
- THE WITNESS OF WISDOM.
-
-
- 1. If a man plant according to the Tao it will never be uprooted; if he thus
- gather, it will never be lost. His sons and his son's sons, one
- following another, shall honour the shrine of their ancestor.
-
- 2. The Tao, applied to oneself, strengtheneth the Body,<<Teh>> to the
- family, bringeth wealth;<<Teh>> to the district, prosperity;<<Teh>> to
- the state, great fortune.<<Teh>> Let it be the Law of the Kingdom, and
- all men will increase in virtue.<< Teh.
- Teh is always the Magick Power; it need not be explained diversely as in
- the text.>>
-
- 3. Thus we observe its effect in every case, as to the person, the family,
- the district, the state, and the kingdom.
-
- 4. How do I know that this is thus universal under Heaven?
- By experience. {60}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LV
-
-
- THE SPELL OF THE MYSTERY.
-
-
- 1. He that hath the Magick powers<<Teh.>> of the Tao is like a young child.
- Insects will not sting him or beasts or birds of prey attack him.
-
- 2. The young child's bones are tender and its sinews are elastic, but its
- grasp is firm.<<A baby can hang from a bough for quite an indefinitely
- long period. This is because of monkey-atavism; in other words, it is
- the subconscious of the child that is at work. This subconsciousness is
- of its true nature, therefore, in accord with the Tao.>> It knoweth
- nothing of the Union of Man and Woman, yet its Organ may be excited.
- This is because of its natural perfection. It will cry all day long
- without becoming hoarse, because of the harmony of its being.
-
- 3. He who understandeth this harmony knoweth the mystery of the Tao, and
- becometh a True Sage. All devices for inflaming life, and increasing the
- vital Breath,<<Prana.>> by mental effort<<Hatha-Yoga, etc.>> are evil and
- factitious.
-
- 4. Things become strong, then age. This<<forcing-on of strength instead of
- allowing natural growth.>> is in discord with the Tao, and what is not at
- one with the Tao soon cometh to an end. {61}
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LVI
-
-
- THE EXCELLENCE OF THE MYSTERY.
-
-
- 1. Who knoweth the Tao keepeth Silence; he who babbleth knoweth it not.
-
- 2. Who knoweth it closeth his mouth and controlleth the Gates of his Breath.
- He will make his sharpness blunt; he will loosen his complexes; he will
- tone down his brightness to the general obscurity. This is called the
- Secret of Harmony.
-
- 3. He cannot be insulted either by familiarity or aversion; he is immune to
- ideas of gain or loss, of honour or disgrace; he is the true man,
- unequalled under Heaven. {62}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LVII
-
-
- THE TRUE INFLUENCE.
-
-
- 1. One may govern a state by restriction; weapons may be used with skill and
- cunning; but one acquireth true command only by freedom, given and taken.
-
- 2. How am I aware of this? By experience that to multiply restrictive laws
- in the kingdom impoverisheth the people; the use of machines causeth
- disorder in state and race alike. The more men use skill and cunning,
- the more machines there are; and the more laws there are, the more felons
- there are.
-
- 3. A wise man has said this: I will refrain from doing, and the people will
- act rightly of their own accord; I will love Silence, and the people will
- instinctively turn to perfection; I will take no measures, and the people
- will enjoy true wealth; I will restrain ambition, and the people will
- attain simplicity. {63}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LVIII
-
-
- ADAPTATION TO ENVIRONMENT.
-
-
- 1. The government that exerciseth the least care serveth the people best;
- that which meddleth with everybody's business worketh all manner of harm.
- Sorrow and joy are bedfellows; who can divine the final result of either?
-
- 2. Shall we avoid restriction? Yea; restriction distorteth nature, so that
- even what seemeth good in it is evil. For how long have men suffered
- from misunderstanding of this.
-
- 3. The wise man is foursquare, and avoideth aggression; his corners do not
- injure others. He moveth in a straight line<<according to his Will.>>
- and turneth not aside therefrom; he is brilliant<<like a Star.>> but doth
- not blind with his brightness.<<because he keeps to his own orbit.>> {64}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LIX
-
-
- WARDING THE TAO.
-
-
- 1. To balance our earthly nature and cultivate our heavenly nature, tread
- the Middle Path.
-
- 2. This Middle Path alone leadeth to the Timely Return to the True Nature.
- This Timely Return resulteth from the constant gathering of Magick
- Powers.<<Teh.>> With that Gathering cometh Control. This Control we
- know to be without Limit<<Like the Tao.>> and he who knoweth the
- Limitless may rule the state.
-
- 3. He who possesseth the Tao continueth long. He is like a plant with well-
- set roots and strong stems. Thus it secureth long continuance of its
- life. {65}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LX
-
-
- THE DUTY OF GOVERNMENT.
-
-
- 1. The government of a kingdom is like the cooking of fish.<<This means, it
- is the simplest possible operation.>>
-
- 2. If the kingdom be ruled according to the Tao, the spirits of our
- ancestors will not manifest their Teh.<<I.e., their Magick Powers, from
- indignation at the mischief wrought by their descendents.>> These
- spirits have this Teh, but will not turn it against men. It is able to
- hurt men; so also is the Wise King; but he doth not.
-
- 3. When these powers<<the spirits and the Wise King.>> are in accord, their
- Good Will produceth the Teh, endowing the people therewith. {66}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXI
-
-
- THE MODESTY OF THE TEH.
-
-
- 1. A state becometh powerful when it resembleth a great river, deep-seated;
- to it tend all the small streams under Heaven.
-
- 2. It is as with the female, that conquereth the male by her Silence.
- Silence is a form of Gravity.<<It is not that there is any "virtue" in
- humility; it is simply that all lines converge at the center of the
- Web.>>
-
- 3. Thus a great state attracteth small states by meeting their views, and
- small states attract the great state by revering its eminence. In the
- first case this Silence gaineth supporters; in the second, favour.
-
- 4. The great state uniteth men and nurtureth them; the small state wisheth
- the good will of the great, and offereth service; thus each gaineth its
- advantage. But the great state must keep Silence. {67}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXII
-
-
- THE WORKINGS OF THE TAO.
-
-
- 1. The Tao is the most exalted of all things. It is the ornament of the
- good, and the protection and purification of the evil.<<Cf. "Soul of
- Goodness in Things Evil.">>
-
- 2. Its words are the fountain of honour, and its deeds the engine of
- achievement. It is present even in evil.
-
- 3. Though the Son of Heaven were enthroned with his three Dukes appointed to
- serve him, and he were offered a round symbol- of-rank as great as might
- fill the hands, with a team of horses to follow, this gift were not to be
- matched against the Tao, which might be offered by the humblest of men.
-
- 4. Why did they of old time set such store by the Tao? Because he that
- sought it might find it, and because it was the Purification from all
- evil. Therefore did all men under Heaven esteem it the most exalted of
- all things. {68}
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXIII
-
-
- FORETHOUGHT AT THE OUTSET.
-
-
- 1. Act without lust of result; work without anxiety; taste without
- attachment to flavour; esteem small things great and few things many;
- repel violence with gentleness.
-
- 2. Do great things while they are yet small, hard things while they are yet
- easy; for all things, how great or hard soever, have a beginning when
- they are little and easy. So thus the wise man accomplisheth the
- greatest tasks without undertaking anything important.
-
- 3. Who undertaketh thoughtlessly is certain to fail in attainment; who
- estimateth things easy findeth them hard. The wise man considereth even
- easy things hard, so that even hard things are easy to him. {69}
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXIV
-
-
- ATTENDING TO DETAILS.
-
-
- 1. It is easy to grasp what is not yet in motion, to withstand what is not
- yet manifest, to break what is not yet compact, to disperse what is not
- yet coherent. Act against things before they become visible; attend to
- order before disorder ariseth.
-
- 2. The tree which filleth the embrace grew from a small shoot; the tower
- nine-storied rose from a low foundation; the ten-day journey began with a
- single step.
-
- 3. He who acteth worketh harm; he who graspeth findeth it a slip. The wise
- man acteth not, so worketh no harm; he doth not grasp, and so doth not
- let go. Men often ruin their affairs on the eve of success, because they
- are not as prudent at the end as in the beginning.
-
- 4. The wise man willeth what others do not will,<<He does his own Will,
- instead of aiming at a standardized goal.>> and valueth not things
- rare.<<and so sought after by others.>> He learneth what others learn
- not, and gathered up what they despise. Thus he is in accord with the
- natural course of events, and is not overbold in action. {70}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXV
-
-
- THE PURITY OF THE TEH.
-
-
- 1. They of old time that were skilled in the Tao sought not to enlighten the
- people, but to keep them simple.
-
- 2. The difficulty of government is the vain knowledge of the people. To use
- cleverness in government is to scourge the kingdom; to use simplicity is
- to anoint it.
-
- 3. Know these things, and make them thy law and thine example. To possess
- this Law is the Secret Perfection of rule. Profound and Extended is this
- Perfection; he that possesseth it is indeed contrary to the rest, but he
- attracteth them to full accordance. {71}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXVI
-
-
- PUTTING ONE'S SELF LAST.
-
-
- 1. The oceans and the rivers attract the streams<<as it were, tribute and
- worship.>> by their skill in being lower than they; thus are they masters
- thereof. So the Wise Man, to be above men, speaketh lowly; and to
- precede them acteth with humility.
-
- 2. Thus, though he be above them, they feel no burden; nor, though he
- precede them, do they feel insulted.
-
- 3. So then do all men delight to honour him, and grow not weary of him. He
- contendeth not against any man; therefore no man is able to contend
- against him. {72}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXVII
-
-
- THE THREE JEWELS.
-
-
- 1. They say that while this Tao of mine is great, yet it is inferior. This
- is the proof of its greatness. If it were like anything else, its
- smallness would have long been known.
-
- 2. I have three jewels of price whereto I cleave; gentleness, economy, and
- humility.
-
- 3. That gentleness maketh me courageous, that economy generous, that
- humility honoured. Men of today abandon gentleness for violence, economy
- for extravagance, humility for pride: this is death.
-
- 4. Gentleness bringeth victory in fight; and holdeth its ground with
- assurance. Heaven wardeth the gentle man by that same virtue. {73}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXVIII
-
-
- ASSIMILATING ONE'S SELF TO HEAVEN.
-
-
- 1. He that is skilled in war maketh no fierce gestures; the most efficient
- fighter bewareth of anger. He who conquereth refraineth from engaging in
- battle; he whom men most willingly obey continueth silently with his
- Work. So it is said: "He is mighty who fighteth not; he ruleth who
- uniteth with his subjects; he shineth whose will is that of Heaven." {74}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXIX
-
-
- THE USE OF THE MYSTERIOUS WAY.
-
-
- 1. A great strategist saith: "I dare not take the offensive. I prefer the
- defensive. I dare not advance an inch; I prefer to retreat a foot."
- Place therefore the army where there is no army; prepare for action where
- there is no engagement; strike where there is no conflict; advance
- against the enemy where the enemy is not.<<This is quite orthodox
- strategy, to avoid battle where the enemy is strong, to concentrate on
- the weak points of his line.>>
-
- 2. There is no error so great as to engage in battle without sufficient
- force. To do so is to risk losing the gentleness<<Elasticity.
- A general who is compelled to fight at any point has lost the initiative
- at the point.>> which is beyond price. Thus when the lines actually
- engage, he who regretteth the necessity is the victor. {75}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXX
-
-
- THE DIFFICULTY OF RIGHT APPREHENSION.
-
-
- 1. My words are easy to understand and to perform; but is there anyone in
- the world who can understand them and perform them?
-
- 2. My words derive from a creative and universal Principle, in accord with
- the One Law. Men, not knowing these, understand me not.
-
- 3. Few are they that understand me; therefore am I the more to be valued.
- The Wise Man weareth sack-cloth, but guardeth his jewel in his bosom.
- {76}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXXI
-
-
- THE DISTEMPER OF KNOWLEDGE.
-
-
- 1. To know, yet to know nothing, is the highest; not to know, yet to pretend
- to knowledge, is a distemper.
-
- 2. Painful is this distemper; therefore we shun it. The wise man hath it
- not. Knowing it to be bound up with Sorrow, he putteth it away from him.
- {77}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXXII
-
-
- CONCERNING LOVE OF SELF.
-
-
- 1. When men fear not that which is to be feared, that which they fear cometh
- upon them.<<They should fear Restriction of their True Wills; if not,
- they become slaves.>>
-
- 2. Let them not live, without thought, the superficial life.<<They must
- discover the True Will, and do it. See the Book of Wisdom or Folly.>>
- Let them not weary of the Spring of Life!<<The true, subconscious will.>>
-
- 3. By avoiding the superficial life<<Rational, instead of subconscious
- reaction to environment.>>, this weariness cometh not upon them.<<One
- must make a habit of doing one's true will; at first it is irksome,
- because of conflict with the accidents of life.>>
-
- 4. These things the wise man knoweth, not showeth: he loveth himself,
- without isolating his value.<<confounding the space-marks, etc.>> He
- accepteth the former and rejecteth the latter. {78}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXXIII
-
-
- ESTABLISHING THE LAW OF FREEDOM.
-
-
- 1. One man, daring, is executed; another, not daring, liveth. It would seem
- as if the one course were profitable and the other detrimental. Yet when
- Heaven smiteth a man, who shall assign the cause thereof? Therefore the
- sage is diffident.<<This difficult passage deprecates the security
- afforded by worldly prudence. He who fights and runs away may get cut
- down by pursuing cavalry. The only way is to adapt oneself to one's
- environment; that is, to the Way of the Tao, which is everywhere.>>
-
- 2. The Tao of Heaven contendeth not, yet it overcometh; it is silent, yet
- its need is answered; it summoneth none, but all men come to it of their
- free will. Its method is quietness, yet its will is efficient. Large
- are the meshes of Heaven's Net; wide open, yet letting none escape.<<Cf.
- -- "Through the mills of God" etc.>> {79}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXXIV
-
-
- A RESTRAINT OF MISUNDERSTANDING.
-
-
- 1. The people have no fear of death;<<for the meddlesome governments have
- made their lives intolerable.>> why then seek to awe them by the threat
- of death? If the people feared death<<their lives being pleasant.>> and
- I could put to death evil-doers, who would dare to offend?
-
- 2. There is one appointed to inflict death.<<Azrael in the lore of Islam.
- This chapter is again difficult. Par. 2 shows capital punishment as
- interference with Heaven's privilege. Yet in Par. 1 we see the threat of
- it kept as a ruler's last resort. Only, this is a "fool's knot"
- proposal; for such punishment is effective only when the people are so
- happy that they fear it infinitely, so that none ever incurs it. Hence
- it need never be carried out.>> He who would usurp that position
- resembleth a hewer of wood doing the work of a carpenter. Such an one,
- presumptuous, will be sure to cut his own hands. {80}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXXV
-
-
- THE INJURY OF GREED.
-
-
- In such a state of insecurity it is better to ignore the question of living
- than to set store by it.<<These chapters 74 and 75 are an interpolation,
- describing the conditions resulting from neglect of the Tao. The last
- sentence is not to be taken as didactic, as though a counsel of despair.
- It is the climax of the lamentation.>> {81}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXXVI
-
-
- A WARNING AGAINST RIGIDITY.
-
-
- 1. At the birth of man, he is elastic and weak; at his death, rigid and
- unyielding.<<unable to adapt himself to his environment.>> This is the
- common law; trees also, in their youth, are tender and supple; in their
- decay, hard and dry.
-
- 2. So then rigidity and hardness are the stigmata of death; elasticity and
- adaptability, of life.
-
- 3. He then who putteth forth strength is not victorious; even as a strong
- tree filleth the embrace.<<is ready for cutting, and also, unable to grow
- further, decays.>>
-
- 4. Thus the hard and rigid have the inferior place, the soft and elastic the
- superior. {82}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXXVII
-
-
- THE WAY OF HEAVEN.
-
-
- 1. The Tao of Heaven is likened to the bending of a bow, whereby the high
- part is brought down, and the low part raised up. The extreme is
- diminished, and the middle increased.
-
- 2. This is the Way of Heaven, to remove excess, and to supplement
- insufficiency. Not so is the way of man, who taketh away from him that
- hath not to give to him that hath already excess.
-
- 3. Who can employ his own excess to the weal of all under Heaven? Only he
- that possesseth the Tao.
-
- 4. So the Wise Man acteth without lust of result; achieveth and boasteth
- not; he willeth not to proclaim his greatness. {83}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXXVIII
-
-
- A CREED.
-
-
- 1. Nothing in the world is more elastic and yielding than water; yet it is
- preeminent to dissolve things rigid and resistant; there is nothing which
- can match it.
-
- 2. All men know that the soft overcometh the hard, and the weak conquereth
- the strong; but none are able to use this law in action.
-
- 3. A Wise Man hath said: "He that taketh on the burden of the state is a
- demigod worthy of sacrificial worship; and the true King of a people is
- he that undertaketh the weight of their sorrows."
-
- 4. Truth appeareth paradox. {84}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXXIX
-
-
- TRUTH IN COVENANT.
-
-
- 1. When enemies are reconciled, there is always an aftermath of illwill.
- How can this be useful?
-
- 2. Therefore, the Wise Man, while he keepeth his part of the record of a
- transaction, doth not insist on its prompt execution. He who hath the
- Teh considereth the situation from all sides, while he who hath it not
- seeketh only to benefit himself.<<The Magick Powers must be exerted only
- according to the whole Will of the Universe without partiality.>>
-
- 3. In the Tao of Heaven, there is no distinction of persons in its love; but
- it is for the True Man to claim it. {85}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXXX
-
-
- ISOLATION.
-
-
- 1. In a little kingdom of few people it should be the order that though
- there were men able to do the work of ten men or five score, they should
- not be employed.<<at this high pressure.>> Though the people regarded
- death as sorrowful, yet they should not wish to go elsewhere.
-
- 2. They should have boats and wagons, yet no necessity to travel; corslets
- and weapons, yet no occasion to fight.
-
- 3. For communication they should use knotted cords.<<The curse of modern
- society is the Press: babble of twaddle, like a drunk prostitute
- vomiting. One should say only things strictly necessary.>>
-
- 4. They should deem their food sweet, their clothes beautiful, their houses
- homes, their customs delightful.
-
- 5. There should be another state within view, so that its fowls and dogs
- should be heard; yet to old age, even to death, the people should hold no
- traffic with it. {86}
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LXXXI
-
-
- THE SHEWING-FORTH OF SIMPLICITY.
-
-
- 1. True speech is not elegant; elaborate speech is not truth. Those who
- know do not argue; the argumentative are without knowledge. Those who
- have assimilated are not learned; those who are gross with learning have
- not assimilated.
-
- 2. The Wise Man doth not hoard. The more he giveth, the more he hath; the
- more he watereth, the more is he watered himself.
-
- 3. The Tao of Heaven is like an Arrow, yet it woundeth not; and the Wise
- Man, in all his Works, maketh no contention. {87}