Tao Te Ching by Laozi (reading comprehension books txt) ๐
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The Tao Te Ching is a classic Chinese text written around the 6th century BC by Laozi, a Zhou-dynasty courtier. While its authorship is debated, the text remains a fundamental building block of Taoism and one of the most influential works of its time. Today itโs one of the most-translated works in the world.
The work itself is a series of 81 short poetic sections, each one written in a fluid, ambiguous style, leaving them open to wide interpretation. Subjects range from advice to those in power to advice to regular people and adages for daily living. Because of its ambiguous nature the Tao Te Ching is famously difficult to translate, and many, if not all, translations are significantly influenced by the translatorโs state of mind. This translation is by James Legge, a famous Scottish sinologist and the first professor of Chinese at Oxford University.
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- Author: Laozi
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The next paragraph of the same book contains another story about two ancient men, both deformed, who, when looking at the graves on Kunlun, begin to feel in their own frames the symptoms of approaching dissolution. One says to the other, โDo you dread it?โ and gets the reply, โNo. Why should I dread it? Life is a borrowed thing. The living frame thus borrowed is but so much dust. Life and death are like day and night.โ
In every birth, it would thus appear, there is, somehow, a repetition of what it is said, as we have seen, took place at โthe grand beginning of all things,โ when out of the primal nothingness, the Tao somehow appeared, and there was developed through its operation the world of thingsโ โmaterial things and the material body of man, which enshrines or enshrouds an immaterial spirit. This returns to the Tao that gave it, and may be regarded indeed as that Tao operating in the body during the time of life, and in due time receives a new embodiment.
In these notions of Taoism there was preparation for the appreciation by its followers of the Buddhistic system when it came to be introduced into the country, and which forms a close connection between the two at the present day, Taoism itself constantly becoming less definite and influential on the minds of the Chinese people. The book which tells us of the death of Chuang-tzลญโs wife concludes with a narrative about Lieh-tzลญ and an old bleached skull,27 and to this is appended a passage about the metamorphoses of things, ending with the statement that โthe panther produces the horse, and the horse the man, who then again enters into the great machinery (of evolution), from which all things come forth (at birth) and into which they re-enter (at death).โ Such representations need not be characterised.
Chu Hsi, โthe prince of literature,โ described the main object of Taoism to be โthe preservation of the breath of life;โ and Liu Mi, probably of our thirteenth century,28 in his Dispassionate Comparison of the Three Religions, declared that โits chief achievement is the prolongation of longevity.โ Such is the account of Taoism originality given by Confucian and Buddhist writers, but our authorities, Lao and Chuang, hardly bear out this representation of it as true of their time. There are chapters of the Tao Te Ching which presuppose a peculiar management of the breath, but the treatise is singularly free from anything to justify what Mr. Balfour well calls โthe antics of kung-fu, or system of mystic and recondite calisthenics.โ Lao insists, however, on the Tao as conducive to long life, and in Chuang-tzลญ we have references to it as discipline of longevity, though even he mentions rather with disapproval โthose who kept blowing and breathing with open mouth, inhaling and exhaling the breath, expelling the old and taking in new; passing their time like the (dormant) bear, and stretching and twisting (their necks) like birdsโ He says that โall this simply shows their desire for longevity, and is what the scholars who manage the breath, and men who nourish the body and wish to live as long as Pสฝรชng-tsu, are fond of doing.โ29 My own opinion is that the methods of the Tao were first cultivated for the sake of the longevity which they were thought to promote, and that Lao, discountenancing such a use of them, endeavoured to give the doctrine a higher character; and this view is favoured by passages in Chuang-tzลญ. In the seventh paragraph, for instance, of his book VI, speaking of parties who had obtained the Tao, he begins with a prehistoric sovereign, who โgot and by it adjusted heaven and earth.โ Among his other instances in Pสฝรชng Tsu, who got it in the time of Shun, and lived on to the time of the five leading princes of Chouโ โa longevity of more than 1,800 years, greater than that ascribed to Methuselah! In the paragraph that follows there appear a Nรผ Yรผ, who is addressed by another famous Taoist in the words, โYou are old, sir, while your complexion is like that of a child;โ โhow is it so?โ and the reply is, โI became acquainted with the Tao.โ
I will adduce only one more passage of Chuang.
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