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<way>
<heading>1. The Way</heading> 
<text>
<l>The Way that can be experienced is not true.</l>
<l>The world that can be constructed is not true.</l>
<l>The Way manifests all that happens and may happen;</l>
<l>The world represents all that exists and may exist.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>2. Abstraction</heading> 
<text>
<l>When beauty is abstracted</l>
<l>Then ugliness has been implied;</l>
<l>When good is abstracted</l>
<l>Then evil has been implied.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>So alive and dead are abstracted from nature,</l>
<l>Difficult and easy abstracted from progress,</l>
<l>Long and short abstracted from contrast,</l>
<l>High and low abstracted from depth,</l>
<l>Song and speech abstracted from melody,</l>
<l>After and before abstracted from sequence.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The sage experiences without abstraction,</l>
<l>And accomplishes without action;</l>
<l>He accepts the ebb and flow of things,</l>
<l>Nurtures them, but does not own them,</l>
<l>And lives, but does not dwell.</l>
</text> 
</way>

  
<way>
<heading>3. Without Action</heading> 
<text>
<l>Not praising the worthy prevents contention,</l>
<l>Not esteeming the valuable prevents theft,</l>
<l>Not displaying the beautiful prevents desire.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>In this manner the sage governs people:</l>
<l>Emptying their minds,</l>
<l>Filling their bellies,</l>
<l>Weakening their ambitions,</l>
<l>And strengthening their bones.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>If people lack knowledge and desire</l>
<l>Then they can not act;</l>
<l>If no action is taken</l>
<l>Harmony remains.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>4. Limitless</heading> 
<text>
<l>The Way is a limitless vessel;</l>
<l>Used by the self, it is not filled by the world;</l>
<l>It cannot be cut, knotted, dimmed or stilled;</l>
<l>Its depths are hidden, ubiquitous and eternal;</l>
<l>I don't know where it comes from;</l>
<l>It comes before nature.</l>
</text> 
</way>
 
<way>
<heading>5. Nature</heading> 
<text>
<l>Nature is not kind;</l>
<l>It treats all things impartially.</l>
<l>The Sage is not kind,</l>
<l>And treats all people impartially.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Nature is like a bellows,</l>
<l>Empty, yet never ceasing its supply.</l>
<l>The more it moves, the more it yields;</l>
<l>So the sage draws upon experience</l>
<l>And cannot be exhausted.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>6. Experience</heading> 
<text>
<l>Experience is a riverbed,</l> 
<l>Its source hidden, forever flowing:</l>
<l>Its entrance, the root of the world,</l>
<l>The Way moves within it:</l>
<l>Draw upon it; it will not run dry.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>7. Complete</heading> 
<text>
<l>Nature is complete because it does not serve itself.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The sage places himself after and finds himself before,</l>
<l>Ignores his desire and finds himself content.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>He is complete because he does not serve himself.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>8. Water</heading> 
<text>
<l>The best of man is like water,</l>
<l>Which benefits all things, and does not contend with them,</l>
<l>Which flows in places that others disdain,</l>
<l>Where it is in harmony with the Way.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>So the sage:</l>
<l>Lives within nature,</l>
<l>Thinks within the deep,</l>
<l>Gives within impartiality,</l>
<l>Speaks within trust,</l>
<l>Governs within order,</l>
<l>Crafts within ability,</l>
<l>Acts within opportunity.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>He does not contend, and none contend against him.</l>
</text> 
</way>
 
<way>
<heading>9. Retire</heading> 
<text>
<l>Fill a cup to its brim and it is easily spilled;</l>
<l>Temper a sword to its hardest and it is easily broken;</l>
<l>Amass the greatest treasure and it is easily stolen;</l>
<l>Claim credit and honour and you easily fall;</l>
<l>Retire once your purpose is achieved - this is natural.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>10. Harmony</heading> 
<text>
<l>Embracing the Way, you become embraced;</l>
<l>Breathing gently, you become newborn;</l>
<l>Clearing your mind, you become clear;</l>
<l>Nurturing your children, you become impartial;</l>
<l>Opening your heart, you become accepted;</l>
<l>Accepting the world, you embrace the Way.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Bearing and nurturing,</l>
<l>Creating but not owning,</l>
<l>Giving without demanding,</l>
<l>This is harmony.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>11. Tools</heading> 
<text>
<l>Thirty spokes meet at a nave;</l>
<l>Because of the hole we may use the wheel.</l>
<l>Clay is moulded into a vessel;</l>
<l>Because of the hollow we may use the cup.</l>
<l>Walls are built around a hearth;</l>
<l>Because of the doors we may use the house.</l>
<l>Thus tools come from what exists,</l>
<l>But use from what does not</l>
</text> 
</way> 

<way>
<heading>12. Substance</heading> 
<text>
<l>Too much colour blinds the eye,</l>
<l>Too much music deafens the ear,</l>
<l>Too much taste dulls the palate,</l>
<l>Too much play maddens the mind,</l>
<l>Too much desire tears the heart.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>In this manner the sage cares for people:</l>
<l>He provides for the belly, not for the senses;</l>
<l>He ignores abstraction and holds fast to substance.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>13. Self</heading> 
<text>
<l>Both praise and blame cause concern,</l>
<l>For they bring people hope and fear.</l>
<l>The object of hope and fear is the self -</l>
<l>For, without self, to whom may fortune and disaster occur?</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Therefore,</l>
<l>Who distinguishes himself from the world may be given the world,</l>
<l>But who regards himself as the world may accept the world.</l>
</text> 
</way>
 
<way>
<heading>14. Mystery </heading> 
<text>
<l>Looked at but cannot be seen - it is beneath form;</l>
<l>Listened to but cannot be heard - it is beneath sound;</l>
<l>Held but cannot be touched - it is beneath feeling;</l>
<l>These depthless things evade definition,</l>
<l>And blend into a single mystery.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>In its rising there is no light,</l>
<l>In its falling there is no darkness,</l>
<l>A continuous thread beyond description,</l>
<l>Lining what can not occur;</l>
<l>Its form formless,</l>
<l>Its image nothing,</l>
<l>Its name silence;</l>
<l>Follow it, it has no back,</l>
<l>Meet it, it has no face.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Attend the present to deal with the past;</l>
<l>Thus you grasp the continuity of the Way,</l>
<l>Which is its essence.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>15. Enlightenment</heading> 
<text>
<l>The enlightened possess understanding</l>
<l>So profound they can not be understood.</l>
<l>Because they cannot be understood</l> 
<l>I can only describe their appearance:</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Cautious as one crossing thin ice,</l>
<l>Undecided as one surrounded by danger,</l>
<l>Modest as one who is a guest,</l>
<l>Unbounded as melting ice,</l>
<l>Genuine as unshaped wood,</l>
<l>Broad as a valley,</l>
<l>Seamless as muddy water.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Who stills the water that the mud may settle,</l>
<l>Who seeks to stop that he may travel on,</l>
<l>Who desires less than may transpire,</l>
<l>Decays, but will not renew.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>16. Decay and Renewal</heading> 
<text>
<l>Empty the self completely;</l>
<l>Embrace perfect peace.</l>
<l>The world will rise and move;</l>
<l>Watch it return to rest.</l>
<l>All the flourishing things</l>
<l>Will return to their source.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>This return is peaceful;</l>
<l>It is the flow of nature,</l>
<l>An eternal decay and renewal.</l>
<l>Accepting this brings enlightenment,</l>
<l>Ignoring this brings misery.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Who accepts nature's flow becomes all-cherishing;</l>
<l>Being all-cherishing he becomes impartial;</l>
<l>Being impartial he becomes magnanimous;</l>
<l>Being magnanimous he becomes natural;</l>
<l>Being natural he becomes one with the Way;</l>
<l>Being one with the Way he becomes immortal:</l>
<l>Though his body will decay, the Way will not.</l>
</text> 
</way> 

<way>
<heading>17. Rulers</heading> 
<text>
<l>The best rulers are scarcely known by their subjects;</l>
<l>The next best are loved and praised;</l>
<l>The next are feared;</l>
<l>The next despised:</l>
<l>They have no faith in their people,</l>
<l>And their people become unfaithful to them.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>When the best rulers achieve their purpose</l>
<l>Their subjects claim the achievement as their own.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>18. Hypocrisy</heading> 
<text>
<l>When the Way is forgotten</l>
<l>Duty and justice appear;</l>
<l>Then knowledge and wisdom are born</l>
<l>Along with hypocrisy.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>When harmonious relationships dissolve</l>
<l>Then respect and devotion arise;</l>
<l>When a nation falls to chaos</l>
<l>Then loyalty and patriotism are born.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>19. Simplify</heading> 
<text>
<l>If we could abolish knowledge and wisdom</l>
<l>Then people would profit a hundredfold;</l>
<l>If we could abolish duty and justice</l>
<l>Then harmonious relationships would form;</l>
<l>If we could abolish artifice and profit</l>
<l>Then waste and theft would disappear.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Yet such remedies treat only symptoms</l>
<l>And so they are inadequate.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>People need personal remedies:</l>
<l>Reveal your naked self and embrace your original nature;</l>
<l>Bind your self-interest and control your ambition;</l>
<l>Forget your habits and simplify your affairs.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>20. Wandering</heading> 
<text>
<l>What is the difference between assent and denial?</l>
<l>What is the difference between beautiful and ugly?</l>
<l>What is the difference between fearsome and afraid?</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The people are merry as if at a magnificent party</l>
<l>Or playing in the park at springtime,</l>
<l>But I am tranquil and wandering,</l>
<l>Like a newborn before it learns to smile,</l>
<l>Alone, with no true home.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The people have enough and to spare,</l>
<l>Where I have nothing,</l>
<l>And my heart is foolish,</l>
<l>Muddled and cloudy.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The people are bright and certain,</l>
<l>Where I am dim and confused;</l>
<l>The people are clever and wise,</l>
<l>Where I am dull and ignorant;</l>
<l>Aimless as a wave drifting over the sea,</l>
<l>Attached to nothing.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The people are busy with purpose,</l>
<l>Where I am impractical and rough;</l>
<l>I do not share the peoples' cares</l>
<l>But I am fed at nature's breast.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>21. Accept</heading> 
<text>
<l>Harmony is only in following the Way.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The Way is without form or quality,</l>
<l>But expresses all forms and qualities;</l>
<l>The Way is hidden and implicate,</l>
<l>But expresses all of nature;</l>
<l>The Way is unchanging,</l>
<l>But expresses all motion.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Beneath sensation and memory</l>
<l>The Way is the source of all the world.</l>
<l>How can I understand the source of the world?</l>
<l>By accepting.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>22. Home</heading> 
<text>
<l>Accept and you become whole,</l>
<l>Bend and you straighten,</l>
<l>Empty and you fill,</l>
<l>Decay and you renew,</l>
<l>Want and you acquire,</l>
<l>Fulfill and you become confused.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The sage accepts the world</l>
<l>As the world accepts the Way;</l>
<l>He does not display himself, so is clearly seen,</l>
<l>Does not justify himself, so is recognized,</l>
<l>Does not boast, so is credited,</l>
<l>Does not pride himself, so endures,</l>
<l>Does not contend, so none contend against him.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The ancients said, "Accept and you become whole",</l>
<l>Once whole, the world is as your home.</l>
</text> 
</way> 

<way>
<heading>23. Words</heading> 
<text>
<l>Nature says only a few words:</l>
<l>High wind does not last long,</l>
<l>Nor does heavy rain.</l>
<l>If nature's words do not last</l>
<l>Why should those of man?</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Who accepts harmony, becomes harmonious.</l>
<l>Who accepts loss, becomes lost.</l>
<l>For who accepts harmony, the Way harmonizes with him,</l>
<l>And who accepts loss, the Way cannot find.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>24. Indulgence</heading> 
<text>
<l>Straighten yourself and you will not stand steady;</l>
<l>Display yourself and you will not be clearly seen;</l>
<l>Justify yourself and you will not be respected;</l>
<l>Promote yourself and you will not be believed;</l>
<l>Pride yourself and you will not endure.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>These behaviours are wasteful, indulgent,</l>
<l>And so they attract disfavour;</l>
<l>Harmony avoids them.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>25. Beneath Abstraction</heading> 
<text>
<l>There is a mystery,</l>
<l>Beneath abstraction,</l> 
<l>Silent, depthless,</l>
<l>Alone, unchanging,</l>
<l>Ubiquitous and liquid,</l>
<l>The mother of nature.</l>
<l>It has no name, but I call it "the Way";</l>
<l>It has no limit, but I call it "limitless".</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Being limitless, it flows away forever;</l>
<l>Flowing away forever, it returns to my self:</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The Way is limitless,</l> 
<l>So nature is limitless,</l>
<l>So the world is limitless,</l>
<l>And so I am limitless.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>For I am abstracted from the world,</l>
<l>The world from nature,</l>
<l>Nature from the Way,</l>
<l>And the Way from what is beneath abstraction.</l>
</text> 
</way> 

<way>
<heading>26. Calm</heading> 
<text>
<l>Gravity is the source of lightness,</l>
<l>Calm, the master of haste.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>A lone traveller will journey all day, watching over his belongings;</l>
<l>Yet once safe in his bed he will lose them in sleep.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The captain of a great vessel will not act lightly or hastily.</l>
<l>Acting lightly, he loses sight of the world,</l>
<l>Acting hastily, he loses control of himself.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>A captain can not treat his great ship as a small boat;</l>
<l>Rather than glitter like jade</l>
<l>He must stand like stone.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>27. Perfection</heading> 
<text>
<l>The perfect traveller leaves no trail to be followed;</l>
<l>The perfect speaker leaves no question to be answered;</l>
<l>The perfect accountant leaves no working to be completed;</l>
<l>The perfect container leaves no lock to be closed;</l>
<l>The perfect knot leaves no end to be ravelled.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>So the sage nurtures all men</l>
<l>And abandons no one.</l>
<l>He accepts everything</l>
<l>And rejects nothing.</l>
<l>He attends to the smallest details.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>So the strong must guide the weak,</l>
<l>For the weak are raw material to the strong.</l>
<l>If the guide is not respected,</l>
<l>Or the material is not cared for,</l>
<l>Confusion will result, no matter how clever one is.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>This is the secret of perfection:</l>
<l>When raw wood is carved, it becomes a tool;</l>
<l>When a man is employed, he becomes a tool;</l>
<l>The perfect carpenter leaves no wood to be carved.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>28. Becoming</heading> 
<text>
<l>Using the male, being female,</l>
<l>Being the entrance of the world,</l>
<l>You embrace harmony</l>
<l>And become as a newborn.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Using strength, being weak,</l>
<l>Being the root of the world,</l>
<l>You complete harmony</l>
<l>And become as unshaped wood.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Using the light, being dark,</l>
<l>Being the world,</l>
<l>You perfect harmony</l>
<l>And return to the Way.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>29. Ambition</heading> 
<text>
<l>Those who wish to change the world</l>
<l>According with their desire</l>
<l>Cannot succeed.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The world is shaped by the Way;</l>
<l>It cannot be shaped by the self.</l>
<l>Trying to change it, you damage it;</l>
<l>Trying to possess it, you lose it.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>So some will lead, while others follow.</l>
<l>Some will be warm, others cold</l>
<l>Some will be strong, others weak.</l>
<l>Some will get where they are going</l>
<l>While others fall by the side of the road.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>So the sage will be neither wasteful nor violent.</l>
</text> 
</way>
 
<way>
<heading>30. Violence</heading> 
<text>
<l>Powerful men are well advised not to use violence,</l>
<l>For violence has a habit of returning;</l>
<l>Thorns and weeds grow wherever an army goes,</l>
<l>And lean years follow a great war.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>A general is well advised</l>
<l>To achieve nothing more than his orders:</l>
<l>Not to take advantage of his victory.</l>
<l>Nor to glory, boast or pride himself;</l>
<l>To do what is dictated by necessity,</l>
<l>But not by choice.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>For even the strongest force will weaken with time,</l>
<l>And then its violence will return, and kill it.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>31. Armies</heading> 
<text>
<l>Armies are tools of violence;</l>
<l>They cause men to hate and fear.</l>
<l>The sage will not join them.</l>
<l>His purpose is creation;</l>
<l>Their purpose is destruction.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Weapons are tools of violence,</l> 
<l>Not of the sage;</l>
<l>He uses them only when there is no choice,</l>
<l>And then calmly, and with tact,</l>
<l>For he finds no beauty in them.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Whoever finds beauty in weapons</l>
<l>Delights in the slaughter of men;</l>
<l>And who delights in slaughter </l>
<l>Cannot content himself with peace.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>So slaughters must be mourned</l>
<l>And conquest celebrated with a funeral.</l>
</text> 
</way>
 
<way>
<heading>32. Shapes</heading> 
<text>
<l>The Way has no true shape,</l>
<l>And therefore none can control it.</l>
<l>If a ruler could control the Way</l>
<l>All things would follow</l>
<l>In harmony with his desire,</l>
<l>And sweet rain would fall,</l>
<l>Effortlessly slaking every thirst.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The Way is shaped by use,</l>
<l>But then the shape is lost.</l>
<l>Do not hold fast to shapes</l>
<l>But let sensation flow into the world</l>
<l>As a river courses down to the sea.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>33. Virtues</heading> 
<text>
<l>Who understands the world is learned;</l>
<l>Who understands the self is enlightened.</l>
<l>Who conquers the world has strength;</l>
<l>Who conquers the self has harmony.</l>
<l>Who is determined has purpose;</l>
<l>Who is contented has wealth.</l>
<l>Who defends his home may long endure;</l>
<l>Who surrenders his home may long survive it.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>34. Control</heading> 
<text>
<l>The Way flows and ebbs, creating and destroying,</l>
<l>Implementing all the world, attending to the tiniest details,</l>
<l>Claiming nothing in return.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>It nurtures all things,</l>
<l>Though it does not control them;</l>
<l>It has no intention,</l>
<l>So it seems inconsequential.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>It is the substance of all things;</l>
<l>Though it does not control them;</l>
<l>It has no exception,</l>
<l>So it seems all-important.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The sage would not control the world;</l>
<l>He is in harmony with the world.</l>
</text> 
</way>
 
<way>
<heading>35. Peace</heading> 
<text>
<l>If you offer music and food</l>
<l>Strangers may stop with you;</l>
<l>But if you accord with the Way</l>
<l>All the people of the world will keep you</l>
<l>In safety, health, community, and peace.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The Way lacks art and flavour;</l>
<l>It can neither be seen nor heard,</l>
<l>But its benefit cannot be exhausted.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>36. Opposition</heading> 
<text>
<l>To reduce someone's influence, first expand it;</l>
<l>To reduce someone's force, first increase it;</l>
<l>To overthrow someone, first exalt them;</l>
<l>To take from someone, first give to them.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>This is the subtlety by which the weak overcome the strong:</l>
<l>Fish should not leave their depths,</l>
<l>And swords should not leave their scabbards.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>37. Tranquillity</heading> 
<text>
<l>The Way takes no action, but leaves nothing undone.</l>
<l>When you accept this</l>
<l>The world will flourish,</l>
<l>In harmony with nature.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Nature does not possess desire;</l>
<l>Without desire, the heart becomes quiet;</l>
<l>In this manner the whole world is made tranquil.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>38. Ritual </heading> 
<text>
<l>Well established hierarchies are not easily uprooted;</l>
<l>Closely held beliefs are not easily released;</l>
<l>So ritual enthralls generation after generation.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Harmony does not care for harmony, and so is naturally attained;</l>
<l>But ritual is intent upon harmony, and so can not attain it.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Harmony neither acts nor reasons;</l>
<l>Love acts, but without reason;</l>
<l>Justice acts to serve reason;</l>
<l>But ritual acts to enforce reason.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>When the Way is lost, there remains harmony;</l>
<l>When harmony is lost, there remains love;</l>
<l>When love is lost, there remains justice;</l>
<l>But when justice is lost, there remains ritual.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Ritual is the end of compassion and honesty,</l>
<l>The beginning of confusion;</l>
<l>Belief is a colourful hope or fear,</l>
<l>The beginning of folly.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The sage goes by harmony, not by hope;</l>
<l>He dwells in the fruit, not the flower;</l>
<l>He accepts substance, and ignores abstraction.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>39. Support</heading> 
<text>
<l>In mythical times all things were whole:</l>
<l>All the sky was clear,</l>
<l>All the earth was stable,</l>
<l>All the mountains were firm,</l>
<l>All the riverbeds were full,</l>
<l>All of nature was fertile,</l>
<l>And all the rulers were supported.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>But, losing clarity, the sky tore;</l>
<l>Losing stability, the earth split;</l>
<l>Losing strength, the mountains sank;</l>
<l>Losing water, the riverbeds cracked;</l>
<l>Losing fertility, nature disappeared;</l>
<l>And losing support, the rulers fell.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Rulers depend upon their subjects,</l>
<l>The noble depend upon the humble;</l>
<l>So rulers call themselves orphaned, hungry and alone,</l>
<l>To win the people's support.</l>
</text> 
</way> 

<way>
<heading>40. Motion and Use</heading> 
<text>
<l>The motion of the Way is to return;</l>
<l>The use of the Way is to accept;</l>
<l>All things come from the Way,</l>
<l>And the Way comes from nothing.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>41. Following</heading> 
<text>
<l>When the great man learns the Way, he follows it with diligence;</l>
<l>When the common man learns the Way, he follows it on occasion;</l>
<l>When the mean man learns the Way, he laughs out loud;</l>
<l>Those who do not laugh, do not learn at all.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Therefore it is said:</l>
<l>Who understands the Way seems foolish;</l>
<l>Who progresses on the Way seems to fail;</l>
<l>Who follows the Way seems to wander.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>For the finest harmony appears plain;</l>
<l>The brightest truth appears coloured;</l>
<l>The richest character appears incomplete;</l>
<l>The bravest heart appears meek;</l>
<l>The simplest nature appears inconstant.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The square, perfected, has no corner;</l>
<l>Music, perfected, has no melody;</l>
<l>Love, perfected, has no climax;</l>
<l>Art, perfected, has no meaning.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The Way can be neither sensed nor known:</l>
<l>It transmits sensation and transcends knowledge.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>42. Mind</heading> 
<text>
<l>The Way bears sensation,</l>
<l>Sensation bears memory,</l>
<l>Sensation and memory bear abstraction,</l>
<l>And abstraction bears all the world;</l>
<l>Each thing in the world bears feeling and doing,</l>
<l>And, imbued with mind, harmony with the Way.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>As others have taught, so do I teach,</l>
<l>"Who loses harmony opposes nature";</l>
<l>This is the root of my teaching.</l>
</text> 
</way> 

<way>
<heading>43. Overcoming</heading> 
<text>
<l>Water overcomes the stone;</l>
<l>Without substance it requires no opening;</l>
<l>This is the benefit of taking no action.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Yet benefit without action,</l>
<l>And experience without abstraction,</l> 
<l>Are practiced by very few.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>44. Contentment</heading> 
<text>
<l>Health or reputation: which is held dearer?</l>
<l>Health or possessions: which has more worth?</l>
<l>Profit or loss: which is more troublesome?</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Great love incurs great expense,</l>
<l>And great riches incur great fear,</l>
<l>But contentment comes at no cost;</l>
<l>Who knows when to stop</l> 
<l>Does not continue into danger,</l>
<l>And so may long endure.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>45. Quiet</heading> 
<text>
<l>Great perfection seems incomplete,</l>
<l>But does not decay;</l>
<l>Great abundance seems empty,</l>
<l>But does not fail.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Great truth seems contradictory;</l>
<l>Great cleverness seems stupid;</l>
<l>Great eloquence seems awkward.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>As spring overcomes the cold,</l>
<l>And autumn overcomes the heat,</l>
<l>So calm and quiet overcome the world.</l>
</text> 
</way> 

<way>
<heading>46. Horses</heading> 
<text>
<l>When a nation follows the Way,</l>
<l>Horses bear manure through its fields;</l>
<l>When a nation ignores the Way,</l>
<l>Horses bear soldiers through its streets.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>There is no greater mistake than following desire;</l>
<l>There is no greater disaster than forgetting contentment;</l>
<l>There is no greater sickness than seeking attainment;</l>
<l>But one who is content to satisfy his needs</l>
<l>Finds that contentment endures.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>47. Knowing</heading> 
<text>
<l>Without taking a step outdoors</l>
<l>You know the whole world;</l>
<l>Without taking a peep out the window</l>
<l>You know the colour of the sky.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The more you experience,</l>
<l>The less you know.</l>
<l>The sage wanders without knowing,</l>
<l>Sees without looking,</l>
<l>Accomplishes without acting.</l>
</text> 
</way>
 
<way>
<heading>48. Inaction</heading> 
<text>
<l>The follower of knowledge learns as much as he can every day;</l>
<l>The follower of the Way forgets as much as he can every day.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>By attrition he reaches a state of inaction</l>
<l>Wherein he does nothing, but nothing remains undone.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>To conquer the world, accomplish nothing;</l>
<l>If you must accomplish something,</l>
<l>The world remains beyond conquest.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>49. People</heading> 
<text>
<l>The sage does not distinguish between himself and the world;</l>
<l>The needs of other people are as his own.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>He is good to those who are good;</l>
<l>He is also good to those who are not good,</l>
<l>Thereby he is good.</l>
<l>He trusts those who are trustworthy;</l>
<l>He also trusts those who are not trustworthy,</l>
<l>Thereby he is trustworthy.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The sage lives in harmony with the world,</l>
<l>And his mind is the world's mind.</l>
<l>So he nurtures the worlds of others</l>
<l>As a mother does her children.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>50. Death</heading> 
<text>
<l>Men flow into life, and ebb into death.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Some are filled with life;</l>
<l>Some are empty with death;</l>
<l>Some hold fast to life, and thereby perish,</l>
<l>For life is an abstraction.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Those who are filled with life</l>
<l>Need not fear tigers and rhinos in the wilds,</l>
<l>Nor wear armour and shields in battle;</l>
<l>The rhinoceros finds no place in them for its horn,</l>
<l>The tiger no place for its claw,</l>
<l>The soldier no place for a weapon,</l>
<l>For death finds no place in them.</l>
</text> 
</way> 

<way>
<heading>51. Nurture</heading> 
<text>
<l>The Way bears all things;</l>
<l>Harmony nurtures them;</l>
<l>Nature shapes them;</l>
<l>Use completes them.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Each follows the Way and honours harmony,</l>
<l>Not by law,</l>
<l>But by being.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The Way bears, nurtures, shapes, completes,</l> 
<l>Shelters, comforts, and makes a home for them.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Bearing without possessing,</l>
<l>Nurturing without taming,</l>
<l>Shaping without forcing,</l>
<l>This is harmony.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>52. Clarity</heading> 
<text>
<l>The origin of the world is its mother;</l>
<l>Understand the mother, and you understand the child;</l>
<l>Embrace the child, and you embrace the mother,</l>
<l>Who will not perish when you die.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Reserve your judgments and words</l>
<l>And you maintain your influence;</l>
<l>Speak your mind and take positions</l>
<l>And nothing can save you.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>As observing detail is clarity,</l>
<l>So maintaining flexibility is strength;</l>
<l>Use the light but shed no light,</l>
<l>So that you do yourself no harm,</l>
<l>But embrace clarity.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>53. Difficult Paths</heading> 
<text>
<l>With but a small understanding </l>
<l>One may follow the Way like a main road,</l>
<l>Fearing only to leave it;</l>
<l>Following a main road is easy,</l>
<l>Yet people delight in difficult paths.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>When palaces are kept up</l>
<l>Fields are left to weeds</l>
<l>And granaries empty;</l>
<l>Wearing fine clothes,</l>
<l>Bearing sharp swords,</l>
<l>Glutting with food and drink,</l>
<l>Hoarding wealth and possessions -</l>
<l>These are the ways of theft,</l>
<l>And far from the Way.</l>
</text> 
</way> 

<way>
<heading>54. Cultivate Harmony</heading> 
<text>
<l>Cultivate harmony within yourself, and harmony becomes real;</l>
<l>Cultivate harmony within your family, and harmony becomes fertile;</l>
<l>Cultivate harmony within your community, and harmony becomes abundant;</l>
<l>Cultivate harmony within your culture, and harmony becomes enduring;</l>
<l>Cultivate harmony within the world, and harmony becomes ubiquitous.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Live with a person to understand that person;</l>
<l>Live with a family to understand that family;</l>
<l>Live with a community to understand that community;</l>
<l>Live with a culture to understand that culture;</l>
<l>Live with the world to understand the world.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>How can I live with the world?</l>
<l>By accepting.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>55. Soft Bones</heading> 
<text>
<l>Who is filled with harmony is like a newborn.</l>
<l>Wasps and snakes will not bite him;</l>
<l>Hawks and tigers will not claw him.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>His bones are soft yet his grasp is sure,</l>
<l>For his flesh is supple;</l>
<l>His mind is innocent yet his body is virile,</l>
<l>For his vigour is plentiful;</l>
<l>His song is long-lasting yet his voice is sweet,</l>
<l>For his grace is perfect.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>But knowing harmony creates abstraction,</l>
<l>And following abstraction creates ritual.</l>
<l>Exceeding nature creates calamity,</l>
<l>And controlling nature creates violence.</l>
</text> 
</way> 

<way>
<heading>56. Impartiality</heading> 
<text>
<l>Who understands does not preach;</l>
<l>Who preaches does not understand.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Reserve your judgments and words;</l>
<l>Smooth differences and forgive disagreements;</l>
<l>Dull your wit and simplify your purpose;</l>
<l>Accept the world.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Then,</l>
<l>Friendship and enmity,</l>
<l>Profit and loss,</l>
<l>Honour and disgrace,</l>
<l>Will not affect you;</l>
<l>The world will accept you.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>57. Conquer with Inaction</heading> 
<text>
<l>Do not control the people with laws,</l>
<l>Nor violence nor espionage,</l> 
<l>But conquer them with inaction.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>For:</l>
<l>The more morals and taboos there are,</l>
<l>The more cruelty afflicts people;</l>
<l>The more guns and knives there are,</l>
<l>The more factions divide people;</l>
<l>The more arts and skills there are,</l>
<l>The more change obsoletes people;</l>
<l>The more laws and taxes there are,</l>
<l>The more theft corrupts people.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Yet take no action, and the people nurture eachother;</l>
<l>Make no laws, and the people deal fairly with eachother;</l>
<l>Own no interest, and the people cooperate with eachother;</l>
<l>Express no desire, and the people harmonize with eachother.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>58. No End</heading> 
<text>
<l>When government is lazy and informal</l>
<l>The people are kind and honest;</l>
<l>When government is efficient and severe</l>
<l>The people are discontented and deceitful.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Good fortune follows upon disaster;</l>
<l>Disaster lurks within good fortune;</l>
<l>Who can say how things will end?</l>
<l>Perhaps there is no end.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Honesty is ever deceived;</l>
<l>Kindness is ever seduced;</l>
<l>Men have been like this for a long time.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>So the sage is firm but not cutting,</l>
<l>Pointed but not piercing,</l>
<l>Straight but not rigid,</l>
<l>Bright but not blinding.</l>
</text> 
</way> 

<way>
<heading>59. Restraint</heading> 
<text>
<l>Manage a great nation as you would cook a delicate fish.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>To govern men in accord with nature</l>
<l>It is best to be restrained;</l>
<l>Restraint makes agreement easy to attain,</l>
<l>And easy agreement builds harmonious relationships;</l>
<l>With sufficient harmony no resistance will arise;</l>
<l>When no resistance arises, then you possess the heart of the nation,</l>
<l>And when you possess the nation's heart, your influence will long endure:</l>
<l>Deeply rooted and firmly established.</l>
<l>This is the method of far sight and long life.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>60. Demons</heading> 
<text>
<l>When you use the Way to conquer the world,</l>
<l>Your demons will lose their power to harm.</l>
<l>It is not that they lose their power as such,</l>
<l>But that they will not harm others;</l>
<l>Because they will not harm others,</l>
<l>You will not harm others:</l>
<l>When neither you nor your demons can do harm,</l>
<l>You will be at peace with them.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>61. Submission</heading> 
<text>
<l>A nation is like a hierarchy, a marketplace, and a maiden.</l>
<l>A maiden wins her husband by submitting to his advances;</l>
<l>Submission is a means of union.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>So when a large country submits to a small country</l>
<l>It will adopt the small country;</l>
<l>When a small country submits to a large country</l>
<l>It will be adopted by the large country;</l>
<l>The one submits and adopts;</l>
<l>The other submits and is adopted.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>It is in the interest of a large country to unite and gain service,</l>
<l>And in the interest of a small country to unite and gain patronage;</l>
<l>If both would serve their interests,</l>
<l>Both must submit.</l>
</text> 
</way> 

<way>
<heading>62. Sin</heading> 
<text>
<l>The Way is the fate of men,</l>
<l>The treasure of the saint,</l> 
<l>And the refuge of the sinner.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Fine words are often borrowed,</l>
<l>And great deeds are often appropriated;</l>
<l>Therefore, when a man falls, do not abandon him,</l>
<l>And when a man gains power, do not honour him;</l>
<l>Only remain impartial and show him the Way.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Why should someone appreciate the Way?</l>
<l>The ancients said, "By it, those who seek may easily find,</l>
<l>And those who regret may easily absolve"</l>
<l>So it is the most precious gift.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>63. Difficulty</heading> 
<text>
<l>Practice no-action;</l>
<l>Attend to do-nothing;</l>
<l>Taste the flavorless,</l>
<l>Magnify the small,</l> 
<l>Multiply the few,</l>
<l>Return love for hate.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Deal with the difficult while it is yet easy;</l>
<l>Deal with the great while it is yet small;</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The difficult develops naturally from the easy,</l>
<l>And the great from the small;</l>
<l>So the sage, by dealing with the small,</l>
<l>Achieves the great.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Who finds it easy to promise finds it hard to be trusted;</l>
<l>Who takes things lightly finds things difficult;</l>
<l>The sage recognizes difficulty, and so has none.</l>
</text> 
</way> 

<way>
<heading>64a. Care at the Beginning</heading> 
<text>
<l>What lies still is easy to grasp;</l>
<l>What lies far off is easy to anticipate;</l>
<l>What is brittle is easy to shatter;</l>
<l>What is small is easy to disperse.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Yet a tree broader than a man can embrace is born of a tiny shoot;</l>
<l>A dam greater than a river can overflow starts with a clod of earth;</l>
<l>A journey of a thousand miles begins at the spot under one's feet.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Therefore deal with things before they happen;</l>
<l>Create order before there is confusion.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>64b. Care at the End</heading> 
<text>
<l>He who acts, spoils;</l>
<l>He who grasps, loses.</l>
<l>People often fail on the verge of success;</l>
<l>Take care at the end as at the beginning,</l>
<l>So that you may avoid failure.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The sage desires no-desire,</l>
<l>Values no-value,</l>
<l>Learns no-learning,</l>
<l>And returns to the places that people have forgotten;</l>
<l>He would help all people to become natural,</l>
<l>But then he would not be natural.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>65. Subtlety</heading> 
<text>
<l>The ancients did not seek to rule people with knowledge,</l>
<l>But to help them become natural.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>It is difficult for knowledgeable people to become natural;</l>
<l>So to use law to control a nation weakens the nation,</l>
<l>But to use nature to control a nation strengthens the nation.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Understanding these two paths is understanding subtlety;</l>
<l>Subtlety runs deep, ranges wide,</l> 
<l>Resolves confusion and preserves peace.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>66. Lead by Following</heading> 
<text>
<l>The river carves out the valley by flowing beneath it.</l>
<l>Thereby the river is the master of the valley.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>In order to master people </l>
<l>One must speak as their servant;</l>
<l>In order to lead people</l>
<l>One must follow them.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>So when the sage rises above the people,</l>
<l>They do not feel oppressed;</l>
<l>And when the sage stands before the people,</l>
<l>They do not feel hindered.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>So the popularity of the sage does not fail,</l>
<l>He does not contend, and no one contends against him.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>67. Unimportance</heading> 
<text>
<l>All the world says,</l>
<l>"I am important;</l>
<l>I am separate from all the world.</l>
<l>I am important because I am separate,</l>
<l>Were I the same, I could never be important.</l>"
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Yet here are three treasures</l>
<l>That I cherish and commend to you:</l>
<l>The first is compassion,</l>
<l>By which one finds courage.</l>
<l>The second is restraint,</l>
<l>By which one finds strength.</l>
<l>And the third is unimportance,</l>
<l>By which one finds influence.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Those who are fearless, but without compassion,</l>
<l>Powerful, but without restraint,</l>
<l>Or influential, yet important,</l>
<l>Cannot endure.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>68. Compassion</heading> 
<text>
<l>Compassion is the finest weapon and best defence.</l>
<l>If you would establish harmony,</l>
<l>Compassion must surround you like a fortress.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Therefore,</l>
<l>A good soldier does not inspire fear;</l>
<l>A good fighter does not display aggression;</l>
<l>A good conqueror does not engage in battle;</l>
<l>A good leader does not exercise authority.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>This is the value of unimportance;</l>
<l>This is how to win the cooperation of others;</l>
<l>This to how to build the same harmony that is in nature.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>69. Ambush</heading> 
<text>
<l>There is a saying among soldiers:</l>
<l>It is easier to lose a yard than take an inch.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>In this manner one may deploy troops without marshalling them,</l>
<l>Bring weapons to bear without exposing them,</l>
<l>Engage the foe without invading them,</l>
<l>And exhaust their strength without fighting them.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>There is no worse disaster than misunderstanding your enemy;</l>
<l>To do so endangers all of my treasures;</l>
<l>So when two well matched forces oppose eachother,</l>
<l>The general who maintains compassion will win.</l>
</text> 
</way>
 
<way>
<heading>70. Individuality</heading> 
<text>
<l>My words are easy to understand </l>
<l>And my actions are easy to perform</l>
<l>Yet no other can understand or perform them.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>My words have meaning; my actions have reason;</l>
<l>Yet these cannot be known and I cannot be known.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>We are each unique, and therefore valuable;</l>
<l>Though the sage wears coarse clothes, his heart is jade.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>71. Limitation</heading> 
<text>
<l>Who recognizes his limitations is healthy;</l>
<l>Who ignores his limitations is sick.</l>
<l>The sage recognizes this sickness as a limitation.</l>
<l>And so becomes immune.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>72. Revolution</heading> 
<text>
<l>When people have nothing more to lose,</l>
<l>Then revolution will result.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Do not take away their lands,</l>
<l>And do not destroy their livelihoods;</l>
<l>If your burden is not heavy then they will not shirk it.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The sage maintains himself but exacts no tribute,</l>
<l>Values himself but requires no honours;</l>
<l>He ignores abstraction and accepts substance.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>73. Fate</heading> 
<text>
<l>Who is brave and bold will perish;</l>
<l>Who is brave and subtle will benefit.</l>
<l>The subtle profit where the bold perish</l>
<l>For fate does not honour daring.</l>
<l>And even the sage dares not tempt fate.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Fate does not attack, yet all things are conquered by it;</l>
<l>It does not ask, yet all things answer to it;</l>
<l>It does not call, yet all things meet it;</l>
<l>It does not plan, yet all things are determined by it.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Fate's net is vast and its mesh is coarse,</l>
<l>Yet none escape it.</l>
</text> 
</way>
 
<way>
<heading>74. Execution</heading> 
<text>
<l>If people were not afraid of death,</l>
<l>Then what would be the use of an executioner?</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>If people were only afraid of death,</l>
<l>And you executed everyone who did not obey,</l>
<l>No one would dare to disobey you.</l>
<l>Then what would be the use of an executioner?</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>People fear death because death is an instrument of fate.</l>
<l>When people are killed by execution rather than by fate,</l>
<l>This is like carving wood in the place of a carpenter.</l>
<l>Those who carve wood in place of a carpenter </l>
<l>Often injure their hands.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>75. Rebellion</heading> 
<text>
<l>When rulers take grain so that they may feast,</l>
<l>Their people become hungry;</l>
<l>When rulers take action to serve their own interests,</l>
<l>Their people become rebellious;</l>
<l>When rulers take lives so that their own lives are maintained,</l>
<l>Their people no longer fear death.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>When people act without regard for their own lives</l>
<l>They overcome those who value only their own lives.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>76. Flexibility</heading> 
<text>
<l>A newborn is soft and tender,</l>
<l>A crone, hard and stiff.</l>
<l>Plants and animals, in life, are supple and succulent;</l>
<l>In death, withered and dry.</l>
<l>So softness and tenderness are attributes of life,</l>
<l>And hardness and stiffness, attributes of death.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Just as a sapless tree will split and decay</l>
<l>So an inflexible force will meet defeat;</l>
<l>The hard and mighty lie beneath the ground</l>
<l>While the tender and weak dance on the breeze above.</l>
</text> 
</way>
 
<way>
<heading>77. Need</heading> 
<text>
<l>Is the action of nature not unlike drawing a bow?</l>
<l>What is higher is pulled down, and what is lower is raised up;</l>
<l>What is taller is shortened, and what is thinner is broadened;</l>
<l>Nature's motion decreases those who have more than they need</l>
<l>And increases those who need more than they have.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>It is not so with Man.</l>
<l>Man decreases those who need more than they have</l>
<l>And increases those who have more than they need.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>To give away what you do not need is to follow the Way.</l>
<l>So the sage gives without expectation,</l>
<l>Accomplishes without claiming credit,</l>
<l>And has no desire for ostentation.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>78. Yielding</heading> 
<text>
<l>Nothing in the world is as soft and yielding as water,</l>
<l>Yet nothing can better overcome the hard and strong,</l>
<l>For they can neither control nor do away with it.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The soft overcomes the hard,</l>
<l>The yielding overcomes the strong;</l>
<l>Every person knows this,</l>
<l>But no one can practice it.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Who attends to the people would control the land and grain;</l>
<l>Who attends to the state would control the whole world;</l>
<l>Truth is easily hidden by rhetoric.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>79. Reconciliation</heading> 
<text>
<l>When conflict is reconciled, some hard feelings remain;</l>
<l>This is dangerous.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The sage accepts less than is due</l>
<l>And does not blame or punish;</l>
<l>For harmony seeks agreement</l>
<l>Where justice seeks payment.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>The ancients said: "nature is impartial;</l>
<l>Therefore it serves those who serve all."</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>80. Utopia</heading> 
<text>
<l>Let your community be small, with only a few people;</l>
<l>Keep tools in abundance, but do not depend upon them;</l>
<l>Appreciate your life and be content with your home;</l>
<l>Sail boats and ride horses, but don't go too far;</l>
<l>Keep weapons and armour, but do not employ them;</l>
<l>Let everyone read and write,</l>
<l>Eat well and make beautiful things.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>Live peacefully and delight in your own society;</l>
<l>Dwell within cock-crow of your neighbours,</l>
<l>But maintain your independence from them.</l>
</text> 
</way>

<way>
<heading>81. The Sage</heading> 
<text>
<l>Honest people use no rhetoric;</l>
<l>Rhetoric is not honesty.</l>
<l>Enlightened people are not cultured;</l>
<l>Culture is not enlightenment.</l>
<l>Content people are not rich;</l>
<l>Riches are not contentment.</l>
<l>&#160;</l>
<l>So the sage does not serve himself;</l>
<l>The more he does for others, the more he is satisfied;</l>
<l>The more he gives, the more he receives.</l>
<l>Nature flourishes at the expense of no one;</l>
<l>So the sage benefits all men and contends with none.</l>
</text> 
</way>
</theway>