Human life is limited, but knowledge is limitless. To drive
the limited in pursuit of the limitless is fatal; and to
presume that one really knows is fatal indeed!
In doing good, avoid fame. In doing bad, avoid disgrace.
Pursue a middle course as your principle. Thus you
will guard your body from harm, preserve your life, fulfil your
duties by your parents, and live your allotted span of
life.
Prince Huei's cook was cutting up a bullock. Every blow of
his hand, every heave of his shoulders, every tread of
his foot, every thrust of his knee, every whshh of rent flesh,
every chhk of the chopper, was in perfect rhythm, --like
the dance of the Mulberry Grove, like the harmonious chords of
Ching Shou.
"Well done!" cried the Prince. "Yours is skill indeed!"
"Sire," replied the cook laying down his chopper, "I have
always devoted myself to Tao, which is higher than
mere skill. When I first began to cut up bullocks, I saw before me
whole bullocks. After three years' practice, I saw
no more whole animals. And now I work with my mind and not with my
eye. My mind works along without the
control of the senses. Falling back upon eternal principles, I
glide through such great joints or cavities as there may
be, according to the natural constitution of the animal. I do not
even touch the convolutions of muscle and tendon,
still less attempt to cut through large bones.
"A good cook changes his chopper once a year, -- because he
cuts. An ordinary cook, one a month, -- because he
hacks. But I have had this chopper nineteen years, and although I
have cut up many thousand bullocks, its edge is as
if fresh from the whetstone. For at the joints there are always
interstices, and the edge of a chopper being without
thickness, it remains only to insert that which is without
thickness into such an interstice. Indeed there is plenty of
room for the blade to move about. It is thus that I have kept my
chopper for nineteen years as though fresh from the
whetstone.
"Nevertheless, when I come upon a knotty part which is
difficult to tackle, I am all caution. Fixing my eye on it, I
stay my hand, and gently apply my blade, until with a hwah the part
yields like earth crumbling to the ground. Then
I take out my chopper and stand up, and look around, and pause with
an air of triumph. Then wiping my chopper, I
put it carefully away."
"Bravo!" cried the Prince. "From the words of this cook I
have learned how to take care of my life."
When Hsien, of the Kungwen family, beheld a certain official,
he was horrified, and said, "Who is that man?
How came he to lose a leg? Is this the work of God, or of man?"
"Why, of course, it is the work of God, and not of man," was
the reply. "God made this man one-legged. The
appearance of men is always balanced. From this it is clear that
God and not man made him what he is."
A pheasant of the marshes may have to go ten steps to get a
peck, a hundred to get a drink. Yet pheasants do not
want to be fed in a cage. For although they might have less
worries, they would not like it. When Laotse died, Ch'in
Yi went to the funeral. He uttered three yells and departed. A
disciple asked him saying, "Were you not our
Master's friend?"
"I was," replied Ch'in Yi.
"And if so, do you consider that a sufficient expression of
grief at his death?" added the disciple.
"I do," said Ch'in Yi. "I had thought he was a (mortal) man,
but now I know that he was not. When I went in to
mourn, I found old persons weeping as if for their children, young
ones wailing as if for their mothers. When these
people meet, they must have said words on the occasion and shed
tears without any intention. (To cry thus at one's
death) is to evade the natural principles (of life and death) and
increase human attachments, forgetting the source
from which we receive this life. The ancients called this 'evading
the retribution of Heaven.' The Master came,
because it was his time to be born; He went, because it was his
time to go away. Those who accept the natural
course and sequence of things and live in obedience to it are
beyond joy and sorrow. The ancients spoke of this as
the emancipation from bondage. The fingers may not be able to
supply all the fuel, but the fire is transmitted, and
we know not when it will come to an end."