
        From: jimclatfelter
        Posted: Wed Dec 12, 2007
        
Verse Fourteen
from Jonathan Star's 2001 version
        Eyes look but cannot see it
        Ears listen but cannot hear it
        Hands grasp but cannot touch it
        Beyond the senses lies the great Unity € invisible, inaudible, intangible
        What rises up appears bright
        What settles down appears dark
        Yet there is neither darkness nor light just an unbroken dance of shadows
        From nothingness to fullness and back again to nothingness
        This formless form
        This imageless image cannot be grasped by mind or might
        Try to face it
        In what place will you stand?
        Try to follow it
        To what place will you go?
        Know That which is beyond all beginnings and you will know everything here and now
        Know everything in this moment and you will know the Eternal Tao
        
from Witter Bynner's 1944 version
        What we look for beyond seeing
        And call the unseen,
        Listen for beyond hearing
        And call the unheard,
        Grasp for beyond reaching
        And call the withheld,
        Merge beyond understanding
        In a oneness
        Which does not merely rise and give light,
        Does not merely set and leave darkness,
        But forever sends forth a succession of living things as mysterious
        As the unbegotten existence to which they return.
        That is why men have called them empty phenomena,
        Meaningless images,
        In a mirage
        With no face to meet,
        No back to follow.
        Yet one who is anciently aware of existence
        Is master of every moment,
        Feels no break since time beyond time
        In the way life flows.
        
from Diane Morgan's 2003 version
        We look at it, but we see nothing.
        Call it invisible.
        We listen to it, but we hear nothing.
        Call it inaudible.
        We clutch at it, but it slips away.
        Call it intangible.
        
        Invisible, Inaudible, Intangible€
        The One Unfathomable.
        
        Its upper side is not bathed in sunlight,
        Nor its lower side drowned in shadow.
        It flows between being and nonbeing,
        Then again returns.
        This is the form of the Formless,
        The image of the Imageless.
        Call it Unnamable.
        
        Encounter it€you find no face.
        Follow it€you reach no end.
        
        Inconceivably ancient,
        Alive with potential,
        
The Tao unwinds.
        From: jimclatfelter
        Posted: Sun Dec 16, 2007
        
        Stated in the negative: Looked for and not seen.
        Stated in the positive: Looked for and Naught seen.
        
        Encounter it€you find no face.
        Follow it€you reach no end.
        
No face? Do the translators know what this means? Do they know it's not a metaphor? It doesn't matter. We know, and we see. That's enough. And if we get unexpected help and reminders in this way, who's to say it's purely random? No one finds a face. It's no wonder they let it slip out sometimes.
Jim
        From: simon
        Posted: Tue Dec 18, 2007
        
        Hi Jim,
        Funny, I never noticed the "no face" reference before.
        So blatantly obvious yet easy to miss, (which could almost be a name for the Tao!)
        
        And I agree about the
        Quote:
        "unexpected help and reminders in this way, who's to say it's purely random?"
        
        Curious idea in Witter Bynner's 1944 version
        Quote:
        Yet one who is anciently aware of existence
        Is master of every moment,
        Feels no break since time beyond time
        In the way life flows.
        
        Suggests continued seeing (without distraction) * to me: a sort of "equal power to every hour"...
        Perhaps due to a lapse of attention on my part that led to an accident on the motobike, but "sustained seeing" (if i may put it that way) is an interesting exercise...
        
(*Not something that can be done, more an attribute of the Tao, if not, the world would be full of people falling off sidewalks and walking into lamposts.)
        Anyway, happy everything, everyone
        simon
        
        From: jimclatfelter
        Posted: Tue Dec 18, 2007
        
Hi Simon,
I like that idea. Seeing is sustained even when we are not consciously aware of it. Conscious recognition of it is wonderfully satisfying, and the satisfaction continues even when our attention is on other things. It may be in the background, but it's always present.
This verse suggests that it's not just seeing that has its base in the void, the formless form. All the senses do. We can hear the inaudible and tough the intangible.
        Try to face it
        In what place will you stand?
        
Jim
        From: simon
        Posted: Wed Dec 19, 2007
        
        Hi Jim,
        Yes, quite!
        With a big grin!
        
But where can "I" stand?
        Yours
        simon