1
Horses can with their hoofs tread on the hoarfrost and snow, and with
their hair withstand the wind and cold; they feed on the grass and drink water;
they prance with their legs and leap:--this is the true nature of horses. Though
there were made for them grand towers and large dormitories, they would
prefer not to use them. But when Po-lâo (arose and) said, 'I know well how to
manage horses,' (men proceeded) to singe and mark them, to clip their hair,
to pare their hoofs, to halter their heads, to bridle them and hobble them, and
to confine them in stables and corrals. (When subjected to this treatment), two
or three in every ten of them died. (Men proceeded further) to subject them to
hunger and thirst, to gallop them and race them,and to make them go together in regular order. In front were the evils of the
bit and ornamented breast-bands, and behind were the terrors of the whip and
switch. (When so treated), more than half of them died.
The (first) potter said, 'I know well how to deal with clay;' and (men proceeded) to mould it into circles as exact as if made by the compass, and into squares as exact as if formed by the measuring square. The (first) carpenter said, 'I know well how to deal with wood;' and (men proceeded) to make it bent as if by the application of the hook, and straight as if by the application of the plumb-line. But is it the nature of clay and wood to require the application of the compass and square, of the hook and line? And yet age after age men have praised Po-lâo, saying, 'He knew well how to manage horses,' and also the (first) potter and carpenter, saying, 'They knew well how to deal with clay and wood.' This is just the error committed by the governors of the world.
2
According to my idea, those who knew well to govern mankind would not act
so. The people had their regular and constant nature:--they wove and made
themselves clothes; they tilled the ground and got food. This was their
common faculty. They were all one in this, and did not form themselves into
separate classes; so were they constituted and left to their natural
tendencies. Therefore in the age of perfect virtue men walked along with slow and grave step, and with
their looks steadily directed forwards. At that time, on the hills there were no
foot-paths, nor excavated passages; on the lakes there were no boats nor dams;
all creatures lived in companies; and the places of their settlement were made
close to one another. Birds and beasts multiplied to flocks and herds; the grass
and trees grew luxuriant and long. In this condition the birds and beasts might
be led about without feeling the constraint; the nest of the magpie might be
climbed to, and peeped into. Yes, in the age of perfect virtue, men lived in
common with birds and beasts, and were on terms of equality with all creatures,
as forming one family;--how could they know among themselves the distinctions of
superior men and small men? Equally without knowledge, they did not leave (the
path of) their natural virtue; equally free from desires, they were in the state
of pure simplicity. In that state of pure simplicity, the nature of the people
was what it ought to be. But when the sagely men appeared, limping and wheeling
about in (the exercise of) benevolence, pressing along and standing on tiptoe in
the doing of righteousness, then men universally began to be perplexed. (Those
sages also) went to excess in their performances of music, and in their
gesticulations in the practice of ceremonies, and then men began to be separated
from one another. If the raw materials had not been cut and hacked, who could have made a sacrificial vase from
them? If the natural jade had not been broken and injured, who could have made
the handles for the libation-cups from it? If the attributes of the Tâo had not
been disallowed, how should they have preferred benevolence and righteousness?
If the instincts of the nature had not been departed from, how should ceremonies
and music have come into use? If the five colours had not been confused, how
should the ornamental figures have been formed? If the five notes had not been
confused, how should they have supplemented them by the musical accords? The
cutting and hacking of the raw materials to form vessels was the crime of the
skilful workman; the injury done to the characteristics of the Tâo in order to
the practice of benevolence and righteousness was the error of the sagely
men.
3
Horses, when living in the open country, eat the grass, and drink water;
when pleased, they intertwine their necks and rub one another; when enraged,
they turn back to back and kick one another;--this is all that they know to do.
But if we put the yoke on their necks, with the moonlike frontlet displayed on
all their foreheads, then they know to look slily askance, to curve their necks,
to rush viciously, trying to get the bit out of their mouths, and to filch the
reins (from their driver);--this knowledge of the horse and its ability thus to
act the part of a thief is the crime of Po-lâo. In the time of (the Tî)
Ho-hsü, the people occupied their dwellings without knowing what they were doing, and walked out without
knowing where they were going. They filled their mouths with food and were glad;
they slapped their stomachs to express their satisfaction. This was all the
ability which they possessed. But when the sagely men appeared, with their
bendings and stoppings in ceremonies and music to adjust the persons of all, and
hanging up their benevolence and righteousness to excite the endeavours of all
to reach them, in order to comfort their minds, then the people began to stump
and limp about in their love of knowledge, and strove with one another in their
pursuit of gain, so that there was no stopping them:--this was the error of
those sagely men.