________________
PT. III. SECT. V. THE WRITINGS OF KWANG-3ZE.
147
5. The penumbrae (once) asked the shadow1, saying, 'Formerly you were looking down, and now you are looking up; formerly you had your hair tied up, and now it is dishevelled; formerly you were sitting, and now you have risen up; formerly you were walking, and now you have stopped: how is all this?' The shadow said, 'Venerable Sirs, how do you ask me about such small matters? These things all belong to me, but I do not know how they do so. I am (like) the shell of a cicada or the cast-off skin of a snake2;-like them, and yet not like them. With light and the sun I make my appearance; with darkness and the night I fade away. Am not I dependent on the substance from which I am thrown? And that substance is itself dependent on something else! When it comes, I come with it; when it goes, I go with it. When it comes under the influence of the strong Yang, I come under the same. Since we are both produced by that strong Yang, what occasion is there for you to question me?'
1 Compare Bk. II, par. II.
2 Such is the reading of 3iâo Hung.
3 No doubt the Yang Ku of Lieh-3ze and Mencius.
See in XIV, 26 b.
In the borders of Phei; can hardly be the great State.
L 2
:
6. Yang 3ze-kü3 had gone South to Phei*, while Lâo Tan was travelling in the west in Khin. (He thereupon) asked (Lâo-ze) to come to the border (of Phei), and went himself to Liang, where he met him. Lâo-zze stood in the middle of the way, and, looking up to heaven, said with a sigh, 'At first I thought that you might be taught, but now I see that you cannot be.' Yang 3ze-kü made no reply;
Digitized by Google