home


ee cummings:
i thank You
somewhere i have never travelled
in Just-

Thomas Centolella:
Misterioso

Louise Gluck:
Formaggio

Jane Kenyon:
Happiness
Otherwise
Learning in the First Grade

Bukowski:
One for old snaggletooth
i met a genius
the worst and the best

Nikki Giovanni:
Photography

Mary Oliver:
Mindful

Leonard Cohen:
Interview

George Eliot:
Middlemarch

Margaret Atwood:
Sleep

Borges:
Ajedrez
La escritura del dios

Rebecca Seiferle:
Seraphim

ntozake shange:
no assistance

Pablo Neruda:
Book of Questions XIV

Billy Collins:
Litany

Nora Ephron:
Remarks to Wellesley College Class of 1996

Arundhati Roy:
Buy One, Get One Free

George Packer:
The Way We Live Now

Carl Mayer:
The pile theory


tenets

parables
     

Tenet 2

When all the world recognizes beauty as beauty, this in itself is ugliness.
When all the world recognizes good as good, this in itself is evil.
Indeed, the hidden and the manifest give birth to each other.
Difficult and easy complement each other.
Long and short exhibit each other.
High and low set measure to each other.
Voice and sound harmonize each other.
Back and front follow each other.
Therefore, the sage manifests his affairs without ado,
And spreads his teaching without talking.
He denies nothing to the teeming things.
He rears them, but lays no claim to them.
He does his work, but sets no store by it.
He accomplishes his task, but does not dwell upon it.
And yet it is just because he does not dwell on it
That nobody can ever take it away from him.




Tenet 17

The highest type of ruler is one of whose existence the people are barely aware.
Next comes one whom they love and praise.
Next comes one whom they fear.
Next comes one whom they despise and defy.
When you are lacking in faith,
Others will be unfaithful to you.
The sage is self-effacing and scanty of words.
When the task is accomplished and things have been completed,
All the people say, "We ourselves have achieved it!"