When he reached the city gates (some say riding a water buffalo), however, the sentry immediately recognized who he was. The legend goes that, disillusioned with life at the court of the Chinese Zhou Dynasty where he worked as a keeper of the archives, Lao Tzu decided to renounce his civic duties once and for all and head west to live out his days as a hermit. By far and away the most beautiful, both in terms of its exquisite verse and sumptuous graphics, is the illustrated translation by the American scholar, Stephen Mitchell.ĭespite the fact that very little is known about the Chinese philosopher, Lao Tzu (6th-century BC) needs no introduction, being the alleged author of one of the most famous spiritual texts in the world. OVER THE YEARS, I have collected a number of editions of Lao Tzu’s seminal text, the Tao Te Ching. Enforced solitude has meant that I have rediscovered many of them whilst decluttering my bookshelves and their wisdom has been a welcome relief from pandemic pandemonium. “True mastery can be gained by letting things go their own way.” Photograph: Public Domain The solitary path
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