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Scope: Tian Zi-fang Request type: Paragraph
Condition 1: References "既以與人,己愈有" Matched:1.
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田子方 - Tian Zi-fang

English translation: James Legge [?]
Books referencing 《田子方》 Library Resources
10 田子方:
肩吾問於孫叔敖曰:「子三為令尹而不榮華,三去之而無憂色。吾始也疑子,今視子之鼻間栩栩然,子之用心獨奈何?」孫叔敖曰:「吾何以過人哉!吾以其來不可卻也,其去不可止也,吾以為得失之非我也,而無憂色而已矣。我何以過人哉!且不知其在彼乎,其在我乎?其在彼邪,亡乎我;在我邪,亡乎彼。方將躊躇,方將四顧,何暇至乎人貴人賤哉!」
Tian Zi-fang:
Jian Wu asked Sun-shu Ao, saying, 'You, Sir, were thrice chief minister, and did not feel elated; you were thrice dismissed from that position, without manifesting any sorrow. At first I was in doubt about you, (but I am not now, since) I see how regularly and quietly the breath comes through your nostrils. How is it that you exercise your mind?' Sun-shu Ao replied, 'In what do I surpass other men? When the position came to me, I thought it should not be rejected; when it was taken away, I thought it could not be retained. I considered that the getting or losing it did not make me what I was, and was no occasion for any manifestation of sorrow - that was all. In what did I surpass other men? And moreover, I did not know whether the honour of it belonged to the dignity, or to myself. If it belonged to the dignity, it was nothing to me; if it belonged to me, it had nothing to do with the dignity. While occupied with these uncertainties, and looking round in all directions, what leisure had I to take knowledge of whether men honoured me or thought me mean?'
仲尼聞之曰:「古之真人,知者不得說,美人不得濫,盜人不得劫,伏戲、黃帝不得友。死生亦大矣,而無變乎己,況爵祿乎!若然者,其神經乎大山而無介,入乎淵泉而不濡,處卑細而不憊,充滿天地,既以與人,己愈有。
Zhongni heard of all this, and said, 'The True men of old could not be fully described by the wisest, nor be led into excess by the most beautiful, nor be forced by the most violent robber. Neither Fu-xi nor Huang-Di could compel them to be their friends. Death and life are indeed great considerations, but they could make no change in their (true) self; and how much less could rank and emolument do so? Being such, their spirits might pass over the Tai mountain and find it no obstacle to them they might enter the greatest gulphs, and not be wet by them; they might occupy the lowest and smallest positions without being distressed by them. Theirs was the fulness of heaven and earth; the more that they gave to others, the more they had.'

Total 1 paragraphs. Page 1 of 1.