Volume II — Te
Chapter 63 of the Tao Te Ching
為無為,事無事,味無味。大小多少,報怨以德。圖難於其易,為大於其細;天下難事,必作於易,天下大事,必作於細。是以聖人終不為大,故能成其大。夫輕諾必寡信,多易必多難。是以聖人猶難之,故終無難矣。
This verse establishes the principle of effortless action and the wisdom of attending to beginnings. "Act without acting. Manage affairs without managing. Taste without tasting"—wei wu wei, shi wu shi, wei wu wei (為無為,事無事,味無味). This triple formula describes the paradox at the heart of the Tao: genuine accomplishment comes through non-forcing, genuine management through non-interference, genuine appreciation through non-grasping. Wu wei is not inaction but action that does not oppose natural process. "Regard the small as great, the few as many"—da xiao duo shao (大小多少). The sage reverses ordinary valuation: what seems small may be great in significance; what seems few may be many in consequence. "Repay resentment with virtue"—bao yuan yi de (報怨以德). This is the practical application: when resentment comes, do not return it but transform it through virtue. This is not weakness but the only response that breaks the cycle. "Plan for the difficult while it is still easy. Accomplish the great through the small"—tu nan yu qi yi, wei da yu qi xi (圖難於其易,為大於其細). Tu (圖) is to plan, to map out, to prepare for. The sage addresses difficulties before they become difficult, while they are still in their easy stage. The great achievement is built from small, careful actions—xi (細) means fine, minute, detailed. "All difficult things under heaven arise from what is easy. All great things under heaven arise from what is small"—tian xia nan shi, bi zuo yu yi, tian xia da shi, bi zuo yu xi (天下難事,必作於易,天下大事,必作於細). This is causal wisdom: every difficulty was once easy to address; every great thing was once small. The sage who understands this tends to things in their beginning stage. "Those who make promises lightly rarely keep their word"—fu qing nuo bi gua xin (夫輕諾必寡信). Qing nuo (輕諾) is making promises easily, committing without consideration.
The full commentary continues with deeper analysis of internal cultivation, classical perspectives, and cross-references. Read the complete chapter →
The complete translation includes four classical perspectives — Wang Bi, Heshang Gong, Chan Buddhist, and Internal Martial Arts — plus a detailed character-by-character reference guide.
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