Tao te Ching, Chapter 57 
              
1. A state may be ruled by (measures of) correction; weapons of war  may be used with crafty dexterity; (but) the kingdom is made one's  own (only) by freedom from action and purpose.                   
              
2. How do I know that it is so? By these facts:--In the kingdom the  multiplication of prohibitive enactments increases the poverty of  the people; the more implements to add to their profit that the people  have, the greater disorder is there in the state and clan; the more  acts of crafty dexterity that men possess, the more do strange contrivances  appear; the more display there is of legislation, the more thieves  and robbers there are.                   
              
3. Therefore a sage has said, 'I will do nothing (of purpose), and  the people will be transformed of themselves; I will be fond of keeping  still, and the people will of themselves become correct. I will take  no trouble about it, and the people will of themselves become rich;  I will manifest no ambition, and the people will of themselves attain  to the primitive simplicity.'                   
              
 Tao te Ching, Chapter 58 
              
1. The government that seems the most unwise,   Oft goodness to the people best supplies;   That which is meddling, touching everything,   Will work but ill, and disappointment bring. Misery!--happiness is  to be found by its side! Happiness!--misery lurks beneath it! Who  knows what either will come to in the end?                   
              
2. Shall we then dispense with correction? The (method of) correction  shall by a turn become distortion, and the good in it shall by a turn  become evil. The delusion of the people (on this point) has indeed  subsisted for a long time.                   
              
3. Therefore the sage is (like) a square which cuts no one (with its  angles); (like) a corner which injures no one (with its sharpness).  He is straightforward, but allows himself no license; he is bright,  but does not dazzle.                   
              
 Tao te Ching, Chapter 59 
              
1. For regulating the human (in our constitution) and rendering the  (proper) service to the heavenly, there is nothing like moderation.                  
              
2. It is only by this moderation that there is effected an early return  (to man's normal state). That early return is what I call the repeated  accumulation of the attributes (of the Tao). With that repeated accumulation  of those attributes, there comes the subjugation (of every obstacle  to such return). Of this subjugation we know not what shall be the  limit; and when one knows not what the limit shall be, he may be the  ruler of a state.                   
              
3. He who possesses the mother of the state may continue long. His  case is like that (of the plant) of which we say that its roots are  deep and its flower stalks firm:--this is the way to secure that its  enduring life shall long be seen.                   
              
 Tao te Ching, Chapter 60 
              
1. Governing a great state is like cooking small fish.                   
              
2. Let the kingdom be governed according to the Tao, and the manes  of the departed will not manifest their spiritual energy. It is not  that those manes have not that spiritual energy, but it will not be  employed to hurt men. It is not that it could not hurt men, but neither  does the ruling sage hurt them.                   
              
3. When these two do not injuriously affect each other, their good  influences converge in the virtue (of the Tao).
              
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