Tao Te Ching Chapter 81 – 显质 (道德经 第81章)
Paul PengShare
Tao Te Ching — Chapter 81: The Quality of Being True
道德经 第八十一章 · 显质 · Lao Tzu · Bilingual Edition with Classical Commentaries
Original Text — 原文
English Translation — James Legge
Sincere words are not fine; fine words are not sincere. Those who are skilled in the Dao do not dispute about it; the disputatious are not skilled in it. Those who know the Dao are not extensively learned; the extensively learned do not know it.
The sage does not accumulate for himself. The more that he expends for others, the more does he possess of his own; the more that he gives to others, the more does he have himself. As shown in Chapter 80, the ideal life needs nothing beyond itself — and the sage who gives all away finds himself richer than those who hoard.
The Way of Heaven is to benefit others and not to injure. The Way of the sage is to act but not to contend. This final chapter closes the circle opened in Chapter 1: the Dao that cannot be named, the truth that cannot be adorned — both point to the same wordless reality.
✦ Key Insight
Chapter 81 is the final chapter of the Tao Te Ching, and it closes with three paradoxes that summarise the entire text. Sincere words are plain; beautiful words are false. The truly good do not argue; the argumentative are not truly good. The truly knowing are not widely learned; the widely learned do not truly know. Then comes the sage’s secret: he does not accumulate, and so the more he gives, the more he has. The chapter ends with two parallel lines — Heaven’s Way benefits without harming; the sage’s Way acts without contending. These two lines are the Tao Te Ching’s final word.
Classical Commentaries — 古典注释
王弼注 Wang Bi's Commentary
Wang Bi concludes: sincere words are not beautiful, beautiful words are not sincere. The good do not debate, the debaters are not good. The sage does not accumulate — the more he gives to others, the more he has. Heaven’s Way benefits without harming; the sage’s way acts without contending.
河上公注 Heshang Gong's Commentary
Heshang Gong concludes: truthful words are simple and unadorned; beautiful words are deceptive. The sage does not accumulate wealth but accumulates virtue — teaching the ignorant, giving to the poor. The more he gives, the more he has, like the sun and moon whose light never ends.
About the Author
Paul Peng
Paul Peng is a Zhengyi Taoist priest from Longhu Mountain, Jiangxi — the ancestral home of the Celestial Masters' tradition. Ordained at 25 after a dream from the Celestial Master, he has practiced for 25 years under Master Zeng Guangliang. He is the curator of this store, which is officially authorized by Tianshi Fu. All items are consecrated at the temple by the resident priest team.
Read his full story →