The connection of Zennism with tea
is proverbial. We have already remarked that
the tea-ceremony was a development of the Zen ritual.
The name of Laotse, the founder of Taoism, is also
intimately associated with the history of tea.
It is written in the Chinese school manual concerning
the origin of habits and customs that the ceremony
of offering tea to a guest began with Kwanyin, a well-known
disciple of Laotse, who first at the gate of the Han
Pass presented to the “Old Philosopher”
a cup of the golden elixir. We shall not stop
to discuss the authenticity of such tales, which are
valuable, however, as confirming the early use of
the beverage by the Taoists. Our interest in
Taoism and Zennism here lies mainly in those ideas
regarding life and art which are so embodied in what
we call Teaism.
It is to be regretted that as yet
there appears to be no adequate presentation of the
Taoists and Zen doctrines in any foreign language,
though we have had several laudable attempts.
Translation is always a treason, and
as a Ming author observes, can at its best be only
the reverse side of a brocade, all the threads
are there, but not the subtlety of colour or design.
But, after all, what great doctrine is there which
is easy to expound? The ancient sages never put
their teachings in systematic form. They spoke
in paradoxes, for they were afraid of uttering half-truths.
They began by talking like fools and ended by making
their hearers wise. Laotse himself, with his
quaint humour, says, “If people of inferior intelligence
hear of the Tao, they laugh immensely. It would
not be the Tao unless they laughed at it.”
The Tao literally means a Path.
It has been severally translated as the Way, the Absolute,
the Law, Nature, Supreme Reason, the Mode. These
renderings are not incorrect, for the use of the term
by the Taoists differs according to the subject-matter
of the inquiry. Laotse himself spoke of it thus:
“There is a thing which is all-containing, which
was born before the existence of Heaven and Earth.
How silent! How solitary! It stands alone
and changes not. It revolves without danger to
itself and is the mother of the universe. I do
not know its name and so call it the Path. With
reluctance I call it the Infinite. Infinity is
the Fleeting, the Fleeting is the Vanishing, the Vanishing
is the Reverting.” The Tao is in the Passage
rather than the Path. It is the spirit of Cosmic
Change, the eternal growth which returns
upon itself to produce new forms. It recoils
upon itself like the dragon, the beloved symbol of
the Taoists. It folds and unfolds as do the clouds.
The Tao might be spoken of as the Great Transition.
Subjectively it is the Mood of the Universe.
Its Absolute is the Relative.
It should be remembered in the first
place that Taoism, like its legitimate successor Zennism,
represents the individualistic trend of the Southern
Chinese mind in contra-distinction to the communism
of Northern China which expressed itself in Confucianism.
The Middle Kingdom is as vast as Europe and has a
differentiation of idiosyncrasies marked by the two
great river systems which traverse it. The Yangtse-Kiang
and Hoang-Ho are respectively the Mediterranean and
the Baltic. Even to-day, in spite of centuries
of unification, the Southern Celestial differs in
his thoughts and beliefs from his Northern brother
as a member of the Latin race differs from the Teuton.
In ancient days, when communication was even more
difficult than at present, and especially during the
feudal period, this difference in thought was most
pronounced. The art and poetry of the one breathes
an atmosphere entirely distinct from that of the other.
In Laotse and his followers and in Kutsugen, the forerunner
of the Yangtse-Kiang nature-poets, we find an
idealism quite inconsistent with the prosaic ethical
notions of their contemporary northern writers.
Laotse lived five centuries before the Christian Era.
The germ of Taoist speculation may
be found long before the advent of Laotse, surnamed
the Long-Eared. The archaic records of China,
especially the Book of Changes, foreshadow his thought.
But the great respect paid to the laws and customs
of that classic period of Chinese civilisation which
culminated with the establishment of the Chow dynasty
in the sixteenth century B.C., kept the development
of individualism in check for a long while, so that
it was not until after the disintegration of the Chow
dynasty and the establishment of innumerable independent
kingdoms that it was able to blossom forth in the luxuriance
of free-thought. Laotse and Soshi (Chuangtse)
were both Southerners and the greatest exponents of
the New School. On the other hand, Confucius
with his numerous disciples aimed at retaining ancestral
conventions. Taoism cannot be understood without
some knowledge of Confucianism and vice versa.
We have said that the Taoist Absolute
was the Relative. In ethics the Taoist railed
at the laws and the moral codes of society, for to
them right and wrong were but relative terms.
Definition is always limitation the “fixed”
and “unchangeless” are but terms expressive
of a stoppage of growth. Said Kuzugen, “The
Sages move the world.” Our standards of
morality are begotten of the past needs of society,
but is society to remain always the same? The
observance of communal traditions involves a constant
sacrifice of the individual to the state. Education,
in order to keep up the mighty delusion, encourages
a species of ignorance. People are not taught
to be really virtuous, but to behave properly.
We are wicked because we are frightfully self-conscious.
We nurse a conscience because we are afraid to tell
the truth to others; we take refuge in pride because
we are afraid to tell the truth to ourselves.
How can one be serious with the world when the world
itself is so ridiculous! The spirit of barter
is everywhere. Honour and Chastity! Behold
the complacent salesman retailing the Good and True.
One can even buy a so-called Religion, which is really
but common morality sanctified with flowers and music.
Rob the Church of her accessories and what remains
behind? Yet the trusts thrive marvelously, for
the prices are absurdly cheap, a prayer
for a ticket to heaven, a diploma for an honourable
citizenship. Hide yourself under a bushel quickly,
for if your real usefulness were known to the world
you would soon be knocked down to the highest bidder
by the public auctioneer. Why do men and women
like to advertise themselves so much? Is it not
but an instinct derived from the days of slavery?
The virility of the idea lies not
less in its power of breaking through contemporary
thought than in its capacity for dominating subsequent
movements. Taoism was an active power during the
Shin dynasty, that epoch of Chinese unification from
which we derive the name China. It would be interesting
had we time to note its influence on contemporary
thinkers, the mathematicians, writers on law and war,
the mystics and alchemists and the later nature-poets
of the Yangtse-Kiang. We should not even
ignore those speculators on Reality who doubted whether
a white horse was real because he was white, or because
he was solid, nor the Conversationalists of the Six
dynasties who, like the Zen philosophers, revelled
in discussions concerning the Pure and the Abstract.
Above all we should pay homage to Taoism for what
it has done toward the formation of the Celestial
character, giving to it a certain capacity for reserve
and refinement as “warm as jade.”
Chinese history is full of instances in which the
votaries of Taoism, princes and hermits alike, followed
with varied and interesting results the teachings of
their creed. The tale will not be without its
quota of instruction and amusement. It will be
rich in anecdotes, allegories, and aphorisms.
We would fain be on speaking terms with the delightful
emperor who never died because he had never lived.
We may ride the wind with Liehtse and find it absolutely
quiet because we ourselves are the wind, or dwell in
mid-air with the Aged one of the Hoang-Ho, who lived
betwixt Heaven and Earth because he was subject to
neither the one nor the other. Even in that grotesque
apology for Taoism which we find in China at the present
day, we can revel in a wealth of imagery impossible
to find in any other cult.
But the chief contribution of Taoism
to Asiatic life has been in the realm of aesthetics.
Chinese historians have always spoken of Taoism as
the “art of being in the world,” for it
deals with the present ourselves.
It is in us that God meets with Nature, and yesterday
parts from to-morrow. The Present is the moving
Infinity, the legitimate sphere of the Relative.
Relativity seeks Adjustment; Adjustment is Art.
The art of life lies in a constant readjustment to
our surroundings. Taoism accepts the mundane as
it is and, unlike the Confucians or the Buddhists,
tries to find beauty in our world of woe and worry.
The Sung allegory of the Three Vinegar Tasters explains
admirably the trend of the three doctrines. Sakyamuni,
Confucius, and Laotse once stood before a jar of vinegar the
emblem of life and each dipped in his finger
to taste the brew. The matter-of-fact Confucius
found it sour, the Buddha called it bitter, and Laotse
pronounced it sweet.
The Taoists claimed that the comedy
of life could be made more interesting if everyone
would preserve the unities. To keep the proportion
of things and give place to others without losing one’s
own position was the secret of success in the mundane
drama. We must know the whole play in order to
properly act our parts; the conception of totality
must never be lost in that of the individual.
This Laotse illustrates by his favourite metaphor
of the Vacuum. He claimed that only in vacuum
lay the truly essential. The reality of a room,
for instance, was to be found in the vacant space
enclosed by the roof and the walls, not in the roof
and walls themselves. The usefulness of a water
pitcher dwelt in the emptiness where water might be
put, not in the form of the pitcher or the material
of which it was made. Vacuum is all potent because
all containing. In vacuum alone motion becomes
possible. One who could make of himself a vacuum
into which others might freely enter would become
master of all situations. The whole can always
dominate the part.
These Taoists’ ideas have greatly
influenced all our theories of action, even to those
of fencing and wrestling. Jiu-jitsu, the Japanese
art of self-defence, owes its name to a passage in
the Tao-teking. In jiu-jitsu one seeks to draw
out and exhaust the enemy’s strength by non-resistance,
vacuum, while conserving one’s own strength for
victory in the final struggle. In art the importance
of the same principle is illustrated by the value
of suggestion. In leaving something unsaid the
beholder is given a chance to complete the idea and
thus a great masterpiece irresistibly rivets your
attention until you seem to become actually a part
of it. A vacuum is there for you to enter and
fill up the full measure of your aesthetic emotion.
He who had made himself master of
the art of living was the Real man of the Taoist.
At birth he enters the realm of dreams only to awaken
to reality at death. He tempers his own brightness
in order to merge himself into the obscurity of others.
He is “reluctant, as one who crosses a stream
in winter; hesitating as one who fears the neighbourhood;
respectful, like a guest; trembling, like ice that
is about to melt; unassuming, like a piece of wood
not yet carved; vacant, like a valley; formless, like
troubled waters.” To him the three jewels
of life were Pity, Economy, and Modesty.
If now we turn our attention to Zennism
we shall find that it emphasises the teachings of
Taoism. Zen is a name derived from the Sanscrit
word Dhyana, which signifies meditation. It claims
that through consecrated meditation may be attained
supreme self-realisation. Meditation is one of
the six ways through which Buddhahood may be reached,
and the Zen sectarians affirm that Sakyamuni laid
special stress on this method in his later teachings,
handing down the rules to his chief disciple Kashiapa.
According to their tradition Kashiapa, the first Zen
patriarch, imparted the secret to Ananda, who in turn
passed it on to successive patriarchs until it reached
Bodhi-Dharma, the twenty-eighth. Bodhi-Dharma
came to Northern China in the early half of the sixth
century and was the first patriarch of Chinese Zen.
There is much uncertainty about the history of these
patriarchs and their doctrines. In its philosophical
aspect early Zennism seems to have affinity on one
hand to the Indian Negativism of Nagarjuna and on the
other to the Gnan philosophy formulated by Sancharacharya.
The first teaching of Zen as we know it at the present
day must be attributed to the sixth Chinese patriarch
Yeno(637-713), founder of Southern Zen, so-called from
the fact of its predominance in Southern China.
He is closely followed by the great Baso(died
788) who made of Zen a living influence in Celestial
life. Hiakujo(719-814) the pupil of Baso,
first instituted the Zen monastery and established
a ritual and regulations for its government.
In the discussions of the Zen school after the time
of Baso we find the play of the Yangtse-Kiang
mind causing an accession of native modes of thought
in contrast to the former Indian idealism. Whatever
sectarian pride may assert to the contrary one cannot
help being impressed by the similarity of Southern
Zen to the teachings of Laotse and the Taoist Conversationalists.
In the Tao-teking we already find allusions to the
importance of self-concentration and the need of properly
regulating the breath essential points
in the practice of Zen meditation. Some of the
best commentaries on the Book of Laotse have been written
by Zen scholars.
Zennism, like Taoism, is the worship
of Relativity. One master defines Zen as the
art of feeling the polar star in the southern sky.
Truth can be reached only through the comprehension
of opposites. Again, Zennism, like Taoism, is
a strong advocate of individualism. Nothing is
real except that which concerns the working of our
own minds. Yeno, the sixth patriarch, once saw
two monks watching the flag of a pagoda fluttering
in the wind. One said “It is the wind that
moves,” the other said “It is the flag
that moves”; but Yeno explained to them that
the real movement was neither of the wind nor the
flag, but of something within their own minds.
Hiakujo was walking in the forest with a disciple when
a hare scurried off at their approach. “Why
does the hare fly from you?” asked Hiakujo.
“Because he is afraid of me,” was the answer.
“No,” said the master, “it is because
you have murderous instinct.” The dialogue
recalls that of Soshi (Chaungtse), the Taoist.
One day Soshi was walking on the bank of a river with
a friend. “How delightfully the fishes are
enjoying themselves in the water!” exclaimed
Soshi. His friend spake to him thus: “You
are not a fish; how do you know that the fishes are
enjoying themselves?” “You are not myself,”
returned Soshi; “how do you know that I do not
know that the fishes are enjoying themselves?”
Zen was often opposed to the precepts
of orthodox Buddhism even as Taoism was opposed to
Confucianism. To the transcendental insight of
the Zen, words were but an incumbrance to thought;
the whole sway of Buddhist scriptures only commentaries
on personal speculation. The followers of Zen
aimed at direct communion with the inner nature of
things, regarding their outward accessories only as
impediments to a clear perception of Truth. It
was this love of the Abstract that led the Zen to
prefer black and white sketches to the elaborately
coloured paintings of the classic Buddhist School.
Some of the Zen even became iconoclastic as a result
of their endeavor to recognise the Buddha in themselves
rather than through images and symbolism. We find
Tankawosho breaking up a wooden statue of Buddha on
a wintry day to make a fire. “What sacrilege!”
said the horror-stricken bystander. “I wish
to get the Shali out of the ashes,” calmly rejoined
the Zen. “But you certainly will not get
Shali from this image!” was the angry retort,
to which Tanka replied, “If I do not, this is
certainly not a Buddha and I am committing no sacrilege.”
Then he turned to warm himself over the kindling fire.
A special contribution of Zen to Eastern
thought was its recognition of the mundane as of equal
importance with the spiritual. It held that in
the great relation of things there was no distinction
of small and great, an atom possessing equal possibilities
with the universe. The seeker for perfection
must discover in his own life the reflection of the
inner light. The organisation of the Zen monastery
was very significant of this point of view. To
every member, except the abbot, was assigned some
special work in the caretaking of the monastery, and
curiously enough, to the novices was committed the
lighter duties, while to the most respected and advanced
monks were given the more irksome and menial tasks.
Such services formed a part of the Zen discipline
and every least action must be done absolutely perfectly.
Thus many a weighty discussion ensued while weeding
the garden, paring a turnip, or serving tea.
The whole ideal of Teaism is a result of this Zen
conception of greatness in the smallest incidents of
life. Taoism furnished the basis for aesthetic
ideals, Zennism made them practical.