Chuang-tzu > Work: Classic of Nan-hua The Chuang-tzu (Nan-hua chen-ching)
The book subsists until today as a long text in prose which is divided in 33 chapters distributed in internal chapters (I-VII), external chapters (VIII-XXII), and
miscellaneous chapters (XXIII-XXXIII). According to tradition, only the internal chapters are Chuang-tzu's work, while the other two parts of the text are attributed to the disciples and successors of Master's school. Since the Tang dinasty his book is called The Classic of Nan-hua (Nan-hua chen-ching). Chuang-tzu represents, according to experts' opinion, a quite unusual praised and
unanimously appreciated literary genius. He is first of all the fable writer of the Taoism. His thought expresses in fables, short stories which bring together a great imaginative force, a sarcastic sense of humor and a defamatory and polemic diatribe which sometimes culminates by impertinence. As regards this the following remarks represent the most pertinent judgment:
He discussed... using strange and mystical expressions, wild and extravagant words, and phrases to which no definite meaning could be assigned. He constantly indulged his own wayward ideas, but did not make himself a partisan, nor look at them as peculiar to himself. Considering that men were sunk in stupidity and could not be talked to in dignified style, he employed the words of the cup of endless
application, with important quotations to substantiate the truth, and an abundance of corroborative illustrations. (Chuang-tzu, Book XXXIII, chap. 6, translation by Legge).
Let's add that in this book we find the chief point of the Taoist subject matter from |
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