‘Seeing
is easy, learning is hard’ – old Chinese proverb.
I
might abhor the Chinese predilection for medicines that require powdered rhino
horn and the slaughter of endangered species, but there is still much to admire
in their ancient culture, their resilience in the face of a traumatic history,
and their ability to innovate.
The
Middle Kingdom, Zhongguo or Tschin or Da Qin – the People’s Republic of China
is the third-largest nation in the world in land area and has the largest
population. It has the longest continuously recorded history and has given the
world some of the most significant scientific and technological inventions.
‘Everything
in the past died yesterday; everything in the future was born today.’ – wisdom of
Kung Fu master.
According
to the world view of ancient China, the Middle Kingdom lay precisely below the
centre of the firmament. The further you were from here, the lower in the
cosmic hierarchy. The unfortunate people and cultures living on the dark
peripheries of the earth were considered barbarians. Until more enlightened
times, the westerners thought much the same about the far east.
‘In
painting the tiger, you may delineate his skin but not his bones; in your
acquaintance with a man, you may know his face but not his heart.’ - wisdom of
Kung Fu master.
It
was supposedly Napoleon who warned, ‘Let her sleep, for when she wakes, she
will shake the world’, alluding to China. As we know, in recent years there’s
been no doubt that China is wide awake, an already formidable power for the new
millennium, intent on perhaps dominating world commerce. This is a remarkable
transformation for such an ancient country that has historically focused
inward.
‘Read
a few more books and talk a little less.’ – Chang Chao.
Perhaps
the dark days under Mao are now merely shadows in the past. It’s too early to
say.
I’ll
conclude with a jewel of a truism from the Inscription on the temple of
Everlasting Harmony: ‘A gem is not polished without rubbing nor a man perfected
without trials.’ I think this can be applied to real individuals, male and
female, as well as characters in our fiction.
Happy
New Year!
Bullets for a Ballot by Nik Morton (BTAP Publishing)
Old Guns by Ross Morton (Robert Hale)
3 comments:
According to restaurant placemats I am a snake, so now my year is ending. Which is probably just as well.
Your articles are always so interesting. It's part of your extensive reading I'm sure.
Thanks, Kathleen. Pat, I hope this new year will be a good one for you; the wheel will turn and the snake will return.
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