One day it occurred to a certain
emperor that if he only
knew the answers to three questions, he would
never stray in any
matter.
1. What is the best time to do each thing?
2. Who are the most important people to work
with?
3. What is the most important thing to do
at all times?
The emperor issued a decree throughout his
kingdom
announcing that whoever could answer the questions
would receive
a great reward. Many who read the decree
made their way to the
palace at once, each person with a different
answer.
In reply to the first question, one person
advised that the
emperor make up a thorough time schedule,
consecrating every
hour, day, month and year for certain tasks
and then follow the
schedule to the letter. Only then could
he hope to do every task
at the right time.
Another person replied that it was impossible
to plan in
advance and that the emperor should put all
vain amusements aside
and remain attentive to everything in order
to know what to do at
what time.
Someone else insisted that, by himself, the
emperor could
never hope to have all the foresight and competence
necessary to
decide when to do each and every task, and
what he really needed
was to set up a Council of the Wise and then
to act according to
their advice.
Someone else said that certain matters require
immediate
decision and could not wait for consultation,
but if he wanted to
know in advance what was going to happen he
should consult
magicians and soothsayers.
The responses to the second question also lacked
accord.
One person said that the emperor needed to
place all his
trust in administrators, another urged reliance
on priests and
monks, while others recommended physicians.
Still others put
their faith in warriors.
The third question drew a similar variety of
answers.
Some said science was the most important pursuit.
Others
insisted on religion. Yet others claimed
the most important
thing was military skill.
The emperor was not pleased with any of the
answers, and no
reward was given.
After several nights of reflection, the emperor
resolved to
visit a hermit who lived on a mountain and
was said to be an
enlightened man. The emperor wished
to find the hermit to ask
him the three questions, though he knew the
hermit never left the
mountains and was known to receive only the
poor, refusing to
have anything to do with persons of wealth
or power. So the
emperor disguised himself as a simple peasant
and ordered his
attendants to wait for him at the foot of
the mountain while he
climbed the slope alone to seek the hermit.
Reaching the holy man's dwelling place, the
emperor found
the hermit digging a garden in front of his
hut. When the hermit
saw the stranger, he nodded his head in greeting
and continued to
dig. The labor was obviously hard on
him. He was an old man,
and each time he thrust his spade into the
ground to turn the
earth, he heaved heavily.
The emperor approached him and said, "I have
come here to
ask your help with three questions:
When is the best time to do
each thing? Who are the most important
people to work with?
What is the most important thing to do at
all times?"
The hermit listened attentively but only patted
the emperor
on the shoulder and continued digging.
The emperor said, "You
must be tired. Here, let me give you
a hand with that." The
hermit thanked him, handed the emperor the
spade, and then sat
down on the ground to rest.
After he had dug two rows, the emperor stopped
and turned to
the hermit and repeated his three questions.
The hermit still
did not answer, but instead stood and pointed
to the spade and
said, "Why don't you rest now? I can
take over again." But the
emperor continued to dig. One hour passed,
then two. Finally
the sun began to set behind the mountain.
The emperor put down
the spade and said to the hermit, "I came
here to ask if you
could answer my three questions. But
if you can't give me any
answer, please let me know so that I can get
on my way home."
The hermit lifted his head and asked the emperor,
"Do you
hear someone running over there?" The
emperor turned his head.
They both saw a man with a long white beard
emerge from the
woods. He ran wildly, pressing his hands
against a bloody wound
in his stomach. The man ran toward the
emperor before falling
unconscious to the ground, where he lay groaning.
Opening the
man's clothing, the emperor and hermit saw
that the man had
received a deep gash. The emperor cleaned
the wound thoroughly
and then used his own shirt to bandage it,
but the blood
completely soaked it within minutes.
He rinsed the shirt out and
bandaged the wound a second time and continued
to do so until the
flow of blood had stopped.
At last the wounded man regained consciousness
and asked for
a drink of water. The emperor ran down
to the stream and brought
back a jug of fresh water. Meanwhile,
the sun had disappeared
and the night air had begun to turn cold.
The hermit gave the
emperor a hand in carrying the man into the
hut where they laid
him down on the hermit's bed. The man
closed his eyes and lay
quietly. The emperor was worn out from
a long day of climbing
the mountain and digging the garden.
Leaning against the
doorway, he fell asleep. When he rose,
the sun had already risen
over the mountain. For a moment he forgot
where he was and what
he had come here for. He looked over
to the bed and saw the
wounded man also looking around him in confusion.
When he saw
the emperor, he stared at him intently and
then said in a faint
whisper, "Please forgive me."
"But what have you done that I should forgive
you?" the
emperor asked.
"You do not know me, your majesty, but I know
you. I was
your sworn enemy, and I had vowed to take
vengeance on you, for
during the last war you killed my brother
and seized my property.
When I learned that you were coming alone
to the mountain to meet
the hermit, I resolved to surprise you on
your way back and kill
you. But after waiting a long time there
was still no sign of
you, and so I left my ambush in order to seek
you out. But
instead of finding you, I came across your
attendants, who
recognized me, giving me this wound.
Luckily, I escaped and ran
here. If I hadn't met you I would surely
be dead by now. I had
intended to kill you, but instead you saved
my life! I am
ashamed and grateful beyond words. If
I live, I vow to be your
servant for the rest of my life, and I will
bid my children and
grandchildren to do the same. Please grant
me you forgiveness."
The emperor was overjoyed to see that he was
so easily
reconciled with a former enemy. He not
only forgave the man but
promised to return all the man's property
and to send his own
physician and servants to wait on the man
until he was completely
healed. After ordering his attendants
to take the man home, the
emperor returned to see the hermit.
Before returning to the
palace the emperor wanted to repeat his three
questions one last
time. He found the hermit sowing seeds
in the earth they had dug
the day before.
The hermit stood up and looked at the emperor.
"But your
questions have already been answered."
"How's that?" the emperor asked, puzzled.
"Yesterday, if you had not taken pity on my
age and given me
a hand with digging these beds, you would
have been attacked by
that man on your way home. Then you
would have deeply regretted
not staying with me. Therefore the most
important time was the
time you were digging in the beds, the most
important person was
myself, and the most important pursuit was
to help me."
"Later, when the wounded man ran up here, the
most important
time was the time you spent dressing his wound,
for if you had
not cared for him he would have died and you
would have lost the
chance to be reconciled with him. Likewise,
he was the most
important person, and the most important pursuit
was taking care
of his wound."
"Remember that there is only one important
time and that is
now. The present moment is the only
time over which we have
dominion. The most important person
is always the person you are
with, who is right before you, for who knows
if you will have
dealings with any other person in the future?
The most important
pursuit is making the person standing at your
side happy, for
that alone is the pursuit of life."