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Xieyi・The Rootless Tree:100 Verses-Verse 61#488

Xieyi・The Rootless Tree:100 Verses-Verse 61#488– Daoist-inspired Xieyi painting artwork

 The poems of “The Rootless Tree” express a fundamental force rooted in harmony with heaven and earth, the cyclical flow of yin and yang, and the infinite potential of existence。
 This painting is an expressive “Xieyi” in the tradition of “futu” (spiritual diagrams), passed down for generations in Wudang Mountain, China. It is drawn through a technique where energy flow (xingqi) channels the internal intention into visual form。
An illustration of a seated figure holding a Taoist symbolic diagram, painted in the style of xieyi. The artwork embodies the flow of qi, resonating with the viewer’s spirit and inviting harmony between heaven, earth, and the inner self. In the Taoist world, there exist spiritual and symbolic images called “futu”。
 These are a type of talisman—not merely religious items, but expressive spiritual paintings that act directly on the mind of the viewer。
 Since ancient times, many people have placed these Taoist-style “Xieyi” and futu in their homes, studies, or bedrooms, wishing for longevity, health, auspiciousness, and family harmony. Viewing such paintings was not just aesthetic appreciation, but an act of inviting the presence of the Dao into one’s life and tuning the body and mind。
 Thus, “Xieyi” is more than artistic expression—it is a medium that bridges the spirit, life, and harmony with the universe。
 This kind of artwork is not meant to be seen only with the eyes, but felt with the heart。
 It communicates with the Dao, resonates with the qi of nature, and quietly stirs the viewer’s inner self。
 Futu and “Xieyi” continue to live on from ancient times to this day as “sacred images that speak to the soul.”
 Below, we present the original text of the philosophical poem “The Rootless Tree,” along with a modern Japanese translation and interpretation。
 ※ The author of “The Rootless Tree,” Zhang Sanfeng (1247–?), is also renowned as the founder of Tai Chi, and it is said that he applied the essence of this work to Tai Chi. As an additional note, we include an interpretation connecting this to the Tai Chi tradition of Wudang Mountain.

The Rootless Tree・Verse 61

Xieyi・The Rootless Tree:100 Verses-Verse 61#488– Daoist-inspired Xieyi painting artwork

▶Original Text

無根樹,花正銀,月光照影靜中新。內守清寧心不動,優姿承風自輕塵。

▶Modern Translation

A silver blossom crowns the rootless tree;
Moon-light etches shadows—stillness blooms.
Peace kept within will never sway;
Grace rides the breeze, as weightless as dust.

▶Interpretation

1.[無根樹,花正銀] Pure, silent radiance.
2.[月光照影靜中新] Moonlit insight in quiet night.
3.[內守清寧心不動] Unshaken heart, inner calm.
4.[優姿承風自輕塵] Grace yields to wind—light as dust.

▶Interpretation related to Tai Chi

• Beauty beyond form—independent spirit.
• Sense subtleties in stillness; “use quiet to control motion.”
• Inner calm steadies technique under pressure.
• Yield like dust on the breeze—essence of neutralizing force.

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