H¨¢n D¨¡n Xu¨¦ B¨´

Learn to walk in Handan -- In attempting to
walk like a swan, the crow loses its own gait; Imitating another without success
and losing what used to be one's own ability
Tradition has it that more than 2,000 years ago, there lived a young man in
the Shouling area of the State of Yan. He lacked self-confidence and was at a
loss as to how to behave all the time.
His family members advised him to overcome this shortcoming, but he thought
they were fond of poking their noses into his business and were unwilling to
provide him with tuition fee. His relatives and neighbors sneered at him, saying
that he would never be able to learn anything. As the days went by, he even
began to doubt whether he should walk the way he did, for he felt more and more
uneasy that his walking gestures were too clumsy and awkward.
One day, he met some people on the road who were chatting and laughing. One
of them said that people in Handan walked most gracefully. And that was just
what he was most concerned about, so he hurried towards them and wanted to make
further inquiries. He went to Handan which was far away to learn how to walk.
As soon as he arrived in Handan, he was dazzled to find that everything was
novel. He learned from the children there how to walk, because he thought that
the children's walking gestures were lively and pleasing to the eye. He learned
from the old people there how to walk, because he thought the old people's
walking gestures were steady. He learned from the women there how to walk,
because he thought the women's swaying walking gestures were beautiful. That
being the case with him, in less than half a month he even forgot how to walk.
As he had already used up his traveling expenses, he had to crawl back home.
From this fable comes the idiom .
It is used to refer to acts of copying others mechanically and blindly in
disregard of specific conditions.
|