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    Zen 96

    Page 7
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    knowledge,

      But do not follow the proper course of life,

      The whole world is thrown into great disorder.

      The knowledge shown in the making

      Of all modern tools and devices is great,

      But the environment is troubled by them,

      From above and below, and in all respects.

      The knowledge shown in their inventions is great,

      But resources are mercilessly exploited by them;

      The knowledge shown in the arrangements

      For the new methods of management is great,

      But men in the lower regions are disturbed by them.

      So, the versatility shown in the artful deceptions,

      Becoming more and more pernicious

      In ingenious discussions as to what is global

      And therefore capital-intensive warming

      And political cooling, and what is easy to lose

      And hard to prevent, and what is black and white

      In useless argument, and in attempt to disperse the dust

      And reconcile different views are great indeed,

      But people are perplexed by all the sophistry.

      Truly, as is said, 'The greatest art of politics

      Sounds reliable to the deceived ears.'

      65

      Doomed HD & Hi-Fi

      As they fairly say,

      An extraordinary power of vision

      Leads to the confusion

      Of all colours and therefore

      An excessive use of ornament.

      Its possessor, in the resplendence

      Of one's red and yellow,

      White and black, blue and green

      Will not stop till he has become

      A pheasant with its colourful plumage.

      An extraordinary power of hearing

      Leads to a confusion of all notes

      And an excessive use of the accords.

      Its possessor, in bringing out the tones

      From the instrument made of metal,

      Stone, silk, skin, wood and bamboo

      Aided by the tuning fork, will not stop

      Till one has become a nightingale of May.

      66

      Letting Go

      A high achiever is he

      Who can present in his body

      The appearance of being agitated,

      But in his mind he is conscious of no loss.

      Even the loss of life to him

      Is like the exiting from his home

      In the early morn, and no more ill reality.

      In this way, he is more awake than others are

      To reboot himself and start a day from the right end.

      67

      Opening and Closing

      Every man may well proceed on one's mission;

      But let me repeat to you what I have heard

      From sagely people. 'Skilful wrestlers,' they say,

      'Begin with open trials of strength, but always

      End with masked attempts to gain a victory;

      As their excitement grows excessive,

      They display much wonderful dexterity.'

      Parties drinking at first observe an order,

      But always end with complete disarray;

      As their excitement grows excessive,

      Their fun becomes uproarious and erratic.

      In all things it is so. People are at first sincere,

      But always end with becoming rude; as a rule,

      At first things are treated as trivial, but as the end

      Draws near, they assume great proportions, for sure.

      The breath comes angrily, as when a beast

      Driven to death, wildly bellows forth its rage.

      On this animosities arise on both sides.

      Hasty examination of the case eagerly proceeds,

      And revengeful thoughts arise in their minds,

      But they do not know how. Since they do not know

      How such thoughts arise, who knows how they will end?

      68

      Words

      Words are like the waves

      Acted on by the onshore wind

      When the real point of the case,

      Which is a match for the sea itself,

      Discussed by them is lost.

      The wind and waves

      Are easily set in motion;

      Success of a sailing is failed

      Once the port of destination is lost,

      Putting the vessel in peril

      Of the deep blue whirl.

      This is the reason why

      Quarrels are occasioned

      By nothing so much

      As by the artful words

      And one-sided speeches.

      69

      The Human Nature

      The centuries-old question

      Of the men's primordial nature,

      Whether it is good or ill,

      May be reduced to the following 'ifs.'

     

      If you make for men a device

      To measure their wares,

      Even by means of that device,

      Whether you like it or not,

      You thus teach them to steal

      From their neighbours;

      If you make for them weights

      And steelyards to weigh their goods,

      Even by means of those tools

      You teach them to steal from their clients.

      If you make for men tallies and seals

      To secure their good faith,

      Even by means of those things

      You teach them to steal

      From their counterparties;

      If you make for them the fair system

      Of punishment and pardon

      In order to make their doings right,

      Even by means of this you teach them

      The way to steal from those

      Who are in the lower regions. . .

      70

      What If. . .

      As it runs, "The greatest art looks like stupidity."

      What if all sophisticated schemes of governing

      Were to be seized and thrown aside--

      The virtue of all mankind would begin to display

      The men's mysterious excellence. What if the men

      Have possessed and employed their power of vision--

      There would never be distortion in the world.

      What if the men have possessed and employed

      Their natural power of hearing--there would be

      No distraction at all. What if all the kind men

      Have possessed and employed their natural faculty of wisdom--

      There would be no delusions around. What if the men

      Have possessed and employed their good qualities in full--

      There would be no depravity in the entire world.

      What if all the artful men would display their skills

      And tricks of the trade outwardly, setting the world

      In a blaze of admiration and confound it entirely

      By praising this with the formal term 'globalizing'

      That requires the informal worldwide government,

      The final countdown, a method of deadlock,

      Has been brought into operation once and for all

      Without any conjectural questioning 'What if. . .'

      71

      The Old Hand at Governing

      I have heard of letting the world be so

      And exercising forbearance,

      But I have never heard of the way

      Of ruling people and governing the state

      By virtue of someone's full authority.

      The notion of 'letting be' comes out

      From the fear that the people,

      Once interfered with, will carry their nature

      Beyond all norms and regulations;

      The 'exercising forbearance' comes out

      From the fear that the people,

      Once not so dealt with, will alter specifics

      Of their human habits from bad to worse.

      When all the people do not carry their nat
    ure

      Beyond the norms and regulations,

      Nor alter dramatically their human features,

      A good governing is firmly secured

      For long-lasting job and common goodness.

      72

      Rewards and Punishments

      If now the modern world

      Were taken to reward the good,

      It would not suffice

      Nor would it be possible with it

      To punish the evil so far.

      This world, great as it is,

      Not sufficing for rewards,

      As well as for punishments.

      From the time of old

      There has been nothing else

      But bustle and excitement,

      And that's the whole issue.

      Always occupied with rewards

      And punishments, what leisure

      Have men had to rest in the instincts

      Of their nature with which

      They are endowed so richly?

      But when men begin to honour them

      And long for them with partiality,

      How great is the deception

      Practised on the worldly conditions

      By dividing them into the ends of Extremity!

      And not only when a performance of them

      Is once and suddenly over,

      Do they not have done with them,

      But they prepare themselves

      As with fasting to describe them,

      They seem to kneel reverently

      When men bring them forward

      And they go through them

      With excitement of a musical show. . .

      And what can be done then

      To remedy the evil

      Within the human deportment?

      73

      The Human Mind

      If not to govern the world,

      How can we make

      Men's demeanour good?

      The human mind,

      If pushed about, gets depressed;

      If helped along, it gets exalted.

      Now exalted and now depressed,

      Here it appears as a prisoner

      And there as a wrathful fury.

      At one time it becomes pliable and soft,

      Yielding to what is hard and strong;

      At another, it is keen as the sharpest blade,

      Fit to carve or chisel the hardest stone.

      Now it is hot as a scorching fire,

      And anon it is cold as the icy water.

      It is so swift that while one is bending down

      And lifting up one's hands

      In propping the Buddha's feet,

      It shall twice have put forth

      A soothing thought beyond the four oceans.

      Resting, it is still as a deep abyss;

      Moving, it is like one of the shooting stars;

      In its resolute haughtiness,

      It refuses to be bound --

      Such is the human mind!

      It is the beauty of the skin

      Of tiger and leopard

      Which makes men hunt them;

      The agility of a monkey

      And sagacity of a dog

      Which strangles bears

      Make men lead them on a leash.

      But can one similarly endowed be matched

      To the sagely man? Does the human nature

      Permit it without demur? . .

      74

      Phrases and Faces

      Words cannot express in full

      The true meaning of things;

      Speech does not convey

      The spirit of the transcendental.

      Swayed by words

      One becomes frustrated and lost;

      Blocked by cliches

      One sees the bewildered look

      On one's woody face.

      75

      Trees, Tears, Trees

      The Bodhi tree or the Tree of Enlightenment

      Is in your pure heart, not in the pericardium--

      The storage of ambitious and voluptuous airs;

      Hence no one else is able to dig down its root

      Which cannot ever be rotten or vermiculated.

      Once turning from the juicy fruits of peaches

      Grown in the low-lying vale, you are doomed

      All your life to pick the harsh and sour plums

      Raised on steep slopes of the wind-blown hills.

      Hence, think twice before you tell your boss,

      A true woodworm, where to get off and for all.

      76

      A Bear's Affection

      Formerly I frequently strolled

      A decade or two of miles

      Through the deepest snow

      In the wind-blown bottomland

      To keep an appointment

      With an elm or a white birch,

      Or with an old acquaintance

      Among the wild plum trees.

      Today I sit alone on a high cliff

      Surrounded by my only intimates--

      The cypress trees and red pines.

      77

      Heaven's Layout

      Mountains and streams,

      Midwood and wasteland

      In the clear vision

      Of a poet and writer

      Are the junctions of Eternity

      Skilfully mapped out

      In accord with the starry pattern

      Which is answered in Earth's soul

      As the blueprint for fertile going on.

      78

      The Sabbath

      Some keep the Sabbath

      Going to a synagogue

      That is Beit-Knesset

      In the Hebrew tongue;

      I keep it staying

      In my backyard instead

      With an oriole for a cantor

      And the olive tree shade

      For my 'kipa,' my skullcap.

      As for the candle light,

      It is all the way in my mind.

      79

      High Peaks

      I admire high peaks

      Because they seem

      More selfless to me

      And more resigned

      In the way they are,

      Going thru the cold

      Of a long night and

      Midday heat ahead

      Than all the other

      Low-lying entities

      Whose fat lots flow

      In their due security.

      80

      The Bamboo Grove

      From time immemorial

      The bamboo groves

      Were еhe cradle

      And sanctuary and then

      The mass grave

      For all the sagely minded

      Hermits, secret societies,

      Rebels, decadents

      And poets in exile.

      81

      Still Stands Up and How!

      Each one is a bunch of wars

      And truces, from time to time

      Waged reasonably and without

      Any good reason but flamed up

      In one's bursting mind, like a flint.

      Like a knotty and contorted

      In the gusty wind cypress trees,

      With their blown out bare roots,

      Each of us clings to the rocky

      And jaggy cliffs of today's conditions

      To be on duly reproduction

      Of a plenty of cones.

      What compels each one,

      Whose living conditions

      Are so severe, to propagate well

      And be remarkable for longevity

      If not that gusty wind above all things!

      82

      Among the Thickets

      Upon entering into a midwood,

      You find yourself surrounded

      By the ancient trees

      Which are much higher

      Than lofty towers and castles

      Upon the rocky hills.

      Look up to observe the glory

      Of their everlasting cooperation

      With the blazing sun;

      Look down to only imagine

      How deep-rooted


      Is their system of wrapping around.

      Touching the azure sky

      With their thickly boughs,

      They dip their luxuriant crowns

      Into the milkshake of clouds.

      They cast their stately shadows

      Of the trunks for masts

      Across the prominent boulders,

      Swampy ponds, bubbled brooks

      And sagged down lairs of tigers.

      The gloomy silence

      Of their shrivelled leaves

      Frozen within the twilight mist

      And the darkness of hollows--

      All those mysterious things

      Strike you straight to the marrow

      With an obvious presence

      Of something spirit-like and

      Ghostly vital hidden behind

      The palisade of elves and giants.

      83

      Patrimony

      What kind of age we live in

      When talks of deforestation

      And abuse of surroundings

      Are almost a taboo subject

      Because they imply silence

      About so many aberrations

      Of the doomed humankind

      In full ignorance of Nature!

      What times we're going thru

      If all talks of water pollution

      And need effluent treatment

      Are negligently reduced to

      Soothing delay "for later,"

      As though we hope for

      A second lifetime without

      Succeeding generations. . .

      84

      Springtime

      A saunter around the vernal hills

      May teach you more of yourself--

      What's wrong and good with you

      Than all a big city's practices in

      Various groups and societies can.

      85

      Overlapped Manifestations

      Holding in your hand

      Even a single leaf --

      The very last gift

      Of outgoing season. . .

      You look at it and

      What you see is a vision

      Of many inherent facets

      Of the uncarved

      Philosopher's monolith.

      In such a way

      It is to be manifested

      As an overall universal design

      Laying out in your palm's lines.

      86

      A Settled Abode

      Once on the edge of stress,

      Just think of the deep forest:

      It lets the birds perch and nest

      With no intention to call them

      When they come and no longing

      For their return when they fly away.

      If only men's minds can be like the forest,

      They would not swerve from good relations

      With their parents, kids, friends and colleagues.

      87

      When It Goes to Imbalance

      If we take knowledge as a rootage,

      We easily find out that all things

      That are destructed are yet

      The very cause of generation.

      We know subliminally

      That to stand up for generation

      And ignore destruction

      Is to violate the rootage and thus

      Spoil the whole superstructure.

      88

      Good Old Times Blossoming

      When these wild plum trees just start

      To burst their buds, I recall my fellows,

      My old brethren in the harsh wilderness:

      One was a ferryman, another a woodcutter,

      Who once upon a time gave me the saplings.

      Whereas the times we used to drink together,

      Sitting beneath these blossom trees, are fallen

      In oblivion, those years of ten or so springs ago

      Are like old snapshots to me, and the wine cups

      Of those days I now use as tea-bowls to entertain

      Some rare those who stay away from the highway

      To be one with themselves, Nature and Providence.

      89

      A Clear View

      At an instance I glance

      A dry leaf ramified pattern

      I see a marvel of the universe

      Lied at the very centre of my palm.

      90

      We All Are Like Trees

      We all are like the trees that

      Use what comes their ways

      To provide well themselves.

      By means of dipping roots

      They reach the azure skies;

      By accepting the rains

      They strengthen the ground

      On which they stand up

      In the winds and thunders;

      By reaching out to the sun

      They perfect the lives

      Of all who move around.

      All their excellences reduce

      To the motto which states:

      'Absorb, Refine, Appropriate'

      In order to grow greater day

      By day, year after year, forever.

      91

      Routine

      Our daily life

      Lies between

      Public haunts

      And home rest.

      We find benefits

      In communion,

      But our beatitude

      Comprise

      Cultivating virtues

      While common sense

      Gets into our hands

      From Mother Nature's

      Expedience.

      As for our good habits,

      We derive them all

      At the first light of dawn.

      92

      The Guardians

      High mountains serve as temples

      For visiting godheads and deities

      Who do not approve themselves

      In the earthly manifestations but

      Who dwell in the fibres of gems

      And stones, feeding from jasper

      And communicating by virtue of

      Opal, ruby and, most of all, jade.

      Some are permanently stationed

      And known as the kings of cliffs--

      The guardians of hallowed places,

      The gateways to the parallel worlds.

      93

      The Celestial Office

      The terrestrial mapping is design

      To present Mother Earth's making

      She has done upon celestial patterns.

     

      Only the human beings are able

      To look up into heavens and read

      Their records in the office upstairs.

     

      Yes, Heaven has the stars, Earth has

      The mountains and rivers while Man

      Has the steering wheel of his fortune.

      94

      Final Realization

      First we see mountains as the mountains;

      Then we see them as something different

      From mountains, and only after that stage

      They are the mountains in our eyes again.

      The wonder is that we ultimately see them

      And do not wonder any more of their look;

      And this is how it works thru contemplation.

      95

      A Song of Contemplation

      All this has been experienced

      And tasted more than once

      To be put to the worse:

      The course of years and

      Generations of foreign descendants,

      Progression, oppression,

      Recovery, discovery, and finally

      Enduring affection of the polar exile;

      A half-yearly chasing of the sun

      And wind-break which penetrates at last

      Into


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