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One Robe, One Bowl: The Zen Poetry of Ryokan by Ryokan
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One Robe, One Bowl: The Zen Poetry of Ryokan

by Ryokan

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512106,249 (4.46)None
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Weatherhill (1977), Paperback, 88 pages

Member:laze
Collections:Your libraryRating:****
Tags:buddhism, zen, poetry, religion, ryokan, read
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Excellent translation of some of the finest Zen poems by this famous recluse. ( )
signature103 | May 14, 2008 |  
I got the idea to read this from quotations in one of David Budbill's books. There's something special about reading something so ancient. I imagine that this is what people feel holding a museum artifact. It has the weight of time all over it and yet I feel as though at any time the words might all float right away. ( )
brianfay | Oct 24, 2007 |  
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0834801264, Paperback)

The hermit-monk Ryokan, long beloved in Japan both for his poetry and for his character, belongs in the tradition of the great Zen eccentrics of China and Japan. His reclusive life and celebration of nature and the natural life also bring to mind his younger American contemporary, Thoreau. Ryokan's poetry is that of the mature Zen master, its deceptive simplicity revealing an art that surpasses artifice. Although Ryokan was born in eighteenth-century Japan, his extraordinary poems, capturing in a few luminous phrases both the beauty and the pathos of human life, reach far beyond time and place to touch the springs of humanity. This book offers a representative selection of his verse in both Chinese and Japanese modes.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:10 -0400)

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