ARTS: Poetry — What are you reading?

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  • Tai Shi
    Member
    • Oct 2014
    • 3471

    #46
    Onkai I know you’re priestess duties take a lot of time and I appreciate your recommendation to others and please don’t skimp on your studies. I will also be reading Homeless Kodoo (sp ?) with my Ango partner. I know required reading for priests-in-training.
    Gassho
    deep bows
    Sat/ lah Gaia Rama
    Vishnu creator destroyer
    Tai Shi


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
    Last edited by Tai Shi; 10-12-2023, 02:26 PM. Reason: addition
    Peaceful, Tai Shi. Ubasoku; calm, supportive, for positive poetry 優婆塞 台 婆

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    • Tai Shi
      Member
      • Oct 2014
      • 3471

      #47
      I try to read around in my favorites, so lately I have read Emily Dickinson. The Complete Poems, this book my mother gave me when I was in college because I asked for this book. This is one of my favorite books of all time.
      Gassho
      sat/lah
      Tai Shi
      Peaceful, Tai Shi. Ubasoku; calm, supportive, for positive poetry 優婆塞 台 婆

      Comment

      • Shonin Risa Bear
        Member
        • Apr 2019
        • 923

        #48
        I have been reading Seon Poems: Selected Works from Collected Works of Seon Buddhism (Jogye).

        Sample:

        An Answer on Behalf of Heaven and Earth
        The myriad and thousand differences
        Are all born of false thought.
        If you can abandon these distinctions,
        There is no creature that is not equal.

        代天地答
        萬別千差事 皆從妄想生 若離此分別 何物不齊平

        -- Muuija (1178–1234)

        gassho
        ds sat and some lah
        Visiting priest: use salt

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        • Snow
          Member
          • May 2024
          • 38

          #49
          nirvana



          not much chance,

          completely cut loose from

          purpose,

          he was a young man

          riding a bus

          through North Carolina

          on the way to

          somewhere

          and it began to snow

          and the bus stopped

          at a little cafe

          in the hills

          and the passengers

          entered.


          he sat at the counter

          with the others,

          he ordered and the

          food arrived.

          the meal was

          particularly

          good

          and the

          coffee.


          the waitress was

          unlike the women

          he had

          known.

          she was unaffected,

          there was a natural

          humor which came

          from her.

          the fry cook said

          crazy things.

          the dishwasher,

          in back,

          laughed, a good

          clean

          pleasant

          laugh.


          the young man watched

          the snow through the

          windows.


          he wanted to stay

          in that cafe

          forever.


          the curious feeling

          swam through him

          that everything

          was

          beautiful

          there,

          that it would always

          stay beautiful

          there.


          then the bus driver

          told the passengers

          that it was time

          to board.


          the young man

          thought, I’ll just sit

          here, I’ll just stay

          here.


          but then

          he rose and followed

          the others into the

          bus.


          he found his seat

          and looked at the cafe

          through the bus

          window.

          then the bus moved

          off, down a curve,

          downward, out of

          the hills.


          the young man

          looked straight

          forward.

          he heard the other

          passengers

          speaking

          of other things,

          or they were

          reading

          or

          attempting to

          sleep.


          they had not

          noticed

          the

          magic.


          the young man

          put his head to

          one side,

          closed his

          eyes,

          pretended to

          sleep.

          there was nothing

          else to do—

          just listen to the

          sound of the

          engine,

          the sound of the

          tires

          in the

          snow.


          -Charles Bukowski

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