Irish Zen, a saint and a bird and nothing at the end.

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  • Taigu
    Blue Mountain White Clouds Hermitage Priest
    • Aug 2008
    • 2710

    Irish Zen, a saint and a bird and nothing at the end.

    I owe to Soen the discovery of an amazing poetry inspired by a Christian saint and written by Seamus Heaney...It is an amazing description of Zazen and the way to forget both self and world, to let self and others fall away. I am sure Soen will write a few lines about this true jewel...

    I'll be back with Koku, Dogen and lots of other goodies soon.


    http://www.poetryarchive.org/poetryarch ... oemId=1396


    gassho to all

    Taigu
  • Omoi Otoshi
    Member
    • Dec 2010
    • 801

    #2
    Re: Irish Zen, a saint and a bird and nothing at the end.

    Thank you!
    And Heanley didn't sit Zazen? :shock:
    In a spring outside time, flowers bloom on a withered tree;
    you ride a jade elephant backwards, chasing the winged dragon-deer;
    now as you hide far beyond innumerable peaks--
    the white moon, a cool breeze, the dawn of a fortunate day

    Comment

    • Hoyu
      Member
      • Nov 2010
      • 2020

      #3
      Re: Irish Zen, a saint and a bird and nothing at the end.

      Thank you sharing this Taigu Sensei. Looking forward to more of these goodies to come

      Gassho,
      John
      Ho (Dharma)
      Yu (Hot Water)

      Comment

      • Myozan Kodo
        Friend of Treeleaf
        • May 2010
        • 1901

        #4
        Re: Irish Zen, a saint and a bird and nothing at the end.

        Thank you for posting this Taigu. I am glad you liked the poem. I hope other fellow Treeleafers will like it too.

        Seamus Heaney (Nobel Prize 1995) is a giant of Irish literature. He is in no way a Buddhist or practitioner of Zazen. However, his poem ‘St Kevin and the Blackbird’ has always reminded me of the no-self that can be apprehended in Zazen, where experience is direct and not mediated ... not even through language. When one becomes the many and is “linked into the network of eternal life”.

        By the way, I think a Buddhist would have used the word “compassion” rather than “pity” in the poem, but I think we can understand Heaney’s sense.

        Is not Zazen “a prayer” our “body makes entirely”?

        Here’s another poem I love from Heaney, one that also draws on the unique Irish monastic tradition, and based on a legend from the ancient monastery of Clonmacnoise:

        The annals say: when the monks of Clonmacnoise
        Were all at prayers inside the oratory
        A ship appeared above them in the air.

        The anchor dragged along behind so deep
        It hooked itself into the altar rails
        And then, as the big hull rocked to a standstill,

        A crewman shinned and grappled down the rope
        And struggled to release it. But in vain.
        ‘This man can’t bear our life here and will drown,’

        The abbot said, ‘unless we help him.’ So
        They did, the freed ship sailed, and the man climbed back
        Out of the marvellous as he had known it.

        Gassho,
        Soen

        Comment

        • Shohei
          Member
          • Oct 2007
          • 2854

          #5
          Re: Irish Zen, a saint and a bird and nothing at the end.

          Brilliant poem! Thank you for sharing it!

          Gassho
          Shohei

          Comment

          • Shokai
            Treeleaf Priest
            • Mar 2009
            • 6394

            #6
            Re: Irish Zen, a saint and a bird and nothing at the end.

            ditto, we owe much to the Irish poets
            合掌,生開
            gassho, Shokai

            仁道 生開 / Jindo Shokai

            "Open to life in a benevolent way"

            https://sarushinzendo.wordpress.com/

            Comment

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