Monday morning, 7 a.m.: 30 degrees, with a warmish breeze and a dim cloud of mist rising from the clotted snow. The air is the color of smoke.
I've been thumbing though translations of work by the ninth-century Chinese poet Cold Mountain (Hanshan). The book is filled with what must be gems, yet I can't exactly make them refract clarity into my own life. For instance--
The wine of wisdom is so coldand more confusingly
drinking it makes me sober
A child who doesn't have a teacherIt's puzzling, this disconnect. I begin to understand what he is saying, and then I don't. Although my ignorance doesn't exactly worry me, it does make me feel off balance, as if I'm slightly drunk or am coming down with the flu; and the sensation flows into this odd smoky daylight, first dawn of December--the house suddenly quiet now that the washing machine has kicked off, a ticking clock rising into the void like a soloist.
will never catch a city rat
People can't explain
the reason they're so crazy
*
there's a road but not to town
only mindless men can climb
*
Hey you people who leave home
what does leaving home mean
*
Who knows how to catch rats
doesn't need five white cats
*
if you can't make sense of this
I suspect you'll die of anger
4 comments:
sounds like a fine description of what it must be like in the zen zone. :-)
I especially like the first one. When you realize what you don't know, it IS rather sobering!!
Welcome to December; 12/12 of 2014!
O my, I desperately love "a ticking clock rising into the void like a soloist."
So clean.
So controlling.
Perfect.
I was pretty happy when that soloist simile showed up.
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