"But we know each other once we have met, and it is better to meet each other than when we never met" is a poem written by Tsangyang Gyatso.
1. Full text:
But we know each other once we have met, and it is better to see each other than not. ?
Ande and the king are determined to avoid having to worry about lovesickness in life and death.
2. Source:
Tsangyang Gyatso's "Poem of the Ten Commandments".
3. Appreciation:
Tsangyang Gyatso was only confused by love throughout his life, and regarded power and status as dirt. Tsangyang Gyatso has long understood the truth of love. "Love Song" is a pure sound of nature and a true portrayal of his love life. It can also be said to be the spiritual disclosure of a religious rebel looking for flowers and beauty. He boldly pursues love and opposes the killing of humanity. Tsangyang Gyatso was finally allowed to die in Yanganuoer Lake on the shores of Qinghai Lake in 1706 (some say he died of illness).
"The Love Song of Cangyang Gyatso" is the most popular love song on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau; "The Love Song of Cangyang Gyatso" is the most popular folk song on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. Tsangyang Gyatso’s talents have been reflected in the vastness of Qinghai Lake for thousands of years. "Love Song" expresses the contradiction between becoming a monk and practicing Buddhism and pursuing a love life. Although Tsangyang Gyatso was not good at conduct, he was highly academic and talented, and was the most outstanding among all the Dalai Lamas. Therefore, he was repeatedly humiliated, but he was still loved by Tibetans.
4. Introduction to the author:
Tsangyang Gyatso, a famous poet and political figure in Tibetan history. In the 22nd year of Kangxi (1683), Tsangyang Gyatso was born into a serf family in Wujianlin Village, Yusong District, at the foot of Menyu Nala Mountain in southern Tibet. His father, Tashi Tenzin, and his mother, Ciwang Lhamo. The family has believed in Nyingma Buddhism for generations. In the thirty-sixth year of Kangxi's reign (1697), he was recognized as the reincarnation of the fifth Dalai Lama by the then Tibetan regent Diba Sangye Gyatso. In the same year, he was enthroned in the Potala Palace under the auspices of Sangye Gyatso. ceremony. He was deposed in the forty-fourth year of Kangxi (1705), and it is said that he passed away while being escorted in the forty-fifth year of Kangxi (1706).
Tsangyang Gyatso is the most representative folk poet in Tibet. He wrote many delicate and sincere poems, the most classic of which is the Lhasa Tibetan woodcut version of "The Love Song of Tsangyang Gyatso".