Seek to explain the significance of southern poetry.

Your explanation is very good. Zen is not really used to explain, you can only understand. However, if you are in doubt, it is not good to say nothing. Please forgive me if I don't speak well. A leisure in the bustling bush is prosperous, and "Hua" and "Hua" refer to both the beautiful and vast sea of flowers and the complicated world; "A Free Time", everyone is busy, busy making money, busy seeking fame, busy chasing five desires, very tired and distressed, how can they be idle? To know whether the world is right or wrong, this is not a tongue twister, because each other has no body, so there is no name; There is nothing in the body, so the name is not nothing. Therefore, there is nothing. So it is "a leisure body."

"But don't expect spring from him." "Don't look for spring" has multiple meanings. In a shallow sense, although everyone is very tired and bitter in this bustling world, everyone has not found himself very free in this world. Instead, I am looking for sustenance and relief when I am very tired, and I don't know that I am already very free and free.

In a deeper sense, "don't look for spring" refers to the enlightened realm of Zen. Some people explain that Zen enlightenment refers to the achievement of dharma body. As for Tao's achievement, it has not been achieved yet, so enlightenment does not mean proving Tao. Realm cannot be conveyed in words, which is different from the enlightenment of the sixth consciousness. Can only be demonstrated. The ancients said, drinking water, thinking about the source, knowing yourself in cold and warm.

I can't say any more, or I'll ruin Nan Gong's good poem.

The last two sentences are realm, which is different from thinking and understanding. Explaining with new words is a practice. Buddhists only talk about eight senses: the first six senses are easy to know, but the last two are difficult to know (see the section on knowing only eight senses of sects for details). The realm can be understood not by the sixth consciousness, but by understanding without explanation.