Sakyamuni failed your wish.
Beauty is not born from mother, but from peach tree.
I hate peach blossoms falling easily, and falling flowers are more affectionate than you.
When you calm down, stop to repair the concept, and you can think of the lover hanging in the present.
How difficult is it to become a Buddha if you learn the Tao from this heart?
We are United, although this life is short and touching,
Yushu was still a teenager the day he met Qing near-re-embodiment.
Regardless of the impermanence of life and death, they turn to death one by one.
Extremely smart, full of wisdom, lamenting that he is always at a loss here.
The wild horse on the mountain is difficult to tame, and the machine trap can still control him.
Sigh that the avatar is empty and can't subdue the pillow person.
I want to be with you by the green window, and I regret my mistakes in my life.
I want to go to the jungle with a bowl, and I feel bad about beautiful women.
Sit still, watch the dharma, open your eyes, and pray for Sambo to step down.
Have you ever seen a saint in the scenery? Don't bring your lover.
Go into the mountains to worship Taoist, please explain the reason.
If you think too much, your spirit will go green.
I am afraid that my passion will damage Sanskrit, and I am afraid that I will miss the whole city when I enter the mountain.
You can't have it both ways, and you can't live up to the Tathagata.
Fanfu youth
This is the expression in the love songs of the sixth generation Dalai Lama Cangyang Gyatso. The 6th Dalai Lama Cangyang Gyatso (1683- 1745) is a famous figure in Tibetan history. Born in the corner of Lavo Song Yu, he was very sensitive to qualifications since he was a child. He once worshipped the Fifth Panchen Lama as a teacher, was ordained by the law, and took the name of Renqing Cangyang Jiacuo in Lausanne. Later, he was welcomed to the Potala Palace. Under the direct training of the famous scholar Sanjay Gacuo, he studied astronomy, calendar, medicine and literature, and made great achievements in poetry. At the age of twenty-five, Cangyang Jiacuo began his wandering life as a victim of the struggle for power and profit by the upper ruling class. I have traveled all over Qinghai, Gansu, Mongolia, Sichuan, Tibet, India, Nepal and other places. I once worked as a beggar and delivered corpses, and my life was extremely difficult. Because of my contact with the broad masses of the people and rich life practice, I wrote a beautiful and touching love song of Cangyang Jiacuo. It is said that Cangyang Jiacuo was killed on his way to Beijing, and his work was written before he was twenty-five.
Tsangyang Gyatso
Cangyang Gyatso (1683 ~ 1706) is the sixth Dalai Lama, a Memba, and a famous figure in Tibetan history. A.D. 1683 (Tibetan Water Pig Year, 22nd year of Kangxi) was born in a serf family in Wujianlin Village, Yusong District, Nala Mountain, southern Tibet. His father is Tashi Tenzin and his mother is Qi Dan Ram. This family has believed in Ma Ning Buddhism for generations. According to Feng Erkang's appendix Yongzheng chronology, in August of the thirty-sixth year of Kangxi (1697), Emperor Kangxi ordered fourteen sons of Emperor Kangxi to command the Qing army into Tibet and sent Dalai VI to Lhasa.
1697 was recognized as the reincarnation of the Fifth Dalai Lama by the then Regent of Tibet, Sanjay Gyatso. In the same year, a ceremony was held in Potala Palace under the auspices of Sanjay Gyatso. Emperor Kangxi of the Qing Dynasty sent Zhang Jiahutuktu to attend the ceremony.
Cangyang Jiacuo is a versatile folk poet who wrote many delicate and sincere love songs. The most classic Tibetan woodcut version of Cangyang Gyatso's Love Poems in Lhasa is beautiful, simple and vivid. It has collected more than 60 love poems of Cangyang Gyatso, and now it has been translated into more than 20 languages, almost all over the world. His poetry transcends nationality, time and space and national boundaries and becomes a valuable cultural heritage. The most famous sentence is "I used to worry about the loss of Sanskrit, and I was afraid to leave the whole city when I entered the mountain." In this world, you can live up to the Tathagata, and you can live up to the Tathagata.