Where did the phrase "Don't be ungrateful to the Tathagata" come from?

"Live up to the Tathagata, live up to your Qing Dynasty" comes from the love song of the 6th Dalai Lama Cangyang Gyatso.

The whole poem of the 6th Dalai Lama Cangyang Gyatso is as follows:

Beauty is not born in the womb, but in the peach tree. I hate peach blossoms falling easily, and falling flowers are more affectionate than you.

When you are quiet, you can stop and practice this concept. It seems that your lover is hanging in the present. How difficult is it to become a Buddha if you learn from this heart?

We stick together. Although this life is short and lingering, we will meet again eventually, Yushu boy.

I don't care about life and death, just die one by one. I am extremely clever, admire the wisdom of the world, and lament that he is always at a loss here.

The wild horse on the mountain is difficult to tame, and the machine can still control him, sighing that the magical power is empty and can't subdue the people by the bed.

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 quietly, practice meditation, open your eyes and pray for the arrival of the Three Treasures on the platform. What did the sage see in meditation? 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 used to think that my lust would harm Brahma, and I was afraid to leave the whole city when I entered the mountain. I am safe in the world and live up to the Tathagata.

(Note: The original text is in Tibetan, and this poem was translated into Chinese by Mr. Zeng Biao)

Extended data:

Live up to the Tathagata, live up to the Qing Dynasty. Many poems originated from Cangyang Gyatso, the sixth Dalai Lama: "I was worried that sentimentality would hurt Brahma, but I was afraid to leave the whole city when I went into the mountains." (Also, I am afraid that I will be sentimental and hurt Brahma, and I am afraid that I will be mistaken for a beautiful city when I enter the mountain. ) There are two ways in the world, and I will live up to the Tathagata. " Meaning: If you are emotional, you will lose the Tathagata (Buddhism); If you are not emotional, you will fail "her" (love).

Cangyang gyatso (Tibetan:? ; Tshangs-dbyangs-rgya-mtsho1683.03.01706.11.15), the sixth Dalai Lama, France.

In the 22nd year of Kangxi (1683), Cangyang Gyatso was born into a serf family in Wujianlin Village, Xiayusong District, Yunala Mountain, southern Tibet. His father is Tashi Tenzin and his mother is Tsewang Ram. This family has believed in Ma Ning Buddhism for generations.

In the thirty-sixth year of Kangxi (1697), Bati Sanjay Gyatso, the then Regent of Tibet, was recognized as the reincarnation of the Fifth Dalai Lama. In the same year, under the auspices of Sanjay Gyatso, a ceremony was held in Potala Palace. It was abolished in the forty-fourth year of Kangxi (1705), and it is said that it died in the forty-fifth year of Kangxi (1706).

Cangyang Jiacuo is the most representative folk song poet in Tibet. He wrote many delicate and sincere poems, the most classic of which is the Tibetan woodcut version of Cangyang Jiacuo's Love Song of Lhasa.

References:

Live up to the Tathagata, Live up to your purity (poems by Cangyang Jiacuo)-Baidu Encyclopedia