The beginning is: "Who holds my hand …" What is the whole poem, author or title of this poem?

"Who is Holding My Hand", a poem by Cang Yang Jia Cuo. Excerpts from the whole poem are as follows:

Who held my hand and made me crazy for half my life;

Who, kiss my eyes, cover my half-life displacement;

Who touches my face and soothes my half-life sorrow?

Who, with my heart, melted my half-life frost;

Yi, cover my lips and dispel my past life;

Yi, hold my arms, except for my frivolous past life.

Hold your hand and accompany you crazy;

Kiss your eyes deeply and stay with you forever.

I, holding your hand, take away all your life;

I, caressing my neck, will protect you from the storms of your life.

Who, holding my shoulder, drives me to be silent all my life.

Who, call my heart, cover up my life.

Who can understand me and let me have no regrets in this life?

Who can pour my heart, an inch of land is empty;

Yi, cover my lips and dispel my past life; ?

Yi, hold my arms, except for my frivolous past life.

Holding your hand, * * * you have weathered all your life;

Kiss your eyes and give you a lifetime of affection.

I, holding your hand, take away all your life;

I, caressing my neck, will protect you from the storms of your life.

I, caressing my neck, will protect you from the storms of your life.

About the author:

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.