From the Love Song of the Sixth Dalai Lama Tsangyang Gyatso
Explanation: The Lord Buddha has failed to live up to your wishes, beauty
Full text Beauty is not born from the mother’s womb. It is the peach blossom tree that has grown up.
I already hate that peach blossoms fall easily. Falling flowers are more sentimental than yours.
Practice stillness and contemplation in quiet time, and see your lover hanging in front of you.
If you use this intention to learn the Tao, what is the difficulty in becoming a Buddha?
We are of the same mind and have a long-lasting relationship. Although this life is short and lingering,
The day I meet you again, the jade tree is in the wind for a young man.
Not observing life and death and impermanence, but looking towards death in reincarnation.
He is extremely smart and wise in the world, but he is always confused here.
The wild horse on the mountain is untamable, and even if it is trapped in a trap, it cannot be controlled.
I lament that my magical powers are empty and unable to tame the person beside my pillow.
I want to lean against the green window and accompany you, but I regret my misguided life.
I have the intention to go to the jungle with my begging bowl, but I have to bear the brunt of my love for a beautiful woman.
Sit quietly and practice contemplation, my eyes will be opened, and I pray to the Three Jewels to come to the spiritual platform.
Have you ever seen the saints in the contemplation? Don't invite your lover but come by yourself.
He went to the mountain to pay homage to a Taoist monk and asked the guru for explanation.
I love you without any inspection, and my heart is full of love.
I am afraid that being sentimental will harm my holy life, and I am afraid that I will fall in love with you when I enter the mountain.
How can I get the best of both worlds in this world?
The Brahma Bears Qing Nian
These are the words in the love song of the sixth Dalai Lama Tsangyang Gyatso. The Sixth Dalai Lama Tsangyang Gyatso (1683-1745) was a famous figure in Tibetan history. Born in Menyu Lavoyusong, he had a keen aptitude since he was a child. He once worshiped the fifth Panchen Lama as his teacher. Later, he was welcomed to the Potala Palace, where he was directly trained by the famous scholar Sangye Gyacuo, where he studied astronomy, calendar, medicine, literature, etc., and gained a deep knowledge of poetry. At the age of twenty-five, as a victim of the upper-class ruling class's struggle for power and profit, Cangyangjia Cuo began his wandering life. He has traveled around Qinghai, Gansu, Mongolia, Sichuan, Uizang, India, Nepal and other places. He once worked as a beggar and delivered corpses, and his life was extremely difficult. Because of his contact with the broad masses of the people and his rich life practice, he wrote the beautiful and moving "Love Song of Cangyang Jiacuo". It is said that Cangyang Jiacuo was imprisoned and was killed on the way to Beijing, and the works he wrote were written before he was twenty-five years old.
Tsangyang Gyatso
Tsangyang Gyatso (1683~1706) was the sixth Dalai Lama, a member of the Monba tribe and a famous figure in Tibetan history. Born in 1683 AD (the year of the water pig in the Tibetan calendar, the 22nd year of Kangxi) in southern Tibet, he was born into a serf family in Wujianlin Village, Yusong District, at the foot of Menyu Nala Mountain. His father, Tashi Tenzin, and his mother, Tseden Lhamo. The family has believed in Nyingma Buddhism for generations. According to the Yongzheng Chronology in the appendix of "Yongzheng Biography" written by Feng Erkang, in August of the 36th year of Kangxi (1697), Emperor Kangxi ordered his fourteenth son Yunqi to command two groups of Qing troops to enter Tibet and deliver Lai VI to Lhasa.
In 1697, he was recognized as the reincarnation of the fifth Dalai Lama by the then Tibetan Regent Sangye Gyatso. In the same year, he was enthroned in the Potala Palace under the auspices of Sangye Gyatso. ceremony. Emperor Kangxi of the Qing Dynasty sent Zhangjia Hutuketu and others to attend the ceremony.
Tsangyang Gyatso was a talented and literary folk poet who wrote many delicate and sincere love songs. The most classic Lhasa Tibetan woodcut version of "Love Poems of Tsangyang Gyatso" has beautiful words, simple and vivid words. It is a collection of more than 60 love poems of Tsangyang Gyatso. It has been translated into more than 20 languages ??and has spread almost all over the world. His poetry has transcended nationality, time, space, and national boundaries and has become a precious cultural heritage. The most famous one is "I once worried that being passionate would harm my holy life, and when I entered the mountains, I was afraid that I would not be able to fall in love with you. In this world, I have both the Dharma and the Dharma, and I will live up to the Tathagata and your Majesty."