What is the love poem of Cangyang Gyatso, the sixth living Buddha?

The love poem of the sixth living Buddha Cangyang Gyatso is Ten Commandments.

Ten Commandments

Author: Cangyang Gyatso

Original text:

First, it is best not to meet each other, so you can not fall in love. Second, it is best not to know each other, so you can not miss each other.

third, it's best not to accompany you, so you don't owe each other. Fourth, it is best not to cherish each other, so you can not remember each other.

Fifth, it is best not to love each other, so that we can not abandon each other. Sixth, it's best not to be opposite, so you don't have to meet.

seventh, it's best not to be wrong, so it's not negative. Eighth, it is best not to promise each other, so you can not continue.

ninth, it's best not to depend on each other, so you don't have to cuddle. Tenth, it is best not to meet, so you don't have to get together.

but once we met, we knew each other, and when we met, we didn't see each other. Andrew and jun are absolutely in harmony, so as not to teach life and death to be lovesick.

Appreciation:

This poem writes a kind of painful and beautiful love, and depicts the feelings and melancholy of a pair of lovers who are immersed in love. Complex psychological changes make this true and melancholy love even more painful.

The pain of forcing yourself to make a clean break when you clearly love deeply, the extremely indifferent and depressed attitude, the reservation of dignity and the respect for love are all displayed incisively and vividly in this poem. Simple and simple words have shocking power.