Being rock,
being gas, being mist, being Mind,
being the mesons
travelling among the galaxies at the speed of light,
you have come
here, my beloved.
And your blue
eyes shine, so beautiful, so deep.
You have taken
the path traced for you
from the non-beginning
and the never-ending.
You say that
on your way here
you have gone
through many millions of births and deaths.
Innumerable
times you have been transformed
into firestorms
in outer space.
You have used
your own body
to measure the
age of the mountains and rivers.
You have manifested
yourself
as trees, grass,
butterflies, single-celled beings,
and as chrysanthemums.
But the eyes
with which you look at me this morning
tell me that
you have never died.
Your smile invites
me into the game
whose beginning
no one knows,
the game of
hide-and-seek.
O green caterpillar,
you are solemnly using your body
to measure the
length of the rose branch that grew last Summer.
Everyone says
that you, my beloved, were just born this Spring.
Tell me, how
long have you been around?
Why wait until
this moment to reveal yourself to me,
carrying with
you that smile which is so silent and so deep?
O caterpillar,
suns, moons, and stars flow out each time I exhale.
Who knows that
the infinitely large must be found in your tiny body?
Upon each point
on your body,
thousands of
Buddha fields have been established.
With each stretch
of your body, you measure time
from the non-beginning
to the never-ending.
The great mendicant
of old is still there on Vulture Peak,
contemplating
the ever-splendid sunset.
Gautama, how
strange!
Who said that
the Udumbara flower blooms only once every 3,000 years?
The sound of
the rising tide you cannot help hearing it
if you have
an attentive ear.
This "love
poem," as Joanna Macy calls it, has to do with the original face.
In Buddhism, when a teacher says to his student, "Show me your
original face," it is an invitation to discover one's nature
of interbeing. "My beloved, you have come from the mineral, the
gas, the mist, and consciousness. You have gone through many galaxies
at the speed of light. And no-beginning and no-ending have come together
in order to trace your way, And now you are a caterpillar. I look
into you and I recognize that. Although you look small, you have created
a firestorrn in outer space. And you have measured the age of rivers
and mountains with your tiny body." The infinitely small contains
the infinitely large. Practicing meditation is like seeking your beloved.
The old mendicant, Shakyamuni Buddha, is still sitting there. Don't
think that he has disappeared. He is still contemplating the beautiful
sunset. His preaching is still strong, like the sound of the rising
tide, if you have ears to hear it. I first visited Vulture Peak in
1968, and once in the early evening I saw myself contemplating the
sunset with the eyes of the Buddha. When a group of us went there
together in 1988, I felt the same thing again. This poem was written
in 1970.