Shodoka (Song of Enlightenment)
Attributed to Yung-chia (Yoka Daishi) (665-713 AD
Translated by R. Aitken and the Diamond Sangha, Hawaii. (c) 1991
There is the leisurely one,
Walking the Tao, beyond
philosophy,
Not avoiding fantasy, not seeking
truth.
The real nature of ignorance is
the Buddha-nature itself;
The empty delusory body is the
very body of the Dharma.
When the Dharma body awakens
completely,
There is nothing at all.
The source of our self-nature
Is the Buddha of innocent truth.
Mental and physical reactions
come and go
Like clouds in the empty sky;
Greed, hatred, and ignorance
appear and disappear
Like bubbles on the surface of
the sea.
When we realize actuality,
There is no distinction between
mind and thing
And the path to hell instantly
vanishes.
If this is a lie to fool the
world,
My tongue may be cut out forever.
Once we awaken to the
Tathagata-Zen,
The six noble deeds and the ten
thousand good actions
Are already complete within us.
In our dream we see the six
levels of illusion clearly;
After we awaken the whole
universe is empty.
No bad fortune, no good fortune,
no loss, no gain;
Never seek such things in eternal
serenity.
For years the dusty mirror has
gone uncleaned,
Now let us polish it completely,
once and for all.
Who has no-thought? Who is
not-born?
If we are truly not-born,
We are not un-born either.
Ask a robot if this is not so.
How can we realize ourselves
By virtuous deeds or by seeking
the Buddha?
Release your hold on earth,
water, fire, wind;
Drink and eat as you wish in
eternal serenity.
All things are transient and
completely empty;
This is the great enlightenment
of the Tathagata.
Transience, emptiness and
enlightenment --
These are the ultimate truths of
Buddhism;
Keeping and teaching them is true
Sangha devotion.
If you don`t agree, please ask me
about it.
Cut out directly the root of it
all, --
This is the very point of the
Buddha-seal.
I can't respond to any concern
about leaves and branches.
People do not recognize the
Mani-jewel.
Living intimately within the
Tathagata-garbha,
It operates our sight, hearing,
smell, taste, sensation, awareness;
And all of these are empty, yet
not empty.
The rays shining from this
perfect Mani-jewel
Have the form of no form at all.
Clarify the five eyes and develop
the five powers;
This is not intellectual work, --
just realize, just know.
It is not difficult to see images
in a mirror,
But who can take hold of the moon
in the water?
Always working alone, always
walking alone,
The enlightened one walks the
free way of Nirvana
With melody that is old and clear
in spirit
And naturally elegant in style,
But with body that is tough and
bony,
Passing unnoticed in the world.
We know that Shakya's sons and
daughters
Are poor in body, but not in the
Tao.
In their poverty, they always
wear ragged clothing,
But they have the jewel of no
price treasured within.
This jewel of no price can never
be used up
Though they spend it freely to
help people they meet.
Dharmakaya, Sambogakaya,
Nirmanakaya,
And the four kinds of wisdom
Are all contained within.
The eight kinds of emancipation
and the six universal powers
Are all impressed on the ground
of their mind.
The best student goes directly to
the ultimate,
The others are very learned but
their faith is uncertain.
Remove the dirty garments from
your own mind;
Why should you show off your
outward striving?
Some may slander, some may abuse;
They try to set fire to the
heavens with a torch
And end by merely tiring
themselves out.
I hear their scandal as though it
were ambrosial truth;
Immediately everything melts
And I enter the place beyond
thought and words.
When I consider the virtue of
abusive words,
I find the scandal-monger is my
good teacher.
If we do not become angry at
gossip,
We have no need for powerful
endurance and compassion.
To be mature in Zen is to be
mature in expression,
And full-moon brilliance of
dhyana and prajna
Does not stagnate in emptiness.
Not only can I take hold of
complete enlightenment by myself,
But all Buddha-bodies, like sands
of the Ganges,
Can become awakened in exactly
the same way.
The incomparable lion-roar of
doctrine
Shatters the brains of the one
hundred kinds of animals.
Even the king of elephants will
run away, forgetting his pride;
Only the heavenly dragon listens
calmly, with pure delight.
I wandered over rivers and seas,
crossing mountains and streams,
Visiting teachers, asking about
the Way in personal interviews;
Since I recognized the Sixth
Founding Teacher at Ts'ao Ch'i,
I know what is beyond the
relativity of birth and death.
Walking is Zen, sitting is Zen;
Speaking or silent, active or
quiet, the essence is at peace.
Even facing the sword of death,
our mind is unmoved;
Even drinking poison, our mind is
quiet.
Our teacher, Shakyamuni, met
Dipankara Buddha
And for many eons he trained as
Kshanti, the ascetic.
Many births, many deaths;
I am serene in this cycle,--there
is no end to it.
Since I abruptly realized the
unborn,
I have had no reason for joy or
sorrow
At any honour or disgrace.
I have entered the deep mountains
to silence and beauty;
In a profound valley beneath high
cliffs,
I sit under the old pine trees.
Zazen in my rustic cottage
Is peaceful, lonely, and truly
comfortable.
When you truly awaken,
You have no formal merit.
In the multiplicity of the
relative world,
You cannot find such freedom.
Self-centered merit brings the
joy of heaven itself,
But it is like shooting an arrow
at the sky;
When the force is exhausted, it
falls to the earth,
And then everything goes wrong.
Why should this be better
Than the true way of the
absolute,
Directly penetrating the ground
of Tathagata?
Just take hold of the source
And never mind the branches.
It is like a treasure-moon
Enclosed in a beautiful emerald.
Now I understand this Mani-jewel
And my gain is the gain of
everyone endlessly.
The moon shines on the river,
The wind blows through the
pines,--
Whose providence is this long
beautiful evening?
The Buddha-nature jewel of
morality
Is impressed on the ground of my
mind,
And my robe is the dew, the fog,
the cloud, and the mist.
A bowl once calmed dragons
And a staff separated fighting
tigers;
The rings on this staff jingle
musically.
The form of these expressions is
not to be taken lightly;
The treasure-staff of the
Tathagata
Has left traces for us to follow.
The awakened one does not seek
truth--
Does not cut off delusion.
Truth and delusion are both
vacant and without form,
But this no-form is neither empty
nor not empty;
It is the truly real form of the
Tathagata.
The mind-mirror is clear, so
there are no obstacles.
Its brilliance illuminates the
universe
To the depths and in every grain
of sand.
Multitudinous things of the
cosmos
Are all reflected in the mind,
And this full clarity is beyond
inner and outer.
To live in nothingness is to
ignore cause and effect;
This chaos leads only to
disaster.
The one who clings to vacancy,
rejecting the world of things,
Escapes from drowning but leaps
into fire.
Holding truth and rejecting
delusion--
These are but skilful lies.
Students who do zazen by such
lies
Love thievery in their own
children.
They miss the Dharma-treasure;
They lose accumulated power;
And this disaster follows
directly upon dualistic thinking.
So Zen is the complete
realization of mind,
The complete cutting off of
delusion,
The power of wise vision
penetrating directly to the unborn.
Students of vigorous will hold
the sword of wisdom;
The prajna edge is a diamond
flame.
It not only cuts off useless
knowledge,
But also exterminates delusions.
They roar with Dharma-thunder;
They strike the Dharma-drum;
They spread clouds of love, and
pour ambrosial rain.
Their giant footsteps nourish
limitless beings;
Sravaka, Pratyeka,
Bodhisattva--all are enlightened;
Five kinds of human nature all
are emancipated.
High in the Himalayas, only
fei-ni grass grows.
Here cows produce pure and
delicious milk,
And this food I continually
enjoy.
One complete nature passes to all
natures;
One universal Dharma encloses all
Dharmas.
One moon is reflected in many
waters;
All the water-moons are from the
one moon.
The Dharma-body of all Buddhas
has entered my own nature,
And my nature becomes one with
the Tathagata.
One level completely contains all
levels;
It is not matter, mind nor
activity.
In an instant eighty-thousand
teachings are fulfilled;
In a twinkling the evil of eons
is destroyed.
All categories are no category;
What relation have have these to
my insight?
Beyond praise, beyond blame, --
Like space itself it has no
bounds.
Right here it is eternally full
and serene,
If you search elsewhere, you
cannot see it.
You cannot grasp it, you cannot
reject it;
In the midst of not gaining,
In that condition you gain it.
It speaks in silence,
In speech you hear its silence.
The great way has opened and
there are no obstacles.
If someone asks, what is your
sect
And how do you understand it?
I reply, the power of tremendous
prajna.
People say it is positive;
People say it is negative;
But they do not know.
A smooth road, a rough road --
Even heaven cannot imagine.
I have continued my zazen for
many eons;
I do not say this to confuse you.
I raise the Dharma-banner and set
forth our teaching;
It is the clear doctrine of the
Buddha
Which I found with my teacher,
Hui Neng,
Mahakashyapa became the
Buddha-successor,
Received the lamp and passed it
on.
Twenty-eight generations of teachers
in India,
Then over seas and rivers
to our land
Bodhidharma came as our own
first founder,
And his robe, as we all know,
passed through six teachers here,
And how many generations to come
may gain the path,
No one knows.
The truth is not set forth;
The false is basically vacant.
Put both existence and
non-existence aside,
Then even non-vacancy is vacant,
The twenty kinds of vacancy have
no basis,
And the oneness of the
Tathagata-being
Is naturally sameness.
Mind is the base, phenomena are dust;
Yet both are like a flaw in the
mirror.
When the flaw is brushed aside,
The light begins to shine.
When both mind and phenomena are
forgotten,
Then we become naturally genuine.
Ah, the degenerate materialistic
world!
People are unhappy; they find self-control
difficult.
In the centuries since
Shakyamuni, false views are deep,
Demons are strong, the Dharma is
weak, disturbances are many.
People hear the Buddha's doctrine
of immediacy,
And if they accept it, the demons
will be crushed
As easily as a roofing tile.
But they cannot accept, what a
pity!
Your mind is the source of
action;
Your body is the agent of
calamity;
No pity nor blame to anyone else.
If you don't seek an invitation
to hell,
Never slander the Tathagata's
true teaching.
In the sandalwood forest, there
is no other tree.
Only the lion lives in such deep
luxuriant woods,
Wandering freely in a state of
peace.
Other animals and birds stay far
away.
Just baby lions follow the
parent,
And three-year-olds already roar
loudly.
How can the jackal pursue the
king of the Dharma
Even with a hundred-thousand
demonic arts?
The Buddha's doctrine of
directness
Is not a matter for human
emotion.
If you doubt this or feel
uncertain,
Then you must discuss it with me.
This is not the free rein of a
mountain monk's ego.
I fear your training may lead to
wrong views
Of permanent soul or complete
extinction.
Being is not being; non-being is
not non-being;
Miss this rule by a hair,
And you are off by a thousand
miles.
Understanding it, the
dragon-child abruptly attains Buddhahood;
Misunderstanding it, the greatest
scholar falls into hell.
From my youth I piled studies
upon studies,
In sutras and sastras I searched
and researched,
Classifying terms and forms,
oblivious to fatigue.
I entered the sea to count the
sands in vain
And then the Tathagata scolded me
kindly
As I read "What profit in
counting your neighbor's treasure?"
My work had been scattered and
entirely useless,
For years I was dust blown by the
wind.
If the seed-nature is wrong,
misunderstandings arise,
And the Buddha's doctrine of
immediacy cannot be attained.
Shravaka and Pratyeka students
may study earnestly
But they lack aspiration.
Others may be very clever,
But they lack prajna.
Stupid ones, childish ones,
They suppose there is something
in an empty fist.
They mistake the pointing finger
for the moon.
They are idle dreamers lost in
form and sensation.
Not supposing something is the
Tathagata.
This is truly called Kwan-Yin,
the Bodhisattva who sees freely.
When awakened we find karmic
hindrances fundamentally empty.
But when not awakened, we must
repay all our debts.
The hungry are served a king's
repast,
And they cannot eat.
The sick meet the king of
doctors;
Why don't they recover?
The practice of Zen in this
greedy world --
This is the power of wise vision.
The lotus lives in the midst of
the fire;
It is never destroyed.
Pradhanashura broke the gravest
precepts;
But he went on to realize the
unborn.
The Buddhahood he attained in
that moment
Lives with us now in our time.
The incomparable lion roar of the
doctrine!
How sad that people are
stubbornly ignorant;
Just knowing that crime blocks
enlightenment,
Not seeing the secret of the
Tathagata teaching.
Two monks were guilty of murder
and carnality.
Their leader, Upali, had the
light of a glow-worm;
He just added to their guilt.
Vimalakirti cleared their doubts
at once
As sunshine melts the frost and
snow.
The remarkable power of
emancipation
Works wonders innumerable as the
sands of the Ganges.
To this we offer clothing, food,
bedding, medicine.
Ten thousand pieces of gold are
not sufficient;
Though you break your body
And your bones become powder, --
This is not enough for repayment.
One vivid word surpasses millions
of years of practice.
The King of the Dharma deserves
our highest respect.
Tathagatas, innumerable as sands
of the Ganges,
All prove this fact by their
attainment.
Now I know what the Mani-jewel
is:
Those who believe this will gain
it accordingly.
When we see truly, there is
nothing at all.
There is no person; there is no
Buddha.
Innumerable things of the
universe
Are just bubbles on the sea.
Wise sages are all like flashes
of lightning
However the burning iron ring
revolves around my head,
With bright completeness of
dhyana and prajna
I never lose my equanimity.
If the sun becomes cold, and the
moon hot,
Evil cannot shatter the truth.
The carriage of the elephant
moves like a mountain,
How can the mantis block the
road?
The great elephant does not
loiter on the rabbit's path.
Great enlightenment is not
concerned with details.
Don't belittle the sky by looking
through a pipe.
If you still don't understand,
I will settle it for you.
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