Ryokan

This article is about the Zen monk. For the Japanese type of inn, see Ryokan inn.
       
Ryokan (良寛: Ryōkan) was a Zen Buddhist monk who lived in Niigata Japan 1758-1831. He soon left the monastery where practice was frequently quite lax, and lived as a hermit until he was very old and had to move into the house of one of his supporters. Ryokan was famous for his poetry and calligraphy. His poetry is often very simple and inspired by nature. He was a lover of children, and sometimes forgot to go on his alms round to get food because he was playing with the children of the nearby village. There is some debate as to whether Ryokan was enlightened, but he lived a very simple, very pure life, and stories about his kindness and generosity abound. On his deathbed, Ryokan offered the following poem: ura wo mise omote wo mise chiru momiji showing their backs then their fronts the autumn leaves scatter in the wind

External links

Further Reading

*Great Fool: Zen Master Ryokan: Poems, Letters, and Other Writings (ISBN 082481777X), 1996, by Ryuichi Abe (with Peter Haskel).

 

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