The moon appears in every season, it is true,
But surely it’s best in fall.
In autumn, mountains loom and water runs clear.
A brilliant disk floats across the infinite sky,
And there is no sense of light and darkness,
For everything is permeated with its presence.
The boundless sky above, the autumn chill on my face.
I take my precious staff and wander about the hills.
Not a speck of the world’s dust anywhere,
Just the brilliant beams of moonlight.
I hope others, too, are gazing on this moon tonight,
And that it’s illuminating all kinds of people.
Autumn after autumn, the moonlight comes and goes;
Human beings will gaze upon it for eternity.
The sermons of Buddha, the preaching of Eno,
Surely occurred under the same kind of moon.
I contemplate the moon through the night,
As the stream settles, and white dew descends.
Which wayfarer will bask in the moonlight longest?
Whose home will drink up the most moonbeams?
Ryokan
from the book Dewdrops on a Lotus Leaf: Zen Poems of Ryokan
translated by John Stevens
Read a random quote or see all quotes by Ryokan.
Further quotes from the book Dewdrops on a Lotus Leaf:
- This world
- I now surrender
- Unspoken meaning
- Everything is in the Heart
- Deep in the mountain
- I must go there today
- Right to the core