Branching streams flow in the darkness Zen talks on the Sandokai

Shunryū Suzuki, 1904-1971

Book - 1999

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Subjects
Published
Berkeley : University of California Press 1999.
Language
English
Main Author
Shunryū Suzuki, 1904-1971 (-)
Other Authors
Mel Weitsman (-), Michael Wenger, Shitou, 700-791
Physical Description
viii, 191 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
810L
ISBN
9780520219823
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • Sekito Kisen and the Sandokai
  • Notes to the Reader
  • The Sandokai
  • English Translation
  • Chinese Text and Japanese Transliteration
  • Talk 1. Things-As-It-Is
  • Talk 2. Warm Hand to Warm Hand
  • Talk 3. Buddha Is Always Here
  • Talk 4. The Blue Jay Will Come Right into Your Heart
  • Talk 5. Today We May Be Very Happy
  • Talk 6. The Boat Is Always Moving
  • Talk 7. Without Any Idea of Attainment
  • Talk 8. Within Light There Is Utter Darkness
  • Talk 9. The Willow Tree Cannot Be Broken
  • Talk 10. Suffering Is a Valuable Thing
  • A Short Talk During Zazen
  • Talk 11. We Should Not Stick to Words or Rules
  • Talk 12. Do Not Pass Your Days and Nights in Vain
  • Talk Given to a Visiting Class
  • We Are Just a Tiny Speak of Big Being
  • The Sandokai
  • Compiled Translation
  • Lineage Chart of Teachers
  • Mentioned in the Text
Review by Booklist Review

Suzuki (1904^-1971) came to San Francisco in 1959, established the first Zen Buddhist monastery in the U.S., and wrote the seminal Zen text for Westerners, Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind (1972). Toward the end of his life, Suzuki presented a series of talks based on the Sandokai, an eighth-century poem written by the Chinese Zen master Sekito Kisen. An elegant set of 22 couplets, it addresses a number of dichotomies, such as light and dark and sharp or dull, and it is chanted daily in Zen temples. In his cogent discussions and the question-and-answer sessions that follow--edited for publication by Mel Weitsman of the Berkeley Zen Center and Michael Wenger of the San Francisco Zen Center--Suzuki worked his way through the entire poem, expounding on the meanings of the Sandokai's imagery and its relevance to Buddhist practice and to life. The fact that one text can inspire a book's worth of philosophical thought and practical advice is testimony both to Buddhism's depths and to Suzuki's considerable gifts. --Donna Seaman

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This book is billed as a sequel to Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind, Suzuki's classic collection of talks on Zen, but it stands on its own considerable merits as an eloquent, humorous series of lectures on the Sandokai, an eighth-century poem central to the Soto Zen tradition. These lectures show Suzuki, head priest of Tassajara monastery in California until his death in 1971, using his line-by-line exposition of the poem to illuminate what it means to practice Zen Buddhism. He stresses the simultaneity of the relative and the absolute, skillfully using words to direct his listeners toward understanding, all the while emphasizing that words are merely fingers pointing at the moon of enlightenment. Suzuki's devaluation of the verbal frees him to embrace humor and paradox as teaching methods; his examples range from ancient Chinese stories to anecdotes about weeding in the Tassajara garden and encountering an earwig. Readers of his previous book will be familiar with his earthy, clear, intense style. This book also conveys the texture of monastery life; it recounts 12 consecutive talks and includes the question-and-answer sessions at the end of each talk. These exchanges offer some of the most fascinating parts of an already excellent book, as they explicate some of the unclear points and illuminate the indirect yet confrontational quality of traditional Japanese Zen teaching. (Nov.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved