Taoist Poetry: The Path That Weaves Through Clouds


Book Description

Inspired by the ancient wisdom of the Taoist tradition and wandering the rugged, majestic landscape of alpine mountains, Thompson creates a wonderful sense of place through a deeply sensitive spiritual voice that celebrates simplicity, gentleness and the natural grace inherent within us all; that of the Sage. His poems touch on a range of human experiences; of joy, sadness, love, enlightenment and delusion. Through the lens of modern day living he helps us to recognise an undisturbed Presence whose quiet light draws no attention to itself but is always available to us. His words speak of a deeper understanding, of Self-Realisation, whose poems are reminiscent of the voice of ancient Taoist and Zen Masters, who inspired us to enquire within at the Truth of what we are. His voice though is a gentle one: Sit with me under this sweet-chestnut tree in its wild silence no one has to say a thing. The reader may also be delighted to discover the unassuming artwork of Laura Demelza Bosma, whose drawings bring a warmth and sensitivity as they work in harmony with the poems here.




The Poetry of Tʻao Chʻien


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The Selected Poems of T'ao Ch'ien


Book Description

T'ao Ch'ien, (365 - 427, C.E.), one of the most revered poets in classical Chinese literature, is presented in a lucid translation with an introduction. "David Hinton is one of the most impressive of the younger translators of classical Chinese poetry.... His renderings are varied and imaginative while remaining faithful to the spirit of the original."--Burton Watson




Brocade River Poems


Book Description

Xue Tao (A.D. 768-831) was well known as a poet in an age when all men of learning were poets--and almost all women were illiterate. As an entertainer and official government hostess, she met, and impressed, many of the most talented and powerful figures of her day. As a maker of beautiful paper and a Taoist churchwoman, she maintained a life of independence and aesthetic sensibility. As a writer, she crrated a body of work that is by turns deeply moving, amusing, and thought-provoking. Drawing knowledgeably on a rich literary tradition, she created images that here live again for the contemporary reader of English. This bilingual edition contains about two-thirds of Xue Tao's extant poems. The translations are based on accurate readings of the originals and extensive research in both Chinese and Japanese materials. The notes at the end of the book explain allusions and place the poems in the context of medieval Chinese culture and its great literary heritage, while the opening essay introduces Xue Tao's work and describes her unusual life history.




Mirages on the Sea of Time


Book Description

It's a whole new ride from master of horror and bestselling author R.L. Stine--with a story so fiendish that it can't be contained in just one book! Twelve-year-old Boone and his sister Heather love animals of every kind. That's why they want




You are a Little Bit Happier Than I Am


Book Description

Poetry. Asian American Studies. Winner of the 2005 December Prize. Reading Tao Lin is like looking the wrong way down Frank O'Hara's ear trumpet at a 21st century Mayakovski IM-ing Lili Brik. This book is fun, smart, manic and ecstatic; it puts on a clean shirt before it loads the gun. "YOU ARE A LITTLE BIT HAPPIER THAN I AM has the energy and oddness of a thing that is rising very fast that is not supposed to be rising, or that is supposed to be rising but for a moment you forget that, and for a moment this ordinary thing looks very strange and exciting"--Deb Olin Unferth. Tao Lin is 23 and lives in New York City. Visit his blog reader-of-depressing-books.blogspot.com.




The Tao of Poetry


Book Description

Sam G, Sauls, Jr. is a 77-year-old retired graphics designer who has studied about science and religions over his lifetime, and written poems that were seeking common ground both spiritual and more rational seekers could believe in. He realized monotheism and modern science were on widely divergent paths and not reconcilable. After attending a theosophical conference conducted by a quantum physicist he learned that Fritjof Capra's book, The Tao of Physics, said that Eastern mystics were talking like quantum physicists 2500 years ago! This inspired Sauls to name his book The Tao of Poetry in Capra's honor. It was the Tao symbol with its yin and yang unions of opposites in total Oneness that fit the hidden realities and mysteries that he sought to express, for in 1985 he had an epiphany that proclaimed "All is one, All is well" and that enlightened statement apears frequently in his poems. Humor, sarcasm, mystical insights and Ancient Wisdom are used to proclaim the truths that he feels come from his higher Self. He includes a few poems placed in separate categories of Questions, Old Memories, Prayers and What The Future Holds. His Unitarian Universalist minister based a Sunday morning service upon his poems and connected them with appropriate music. Concerning his insights, intuitions and signs received about the future, a quote from Emerson's essay on poets seems appropriate: "The sign and credentials of the poet are, he announces that which no man foretold. He is the true and only teller of news, for he was present and privy to the appearance which he describes. He is a beholder of ideas. An utterer of the necessary and casual. For we do not speak of men of poetical talents, or of industry and skill in metre, but of the true poet..."




Living in the Tao


Book Description

Taoist techniques that can quiet your mind so you can discover your true self in the wisdom of the heart • Teaches that the Tao is the flow of nature, the effortless middle path of self-discovery • Shows how to quiet the monkey mind (the ego) and listen within for your inner voice • Fosters a connection to the Tao through diet, exercise, livelihood, and sexuality Taoists say that we must learn to observe with the mind and think with the heart. In the West we get caught up in the “monkey mind” of our ego. We think we can control our individual destinies by swimming upstream against the current, but we are mistaken. When we learn to quiet the monkey mind with meditation practices, we are able to go beyond the linear thinking of the upper brain and connect to the multidimensional thinking of supreme consciousness in the heart center. In Living in the Tao, Master Mantak Chia and William Wei present techniques to help us learn to move beyond the limits of time and space to connect with the universal truth within--without striving. Living in the Tao is effortless. Just as a small seed grows into a mighty tree with a little water and a little sunshine every day, a few minutes of Taoist practice each day can transform your life into one of peace and joy.




Tao Te Ching


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When I Find You Again, It Will Be in Mountains


Book Description

Chia Tao (779-843), an erstwhile Zen monk who became a poet during China's Tang dynasty, recorded the lives of the sages, masters, immortals, and hermits who helped establish the great spiritual tradition of Zen Buddhism in China. Presented in both the original Chinese and Mike O'Connor's beautifully crafted English translation, When I Find You Again, It Will Be in Mountains brings to life this preeminent poet and his glorious religious tradition, offering the fullest translation of Chia Tao's poems to date.