Miroku`s Gesture - Phoebus Media Group
Transcription
Miroku`s Gesture - Phoebus Media Group
Miroku’s Gesture James W. Boyd Colorado State University Miroku Bosatsu, Kōryū-ji, Kyoto Low-voiced chants, white camellias set against green-swept moss invoke stillness throughout the grounds of the oldest Buddhist temple in Kyoto, Kōryū-ji. Here one of the first art works to be registered as a National Treasure is preserved: a seventh century wood carving of Miroku Bosatsu (Bodhisattva of the Present and Future Buddha). In the quiet light of the Treasure Hall visitors can contemplate this life-sized statue, the embodiment of mindful compassion. Miroku’s Gesture A gesture sculpts space, touches something hovering at the edge of expression a child wipes away tears a goodbye wave accents a deep sadness the conductor’s hands make sound visible the heart lurches 103 104 Japan Studies Association Journal 2014 Boyd / Miroku’s Gesture Like the wingtips of a crane Miroku’s delicate fingers move through the air discern where we live open our lives to the stillness of flight a stillness that abides deeply between each vanishing thought on the other side of desire a place where the mind never arrives, is always leaving has nothing to explain.* * The last stanza is an adaptation of a verse in “After T’ao Ch’ien’s ‘Drinking Wine’” by the Ch’an poet Su Tung-Po, trans. David Hinton, Classical Chinese Poetry: An Anthology (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux), 2008, p. 383. 105 106 Japan Studies Association Journal 2014