In Japan, on Matsushima Bay, a
peacock passed a dragon in the light of day, two ferry boats progressing in
their opposite directions. We were on the peacock,
contemplating pine-enshrouded
little islands that pervade the bay like earthly stars within a navy sky or
cherry blossoms being blown into the wind and rain.
But none of these descriptions do
that setting any justice. In his journey on the narrow road, the poet Basho
wrote a haiku on each scene he saw except on this one. No inspiration could
exceed its revelation.
Tao that can be named is not the
Tao. But tradition has him writing just the name of Matsushima and an
exclamation word or two. Three times. The one becomes the two becomes
ten-thousand exclamations!
Holy Mother, this astounding
universe is either unbelievable or overwhelming if approached with any small
amount of true attention. Dragon or the peacock: either way, it's not your
doing.