Picture a traveler,
journeying westward,
Having traversed
mile after mile
A long road up hills
and through valleys
But keeping his
focus all the while.
All of a sudden, he
encounters
An obstacle and
doesn't know whether
He can continue. In
front of him,
Two rivers are
rushing together:
Extending north a
river of water
Such as he had never
seen prior
To that day;
extending south
A spitting,
spattering river of fire.
Dividing the rivers,
there is a path--
A narrow one, five
inches wide--
The only way for him
to get
From one bank to the
other side.
"Brigands and
wild beasts are behind me,"
Gasps the traveler
and lets out a cry.
"If I go back
or stay here I perish.
But if I cross the
rivers I'll die!"
He looks at the
fiery, unending river
Extending south;
then he looks north
At the raging,
equally endless water
And boldly says,
"I choose to go forth."
At times, waves of
water surge
Over the path before
him. And then
At other times, fiery
flames
Scorch the path
again and again.
He thinks he hears a
voice behind him,
Urging him to keep
going on.
Since he hears no
other voices,
He wonders where the
brigands have gone.
Coming from deep
inside him perhaps
Or from the western
bank a voice
Gives him greater
confidence--
Gives him a reason
to rejoice:
"Continue
forward, traveler,
Sincere is your
heart; single, your mind.
Grounded in
right-mindedness,
You can leave your
fears behind."
Then from the
eastern bank he hears:
"Come back, or
you will meet your death."
Offering empty promises,
The brigands only waste their breath.
Determined, our
traveler keeps moving forward,
Knowing that all of
his fears are groundless,
For once he reaches
the western bank,
He is certain his
bliss will be boundless.
The person who wrote
the parable--
The venerable Shan
Tao--explained
The meaning of every
symbol therein,
But obviously, I
have refrained
From saying too
much. I have chosen
A way that's much
more roundabout:
If you want to make
sense of the story,
It's up to you to
figure it out.
(10-31-17) By Bob B
*Based on the parable by Shan Tao (613-681)
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