Seven bowls are delicious, and one pot is really interesting.
It's better to eat tea than to hold hundreds of thousands of empty pieces.
Zhao Puchu's "Tea Poems".
There seem to be many poems about Zen tea, but this one is the most famous. The last sentence "It's better to eat tea" is the core of the whole poem, and the whole text revolves around this sentence, which is derived from the Zhaozhou monk's "eat tea" public case. A few numbers carve a transcendent Zen master vividly on the page.
The word "seven bowls" is used in this poem, which is an allusion borrowed from the Tang Dynasty poet Lu Tong's "Seven Bowls of Tea Poem". The original poem is as follows: "One bowl of throat kisses moist, and two bowls break loneliness." Three bowls of dry intestines, only 5,000 volumes of words. Four bowls of light sweat, life injustice, all to the pores. Five bowls of musculoskeletal clearing. Six bowls of fairy spirits. Seven bowls can't be eaten, but the two armpits are used to the breeze. ”
Mr. Li Guiqiang, a military calligrapher, is the inheritor of Zhao Puchu's calligraphy, his calligraphy is in the same vein as Pu Lao, the style of calligraphy is pure, the breath is extraordinary, and its knotting is strict, elegant and leisurely. The chapter and law plan pursue artistic conception and be bold and free. The style of the work is almost similar to the style of Pu Lao's calligraphy, which perfectly interprets the Chinese cultural spirit of Pu Lao's calligraphy and simplicity.
Yanshan people)
Calligraphy: Li Guiqiang.
Editor-in-charge: Wen Jun.