-
The author is: Tashi Ram Dodo.
Tashi Ram Dodo.
This poem is based on the movie "If You Are Honest, Do Not Disturb 2".
And popular all over the country, its author has always been considered the famous 17th century poet Cangyang Gyatso. On the morning of October 19, Guangdong Zhaoqing woman Tan Xiaojing (pen name Tashi Ram Duoduo) successfully defended her rights in the Dongcheng Court, and the court ruled that Zhuhai Publishing House **** should stop publishing and distributing the book "That Day, That Month, That Year" containing the content of "Seeing and Not Seeing"; Beijing Xinhua Bookstore.
Wangfujing Bookstore stopped selling this book.
Tan Xiaojing sued, alleging that he had written the poem "The Silence of Banzaguru Baima" in May 2007
Also known as "Seeing and Not Seeing", it was first published on his blog on May 15 of the same year.
In March 2011, Tan Xiaojing discovered that Zhuhai Publishing House had published a book that included the work, "That Day, That Month, That Year", without permission, and regarded "Seeing and Not Seeing" as Cangyang Gyatso's work. After Tan Xiaojing purchased the book from Wangfujing Bookstore, he sued the publishing house and the bookstore to the court, demanding that the two defendants stop the infringement and that the publishing house publish the book in China Press and Publication News
and pay 5,000 yuan for economic losses and reasonable expenses for litigation.
According to the Zhuhai Publishing House, although Tan Xiaojing's notarized blog webpage contains "Seeing and Not Seeing", it is not signed, and the blog does not clearly state or state that the content of the blog is original or prohibited, so it cannot prove that Tan Xiaojing enjoys copyright.
In addition, the publisher also produced the October 2008 issue of The Reader
He said that the poem had been published in the magazine and signed it "Cangyang Gyatso".
Wangfujing Bookstore argued that the bookstore had legal channels to purchase the book, and had fulfilled its reasonable obligation of review, so it should not bear tort liability.
The court pointed out that the focus of the case was whether the poem was created for Tan Xiaojing.
The court first confirmed that Tan Xiaojing's pen name was Tashi Ram Duoduo. However, the court held that blogs are easy to modify and leave no traces as electronic evidence, so this evidence is not sufficient to prove that the work was created by Tan Xiaojing.
Because Tan Xiaojing later submitted additional evidence in her outbox, proving that she had sent an email to the "Reader" mailbox on October 7, 2008, informing the other party that the 20th issue of "See" in 2008 had a wrong signature, that she was the author of the work, and provided two links to blogs containing her works**. The court found that the mail had stability that could not be easily changed, hence the evidence.
Based on the two pieces of evidence, the email and the blog, the court found that the two could corroborate each other and prove the time and content of the work. Since there is no evidence to prove that the blog or the work has been modified, and there is no evidence to the contrary to prove that the work in question was created by someone else and completed earlier than the time when the work was uploaded on Tan Xiaojing's blog, the court found that the author of "Seeing and Not Seeing" was Tan Xiaojing.
Therefore, the court ruled that Zhuhai Publishing House **** should stop publishing and distributing the book "That Day, That Month, That Year" containing the content of "Seeing and Not Seeing"; Beijing Xinhua Bookstore and Wangfujing Bookstore stopped selling the book.
-
1. The author of "Seeing and Not Seeing" is Tashi Ram. Lot.
The poem, actually titled "The Silence of Banzaguru Pema" (Banzha Guru Pema, transliteration, meaning Guru Padmasambhava), is from his 2007 book "Suspected Wind and Moon Collection".
In 2008, this poem was published in the 20th issue of "Reader", retitled "Seeing and Not Seeing", signed as Cangyang Gyatso, so it is mostly falsely rumored to be written by Cangyang Gyatso. The incident was not the author's intention, and the Reader later apologized for the incident.
2. The attached text is as follows:
The silence of Banzaguru Baima.
See you. Or don't see me.
I was right there.
Not sad or happy. You read me or you don't read me.
The love is there.
Don't come and go. You love it or you don't love me, and your love is there without increasing or decreasing.
You follow. They don't follow me.
My hand is in yours.
Don't give up. Come into my arms.
Or. Let me dwell in your heart.
Silently in love.
Silence and joy.
3. About the author:
Tashi Ramdodo is a Cantonese girl. She is a devout Buddhist. He is now following the 17th Karmapa Mahapo in Bodh Gaya, India.
His published books include "When You Pass by My Bloom", "Murmuring" and "Little Blue Book". He is currently the editor-in-chief of Chen Kun's MOOK book "We".
-
Feng Xiaogang's "If You Are Honest Do Not Disturb 2" became popular with a small poem "See and Don't See". This is a poem sent to him by Li Xiangshan (played by Sun Honglei) by the daughter of Li Xiangshan (played by Sun Honglei) at her father's farewell party before his death. It ** the two themes of love and life, restrained and affectionate, and many viewers burst into tears.
Its author was once said to be the famous 17th-century poet Cangyang Gyatso. The reporter learned yesterday that the author is actually someone else, she is a contemporary female poet named Tashi Ram Duoduo. The poem is from his 2007 collection of works, "Suspected Wind and Moon".
In Non 2, Kawakawa's affectionate recitation of "Seeing and Not Seeing" to his father Li Xiangshan has always been considered his work because of its very similar style to Cangyang Gyatso's works. Netizens were deeply moved by this poem, some remembered the poet on Weibo, and some walked into bookstores to find his poetry collection.
However, was this poem really written by Cangyang Gyatso? Someone gave this answer, "The actual title of "Seeing and Not Seeing" is "The Silence of Banzaguru Baima" (Banzha Guru Baima, transliteration, meaning Guru Padmasambhava), and the author is Tashi Ram Dodo. Yesterday, the New Weekly also corrected it on Weibo, saying that "Seeing and Not Seeing" belongs to Tashi Ram Duoduo.
This poem was once falsely rumored to be the work of Cangyang Gyatso, and the title of the poem was even changed to "See or Not See Me", "You See or Not See Me", etc. Just as it was falsely rumored that the author of "The Furthest Distance in the World" was Rabindranath Tagore, this poem was first published in the 2008 issue of The Reader under the title "Seeing and Not Seeing". The reader thought it was an apology for the incident.
Similarly, the driving force behind The World's Farthest Distance is The Reader.
Some time ago, Tencent, NetEase, Sina and other mainstream Chinese media have published clarification articles on this matter. This article appeared in May 07, and was included in the personal poetry collection "Suspected Fengyue" published in 07, and the Cangyang Gyatso group also published a special article to refute the rumors.
But because Cangyang Gyatso is so famous, many people are willing to believe that this is Cangyang Gyatso's work.
And Tashi Ram Duoduo is just a little girl who is willing to write poetry.
-
The poem, titled "The Silence of Banzaguru Baima", was written by Tashi Ram Dodo and is from his 2007 collection of works, Suspected Wind and Moon.
-
Cangyang Gyatso, he also has a lot of love poems, such as "The Believer", you will definitely like it!
-
The full poem of Gyatso's "Seeing and Not Seeing" by Cangyang Maehodai is as follows:
You see or don't see me, I'm there, not sad or happy.
You read it, or you don't read me, the love is there, and it doesn't come or go.
You love it or you don't love me, and your love is there without increasing or decreasing.
You follow, or don't follow me, my hand is in your hand, and I will not give it up.
Come into my arms, or let me dwell in your heart, and love in silence, and rejoice in silence.
Appreciation
The whole poem uses the rhetorical technique of comparison, repeatedly reciting the love in the poet's heart that will not change no matter how the world changes, with a strong sense of rhythm, good organization, beautiful melody, and great artistic appeal.
From ancient times to the present, love is a word that countless people chant Hui Lu question, too many poems and sentences prove the beauty of love, but also prove that love is a kind of wound that makes people break their hearts and intestines. Thinking about the beautiful snowy plateau, the amorous Cangyang Gyatso walks on the snow because of lovesickness and walks on the night lover, is it fate or disaster?
At dawn, people read the clear night running footprints left by a man in the snowy fields, which quickly and forcefully meandered between the Potala Palace and the depths of the alley, so they were puzzled, pondered, and then shocked, and Cangyang Gyatso sang calmly in the name of love, but also wrote about the betrayal of religion.
Thinking about Cangyang Gyatso's helplessness and involuntary self-help as a living Buddha, although he had no way to change those rules and precepts, he still chose to apostate, chose to give up his rights and change his fate, how much courage does it take? If it is not true and pure love, then what is the force that makes him give up his rights? There is only one answer:
Because of love.
-
The full poem of Cangyang Gyatso's "Seeing and Not Seeing" is as follows:You see, or you don't see me.
I was right there, not sad or happy.
You read me or you don't read me.
The love is there, it doesn't come and go.
You love it or you don't love me, and your love is there without increasing or decreasing.
You follow, or you don't.
My slippery handshake is in your hand, and I won't give it up.
Come into my arms, or, let me dwell in your heart.
Silently in love, silent in love.
Appreciation of "Seeing and Not Seeing".There is no gorgeous phrase in Cangyang Gyatso's poem "Seeing and Not Seeing", only simple and unpretentious emotions, only how things change in the world, his feelings are always the same, so that the love that changes there is like a star in the sky, even if it goes through all the vicissitudes of life, it will remain unchanged for eternity. The whole poem uses the rhetorical technique of comparison, and repeatedly recites the love in the poet's heart that will not change no matter how the world changes, with a beautiful melody and great artistic appeal.
-
The poem is by Tashi Ram Dodo, and the full text is as follows:
Ban Shu repents of the silence of Zaguru Baima
You see, or you don't see me.
I was right there.
Not sad or happy.
You read me or you don't read me.
The love is there.
Don't come and go.
You love, or don't love me.
The love is there.
No increase, no decrease.
You follow, or you don't.
My hand is in yours.
Don't give up.
Come into my arms or let me dwell in your heart.
Silently, in love, in silence, in joy.
-
To See or Not to See is written by Tashi Ram Dodo.
-
To See or Not to See" was originally titled "The Silence of Banzaguru Baima" and was written by Tashi Ram Dodo.
A few days later, Gengying and King Wei were under the Beijing stage when they looked up and saw a flying bird. >>>More
Not a good man, this kind of man is an irresponsible man who will not realize that doing so will hurt girls.
It's the same as the end of the world!
I'm similar to you, and I was the same when I was at Guangzhou University of Technology before, so what is learning, to put it bluntly, it's a mess. >>>More
is the same TV series, but the version is not the same In fact, it is a meaning "Xiaobao and Kangxi" is a TV series directed by Wang Jing and starring Zhang Weijian, adapted from Jin Yong's work "The Story of Deer and Ding". There have been four TV versions and one movie version of "The Legend of Deer and Ding", of which only Zhang Weijian's version was changed to "Xiaobao and Kangxi" instead of the original book.
The problem is too broad and requires a particularly wide range of knowledge to solve it. Here I can talk about my humble opinion. Hope it might help you. >>>More