Название: Tea Wisdom
Автор: Aaron Fisher
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Кулинария
isbn: 9781462908387
isbn:
“Tea without Tea.” Illustration by the author.
Tang Dynasty Tea Brazier by Master Chen Qi Nan.
AARON FISHER
TUTTLE PUBLISHING
Tokyo • Rutland, Vermont • Singapore
Published by Tuttle Publishing, an imprint of Periplus Editions (HK) Ltd., with editorial offices at 364 Innovation Drive, North Clarendon, Vermont 05759 U.S.A.
Copyright © 2009 Aaron Fisher
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without prior written permission from the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Fisher, Aaron.
Tea wisdom: inspirational quotes and quips about the world’s most celebrated beverage / Aaron Fisher. -- 1st ed.
p. cm.
ISBN: 978-1-4629-0838-7 (ebook)
1. Tea--Quotations, maxims, etc. 2. Tea--Philosophy. I. Title.
GT2905.F57 2008
394.1’5--dc22
2008053311
North America, Latin America & Europe
Tuttle Publishing
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Asia Pacific
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First edition
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Printed in Singapore
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Preparing Tea. Illustration traditionally attributed to Lin Sung-nien, Sung Dynasty. From the collection of the National Palace Museum, Taipei.
Oxidation of Puerh tea leaves in Yunnan.
Contents
Chapter Three: Good Spirits 84
Chapter Four: Good Company 112
Chapter Six: Reviving Yourself 180
Chapter Seven: Reflection and Meditation 208
INTRODUCTION
They say it was the Divine Farmer, Shen Nong, who first sipped the Leaf, sitting in idle meditation beneath its great boughs when a single leaf fluttered calmly into his hot water. Others believe a tea sprout sprang up from the discarded eyelids of Bodhidharma, torn off by the stern sage for betraying him with a drowsy flutter during his nine-year vigil. In following the great tea scroll down from these times of legend, before even the calligraphy of history was first stroked, we might find the wizened jungle shamans who carried its leaves in their medicine pouches; further unraveling Daoist mendicants passing a steaming bowl of truth between them, the wind passing through the soughing brazier all the sermon they would ever need; past other bearded sages, monks and nuns sipping green tea in unison as the summoning gong drifts out the temple doors to the point where its vibrations meet silence; and then only would this hoary silk roll, saffroned with age, reach the point where the great tea sage Lu Yu first brushed the Classics of Tea, starting the library of tea words that fill this book, inspiring us with a “Tea Wisdom” as true now as it ever was.
All the wisdom of this book, spanning centuries and continents is but a single steeped and poured truth: that at its center the calmness inherent in this ancient herb, steaming gently in water, unfurls not in a pot, but in our Heart.
Beyond that calm place where we all drink tea—out of friendship, meditation, or to our health—we might say that tea is inspiration, spirit, ceremony, and breadth, calm comfort and amicable joy: Its liquor having fueled a long list of poets, painters, and calligraphers who created under its influence; mendicants, monks, and nuns who tended its leaves, drinking for meditation and as an expression of an ineffable wisdom passed from master to student; not to mention the museums of ceramics, woodwork, metal-smithing, and other arts explicitly devoted to the utensils used in tea preparation. Tea has christened weddings and funerals, been offered to gods and demons both, sat steaming between friends, enemy generals and their nighttime stratagems, and the first meeting of lovers—entwining itself around the human story in a romantic and spiritual sentiment as fragrant as its own aroma.
From East to West, in mythic lands, ancient mountains, or modern tea houses СКАЧАТЬ