Sir, most honorable one… It is not in fear or disgust or in disappointment or revulsion no, Sir, it is not of such causes that I have sought the solitude of these hills and rocks and trees and the lake that whispers ever, even as I lie down to sleep; but O most revered passer-by - in the hustle and bustle of our lives in the capital and in our cities, even there I found an embracing silence that I could not ignore; and I saw the shallowness of activity and I saw the ambition of superficiality; and let it be what word philosophy or ritual or religion may call it, whatever labels Organized Thought revels in - that Silence I found nameless and formless - and even in the midst of activity I found inactivity But Sir, as you ask, the Impatient saw Rebuke in my Silence the Virtuous found their Guilt in my Quiet the Enlightened glimpsed their Darkness in my Stillness And so it came to be that natural outcome, society receded from me Most Honorable Sir, it was not I that left it… And ah, here you find me now, insignificant, part of the whole, still, and as content as the dust that you might find on a blade of grass amidst the natural wideness that is here…
Poem based on painting “Sansu inmuldo” (“the picture of a man in the landscape”) by Jang Seung-eop (Owon), 1843-1897, Korea, late Joseon Dynasty