"Koho Kenichi (1241-1316) was one of the most renowned Zen prelates of his era, his era, not least because of his Japanese origin. As son of , he began his religious career in the esoteric Buddhist school. In 1256 he was admitted into the Tofukuji by Enni Ben'en. Four years later he met Gottan Funei, who had just moved there from China. As instructed by his teacher Enni Ben'en, Koho followed Gottan Funei to Kamakura. On Ichio Ingo's recommendation he came under the care of Koho Kennichi. He was calm and self-willed and preferred to live in seclusion. For this reason he spent many years in a remote area until his appointment as leading priest of the Jomyoji in 1300 and later of the Manjuji in Kamakura. In 1314 Mugaku Sogen entrusted him with the leadership of the great Kenchoji."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Ildegarda Scheidegger, Bokutotsuso. Studies on the Calligraphy of the Zen Master Muso Soseki (1275-1351), 2005. p. 117
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Ingo
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Ingo
Ingo, or Ichio Ingo (1209 - August 21, 1281) was a Japanese Zen master and poet, and a disciple of Mugaku Sogen.
3 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Ingo →
Related Quotes
"Three and seventy years I've drawn pure water from the fire - Now I become a tiny bug. With a touch of my body I shat…"
"Hogo acquired importance as a calligraphic art expressing the personality and the cultural attainments of the zen pri…"
"As if to say— "Isn't it true for men, as well: that the more the words, the less they are of value?"— the cuckoo does…"
"When I look upon the rich sheen of summer hairs in my new brush, I am saddened by a deer drawn at night to a hunter's…"
"I had forgotten— as I kept on forgetting to remind myself that those who vow to forget are the ones who can't forget."
"All these images from a world of long ago— of what good are they? Pine winds, come—please blow away these unforgotten…"
"Even in one’s sleep, it is dreams of this world one sees, and of no other; just as there is no dawning here that brin…"