Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki, D.Litt., Professor of Buddhist Philosophy in the Otani University, Kyoto, was probably the greatest living authority on Buddhist philosophy, and certainly the greatest authority on Zen Buddhism. His major works in English on the subject of Buddhism number a dozen or more, and of his works in Japanese as yet unknown to the West there are at least eighteen.
Contents:
Editor's Foreword To Second Edition
Editor's Note To Second Edition
Preface To First Edition
I. Gathas And Prayers
I. On Opening The Sutra
Ii. Confession
Iii. The Threefold Refuge
Iv. The Four Great Vows
V. The Worshipping Of The Sarira
Vi. The Teaching Of The Seven Buddhas
Vii. The Gatha Of Impermanence
Viii. The Yemmei Kwannon Ten-Clause Sutra
Ix. Prayer On The Occasion Of Feeding The Hungry Ghosts
X. General Prayer
Xi. Prayer Of The Bell
Ii. The Dharanis
I. Dharani Of Removing Disasters
Ii. Dharani Of The Great Compassionate One Iii. Dharani Of The Victorious Buddha-Crown
Iii. The Sutras
I. English Translation Of The Shingyo
Ii. The Kwannon Sutra
Iii. The Kongokyo Or Diamond Sutra
Iv. The Lankavatara Sutra
V. The Ryogonkyo, Or Surangama Sutra
Iv. From The Chinese Zen Masters
I. Bodhidharma On The Twofold Entrance To The Tao Ii. On Believing In Mind (Shinjin-No-Mei)
Iii. From Hui-Neng's Tan-Ching
Iv. Yoka Daishi's “Song Of Enlightenment”
V. Baso (Ma-Tsu) And Sekito (Shih-T'ou), Two Great Masters Of The T'ang Dynasty
Vi. Huang-Po's Sermon, From “Treatise On The Essentials Of The Transmission Of Mind” (Denshin Hoyo)
Vii. Gensha On The: Three Invalids
Viii. The Ten Oxherding Pictures
V. From The Japanese Zen Masters
I. Dai-O Kokushi “On Zen”
2. Dai-O Kokushi's Admonition
3. Daito Kokushi's Admonition
Iv. Kwanzan Kokushi's Admonition
V. Muso Kokushi's Admonition
Vi. Hakuin's “Song Of Meditation”
Vi. The Buddhist Statues And Pictures In A Zen Monastery
I. The Buddha
Ii. The Bodhisattvas
Iii. The Arhats
Iv. The Protecting Gods V.