
"Ab gai so cundet e leri", line 12; translation by Leonardo Malcovati http://www.trobar.org/troubadours/arnaut_daniel/arnaut_daniel_04.php
As quoted in The Essence of Zen : Zen Buddhism for Every Day and Every Moment (2002) by Mark Levon Byrne, p. 28.
Context: From the world of passions returning to the world of passions:
There is a moment's pause.
If it rains, let it rain, if the wind blows, let it blow.
"Ab gai so cundet e leri", line 12; translation by Leonardo Malcovati http://www.trobar.org/troubadours/arnaut_daniel/arnaut_daniel_04.php
Japanese Death Poems. Compiled by Yoel Hoffmann. ISBN 978-0-8048-3179-6
Other translation:
I rebuke the wind and revile the rain,
I do not know the Buddha and patriarchs;
My single activity turns in the twinkling of an eye,
Swifter even than a lightning flash.
Isshu Miura and Ruth Fuller Sasaki, Zen Dust, New York: Harcourt, Brace & World p. 206; cited in Richard Bryan McDaniel (2013)
"All of Us"
A Picnic of Poems in Allah's Green Garden (2011)
“The maple tree that night
Without a wind or rain
Let go its leaves
Because its time had come.”
"The Maple Tree"
Poems
“For after all, the best thing one can do when it is raining is let it rain.”
Variant: The best thing one can do when it's raining is to let it rain.
Poem: The Drunken Fisherman http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/g_l/lowell/onlinepoems.htm
Watch the Wind Blow By
Song lyrics, Tim McGraw and the Dancehall Doctors (2002)
“For a deadly blow let him pay with a deadly blow; it is for him who has done a deed to suffer.”
Source: Oresteia (458 BC), The Libation Bearers, line 312