Where I live, the first breath of autumn has just arrived. With that quiet shift in the air, it feels natural to turn to the beautiful doha that follows, “Мянган намар” (“A Thousand Autumns”) by the Mongolian scholar-poet Zava Damdin (b.1976), composed last year during Mongolia’s short autumnal season.
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A THOUSAND AUTUMNS
Since I last met you
It is as though a thousand autumns have passed
Countless leaves have faded away
Departing beneath the cool wind
From their lines, your letter
I read as if tracing the lines of the palm
Together with many, many migrating birds
I sent my reply by way of the clouds
And again, a thousand autumns pass
Like birds that flew far away
When a certain time comes
We shall meet at the lake of the mind and heart.
Melodious Boy of Grassy Mountain
22.10.2025
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The above is an English language interpretation of the original Mongolian text (see below), a version that has not been cut-and-pasted from elsewhere. If there are mistakes, they are of my own making and for these I humbly apologise. I’m approaching each translation with care and learning slowly as I go…
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МЯНГАН НАМАР
Чамтай уулзсанаас хойш
Мянган намар одсон мэт
Тоолш үгүй навчис алтраад
Сэрүүн салхин дор одчухуй
Чиний захидлыг тэдгээрийн зурааснаас
Алганы хээ мэт уншиж
Олон олон нүүдлийн шувууд лугаа
Үүлсээр хариу илгээжүхүй
Эргээд л мянган намар
Алс дор одсон шувууд мэт
Ирэх нэгэн цаг дор
Сэтгэлийн нууран дор учрамуй
Зүлэгт уулын аялгууч хөвгүүн
22.10.2025
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NOTES
Zava Damdin Bagsh’s “Мянган намар” is a lyrical, meditative poem steeped in temporality*, memory, and spiritual connection. Through the metaphor of autumn and the cycles of nature, Rinpoche explores present distance, remembrance, and the quiet prospect of reunion. The language of this doha is deeply symbolic, drawing on the ephemeral beauty of the natural world to mirror inner experience.
A. Key Themes
1. Time and Longing
- “Мянган намар одсон мэт” (“as though a thousand autumns have passed”) is not just an exaggeration but an emotional truth—longing stretches time. Time is not measured in days, but in seasons of memory and absence.
- Also, Autumn, as a symbol of transience and nostalgia, is repeated, reinforcing the sense of passing time and emotional weight.
2. Nature as Emotional Mirror
- The leaves falling, migrating birds, and cool wind are not passive background but active metaphors for inner movement—separation and yearning.
- Nature becomes a poet’s communicative partner. Through clouds and birds, messages are carried, blending physical and metaphysical worlds.
3. Connection Beyond Distance
- In this doha, Zava Rinpoche refers to reading a letter, “…like tracing the lines of the palm.” This image suggests familiarity, traces of lived experience, and even lineage, all within a wider field of karmic unfolding and connection.
- The line “Үүлсээр хариу илгээжүхүй” (“I sent my reply by way of the clouds”) reflects a kind of spiritual communication, suggesting that the bond persists beyond physical space and possibly time.
- To be clear, these are simply my own readings, shaped by the world as I have come to understand it. Here, an important question arises: What thoughts arise for you when you read each of these two lines? Are they the same, or do they differ from mine?
4. Cyclicality and Reunion
- The second half of this doha moves from separation to the prospect of reunion. Just as birds return and seasons turn, so too will hearts and minds reunite.
- “Сэтгэлийн нууран дор учрамуй” (“We shall meet at the lake of the mind and heart”) implies a deep, subconscious or spiritual realm, a reunion not merely a meeting in some physical place, but a meeting at some deeper level of personhood.
B. Symbolic Imagery
The symbolic readings that follow are associated with this particular doha, and are not intended as general definitions:
| Symbol | Interpretation |
| Thousand Autumns | Prolonged emotional time; spiritual distance or reincarnation motif |
| Falling Leaves | Inevitable change |
| Chill Wind | A quiet sadness, a sense of loss following separation |
| Migrating Birds | Messengers; metaphors for departure and return |
| Clouds | Transient carriers of messages; impermanence |
| Palm Lines | Traces of karma, habit, lived experience |
C. Form and Voice
- The poem is lyrical and introspective, with a contemplative tone.
- Its structure, beginning with separation and ending with the prospect of reunion, echoes a cyclical journey, much like the seasons.
- For this doha, Zava Rinpoche signs off as “Зүлэгт уулын аялгууч хөвгүүн” (“Melodious Boy of Grassy Mountain”), evoking a gentle, pastoral identity—a poet as a voice of the land and heart’s mind.
D. Interpretive Possibilities
From my perspective, A Thousand Autumns may be read in several ways, depending on who your are and what you bring to the reading: as a love poem, expressing longing for a beloved across time; as a spiritual text, hinting at reincarnation, karma, or karmic bonds; or as a reflection on impermanence, inviting the reader to dwell with the transient beauty of life. Of these possibilities, it is the last that I feel most drawn to.
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GLOSSARY
Temporality: In a Mongolian Gelug Buddhist epistemological context, temporality can be understood not simply as clock-time or historical sequence, but as the conditioned, moment-by-moment unfolding of phenomena as they arise, change, and cease within dependent origination, karma, and the path of knowing (Stoltz 2021). Gelug epistemology, drawing on the pramāṇa tradition, is centrally concerned with how valid cognition apprehends an impermanent world and establishes reliable knowledge within that flow; in a Mongolian Gelug setting, that concern is received within a specifically Mongolian Buddhist culture rather than as an abstract Tibetan inheritance.
The pramāṇa tradition is the Buddhist tradition that asks how we know what is true, especially through perception and reasoning.
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FURTHER READING
(Annotated)
Dovchin, Sender. “Nomadic Knowledging and Nomadic Languaging.” ELT Journal, 2025 [Useful as a conceptual companion to A Thousand Autumns, this article frames Mongolian nomadic knowledge as land-based, relational, and shaped by movement, memory, and sacred landscape; it therefore supports a reading of the doha’s autumnal and migratory imagery as modes of knowing and feeling, not mere ornament.]
Irvine, Richard D. G. “Empty Land, Empty Time? Anthropological Theory and the Challenge of Nomadic Civilization.” Mongolian Anthropological Review 1, no. 1 (2025): 9–22 [Useful for interpreting the poem’s autumn, distance, and migratory birds as lived temporal and spatial experience, this essay argues against treating land and time as empty backdrops and instead foregrounds mobility, rhythm, and time-depth in nomadic worlds.]
Stoltz, Jonathan. Illuminating the Mind: An Introduction to Buddhist Epistemology. New York: Oxford University Press, 2021. [A clear and accessible introduction to Buddhist epistemology, useful for readers seeking a concise grounding in questions of valid cognition, impermanence, and the unfolding of experience.]
Tugjamba, Navchaa. “Dancing with Cranes: The Relational Values of the Open Pasture Steppes of Mongolia.” Landscape Research 50, no. 6 (2025): 927–938. [A useful companion for the poem’s leaves, birds, clouds, and seasonal landscape, this article shows how Mongolian pastoral environments are understood relationally: as lived, felt, and value-laden worlds in which belonging, respect, and memory are inseparable from place.]
Refer to the INDEX for other articles that may be of interest.
End of transcript.
© 2013-2026. CP in Mongolia. “Mongolian Poetry 32: A Thousand Autumns” is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. ScholarGPT provided an additional channel for research. Documents linked from this page may be subject to other restrictions. Posted: 19 March 2026. Last updated: 19 March 2026.