Poems of the Masters: China's Classic Anthology of T'ang and Sung Dynasty Verse

Overview

The classic Chinese poetry anthology in a handsome English-Chinese format.

Poetry is China’s greatest art, and for the past eight centuries Poems of the Masters has been that country’s most studied and memorized collection of verse. For the first time ever in English, here is the complete text, with an introduction and extensive notes by renowned translator, Red Pine. Over one hundred poets are represented in this bilingual edition, including ...

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Overview

The classic Chinese poetry anthology in a handsome English-Chinese format.

Poetry is China’s greatest art, and for the past eight centuries Poems of the Masters has been that country’s most studied and memorized collection of verse. For the first time ever in English, here is the complete text, with an introduction and extensive notes by renowned translator, Red Pine. Over one hundred poets are represented in this bilingual edition, including many of China’s celebrated poets: Li Pai, Wang Wei, Tu Fu, Wang Po, and Ou-yang Hsiu.

Poems of the Masters was compiled during the Sung dynasty (960–1278), a time when poetry became the defining measure of human relationships and understanding.

As Red Pine writes in his introduction: "Nothing was significant without a poem, no social or ritual occasion, no political or personal event was considered complete without a few well-chosen words that summarized the complexities of the Chinese vision of reality and linked that vision with the beat of their hearts . . . [Poetry’s] greatest flowering was in the T’ang and Sung, when suddenly it was everywhere: in the palace, in the street, in every household, every inn, every monastery, in every village square."

"Chiupu River Song" by Li Pai

My white hair extends three miles the sorrow of parting made it this long who would guess to look in a mirror where autumn frost comes from

"This valuable text will help us appreciate the richness of poetic imagination and experience."—Book Magazine, five-star review

"[Poems of the Masters] includes the Chinese originals, along with commentaries on imagery, various social conventions, historical background—all absolutely essential to a full appreciation of the texts... the best way to approach them is to pick one out and let it drop like a pebble into the well of your mind and hear how it resonates."—The Philadelphia Inquirer

"The poems in this remarkable anthology speak to us—across an immense distance of time and space—of loneliness, beauty, the consequences of political action, the stillness of autumn. Red Pine's wonderful translations and the clarity of his accompanying notes make these poems accessible and intimate to all of us…Red Pine and the good people at Copper Canyon deserve a place in the Taoist paradise for bringing us this beautiful book."—Booksense Recommends

Red Pine is one of the world’s most respected translators of Chinese literature, bringing into English several of China’s central religious and literary texts, including Lao-tzu's Taoteching (isbn 9781556592904) and The Collected Songs of Cold Mountain (isbn 9781556591402).

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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9781556591952
  • Publisher: Copper Canyon Press
  • Publication date: 9/1/2003
  • Language: Chinese
  • Pages: 480
  • Sales rank: 411,540
  • Product dimensions: 6.00 (w) x 9.00 (h) x 1.40 (d)

Meet the Author

Red Pine (aka Bill Porter) is one of the world's leading translators of Chinese literary and religious texts. After dropping out of a Columbia University Ph.D. program, Red Pine moved to a Buddhist monastery in Taiwan; he eventually became a popular radio journalist in Hong Kong, famous for his descriptions of traveling around mainland China.

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Table of Contents

Translator's Preface 3
1 Spring Dawn 9
2 Calling on Censor Yuan without Success 11
3 Seeing Off Supply Director Kuo 13
4 The Roads of Loyang 15
5 Sitting Alone on Chingting Mountain 17
6 Climbing White Stork Tower 19
7 On Seeing Princess Yung-lo Leave for Manchuria 21
8 Spring Complaint 23
9 A Pear Blossom in the East Wing 25
10 On Thinking of My Lord's Grace 27
11 On Mister Yuan's Country Retreat 29
12 Seeing Off Chao Tsung at Night 31
13 Bamboo Retreat 33
14 Seeing Off Chu Ta Leaving for Ch'in 35
15 Ballad of Changkan 37
16 Ode to the Past 39
17 Resigning as Minister 41
18 On Meeting a Chivalrous Man 43
19 Traveling on the Yangtze 45
20 In Reply to Li Huan 47
21 Ode to the Autumn Wind 49
22 To Secretary Ch'iu on an Autumn Night 51
23 Autumn Day 53
24 Autumn Day on the Lake 55
25 Written in the Palace 57
26 Looking for a Recluse without Success 59
27 Surprised by Autumn on the Fen 61
28 Delayed on the Szechuan Road 63
29 Thoughts on a Quiet Night 65
30 Chiupu River Song 67
31 To Vice Censor Ch'iao 69
32 In Reply to the Prefect of Wuling 71
33 Thinking of My Home in Ch'ang-an While Traveling with the Army for Nine Days 73
34 A Concubine's Lament 75
35 Written at Chulin Temple 77
36 Passing the Shrine to the Master of the Three Gates 79
37 Saying Goodbye on the Yi River 81
38 Saying Goodbye to Lu Ch'in-Ch'ing 83
39 In Reply 85
40 Reaching Sword Gate Pass After Touring the Land of Shu 89
41 Replying to a Poem by Prime Minister Lu of Chinling 91
42 At an Imperial Banquet in Penglai Hall Offering Praise for the Chungnan Mountains 93
43 Parting from a Friend on a Night in Spring 95
44 Attending a Banquet at Princess Ch'ang-ning's Eastern Estate 97
45 Given the Word "Forest" by His Majesty at the Licheng Palace Library Banquet 99
46 Seeing Off a Friend 101
47 Seeing Off a Friend Leaving for Shu 103
48 Stopping at Peiku Mountain 105
49 Mister Su's Country Retreat 107
50 Staying Overnight at the Chancellery in Spring 109
51 Painted on the Wall of Master Hsuan-wu's Room 111
52 The Chungnan Mountains 113
53 To Censor Tu at the Chancellery 115
54 On Climbing Tsungchih Pagoda 117
55 Climbing Yenchou Tower 119
56 On Deputy Prefect Tu Taking Up a Post in Shuchou 121
57 Seeing Off Ts'ui Jung 123
58 The Imperial Entourage on the Road from Tengfeng 125
59 Written on the Wall of Master Yi's Meditation Hut 127
60 To Chang Hsu after Drinking 129
61 Jade Terrace Temple 131
62 On Seeing a Landscape Painted by My Commissioner Cousin for Li Ku 133
63 Recording My Thoughts While Traveling at Night 135
64 Climbing Yuehyang Tower 137
65 Traveling South of the Yangtze 139
66 Spending the Night at Lunghsing Temple 141
67 The Meditation Hall behind Poshan Temple 143
68 Written at the Sungting Relay Station 145
69 Shengkuo Temple 147
70 Gazing across the Countryside 149
71 Seeing Off Editor Ts'ui Marching East 151
72 Encountering Rain at Changpa Reservoir One Evening While Enjoying a Cool Breeze with Rich Young Men and Their Singsong Girls - I 153
73 Encountering Rain at Changpa Reservoir One Evening While Enjoying a Cool Breeze with Rich Young Men and Their Singsong Girls - II 155
74 Spending the Night at Yunmen Temple Pavilion 157
75 Climbing Hsieh T'iao's North Tower in Hsuancheng in Autumn 159
76 Overlooking Tungting Lake - For Prime Minister Chang 161
77 Passing Hsiangchi Temple 163
78 For Censor Cheng on Being Banished to Fukien 165
79 Miscellaneous Poem at Chinchou 167
80 Shrine to Yu the Great 169
81 Gazing at the Valley of Ch'in 171
82 Commiserating with Gentleman-in-Waiting Wang on Tungting Lake 173
83 Crossing the Yangtze 175
84 Drinking at Night in Yuchou 177
85 Casual Poem on a Spring Day 181
86 Spring Day 183
87 Spring Night 185
88 Early Spring East of Town 187
89 Spring Night 189
90 Light Rain in Early Spring 191
91 New Year's Day 193
92 Attending a Banquet on the Great Beginning 195
93 Occasional Poem on the Arrival of Spring 197
94 On a Painting of Playing Football 199
95 Palace Ode - I 201
96 Palace Ode - II 203
97 In Praise of Huaching Palace 205
98 Chingping Ode 207
99 Written on the Wall of an Inn 209
100 Quatrain 211
101 Begonia 213
102 Grave Sweeping Day 215
103 Chingming 217
104 Festival Day 219
105 Cold Food 221
106 Chiangnan Spring 223
107 For Gentleman-in-Attendance Kao 225
108 Quatrain 227
109 Visiting a Private Garden without Success 229
110 Traveling Away from Home 231
111 Written on a Screen 233
112 Inspired 235
113 The Peach Blossoms of Chingchuan Hermitage 237
114 The Peach Blossoms of Hsuantu Temple 239
115 Visiting Hsuantu Temple Again 241
116 Chuchou's West Stream 243
117 Flower Shadows 245
118 North Mountain 247
119 On the Lake 249
120 Inspired 251
121 Spring Clearing 253
122 Late Spring 255
123 Falling Flowers 257
124 Visiting a Private Garden in Late Spring 259
125 The Oriole Shuttle 261
126 Events of Late Spring 263
127 Climbing a Mountain 265
128 Lament of the Silkmaid 267
129 Late Spring 269
130 Spring Lament 271
131 Seeing Off Spring 273
132 Seeing Off Spring on the Last Day of April 275
133 Away from Home at the Beginning of Summer 277
134 Waiting for a Friend 279
135 Waking Up in Early Summer 281
136 On the Sanchu Road 283
137 Impressions 285
138 Visiting Chang's Garden at the Beginning of Summer 287
139 Written at the South Tower of Ochou 289
140 A Mountain Pavilion on a Summer Day 291
141 A Farm Family 293
142 Village Events 295
143 On the Pomegranate Flower 297
144 Village Dusk 299
145 Written on Mister Lakeshade's Wall 301
146 Black Robe Lane 303
147 Seeing Off Yuan Er on a Mission to Anhsi 305
148 On Yellow Crane Tower Hearing a Flute 307
149 Written at Huainan Temple 309
150 The Seventh Night 311
151 Autumn Moon 313
152 Autumn at the Gate 315
153 Autumn Evening 317
154 Mid-Autumn Moon 319
155 Reflections at a River Tower 321
156 Written at an Inn in Linan 323
157 At Chingtzu Temple Seeing Off Lin Tzu-fang at Dawn 325
158 Drinking on the Lake As It Clears Then Rains 327
159 Retiring After Attending a Tea at Hsuante Palace 329
160 Climbing to Canopy Pavilion on a Summer Day 331
161 Written While Serving at Jade Hall 333
162 Written at Secretary Wang's Bamboo Tower 335
163 Serving in the Secretariat 337
164 Reflections While Reading - I 339
165 Reflections While Reading - II 341
166 Cold Spring Pavilion 343
167 For Liu Ching-wen 345
168 Anchored Overnight at Maple Bridge 347
169 Winter Night 349
170 The Frost and the Moon 351
171 The Plum 353
172 Early Spring 355
173 The Show and the Plum - I 357
174 The Snow and the Plum - II 359
175 Herdboy 361
176 Anchored Overnight on the Chinhuai 363
177 On Geese Turning Back 365
178 Written on a Wall 367
179 Morning Court at Taming Palace 371
180 Responding to Secretary Chia Chih's "Morning Court at Taming Palace" 373
181 Responding to Secretary Chia Chih's "Morning Court at Taming Palace" 375
182 Responding to Secretary Chia Chih's "Morning Court at Taming Palace" 377
183 On Lantern Festival at Imperial Request 379
184 On Lantern Festival at Imperial Request 381
185 Attending a Banquet at the New Residence of Princess An-lo 383
186 In Reply to Ting Yuan-chen 385
187 Flower Garland Song 387
188 Private Thoughts 389
189 Cold Food 391
190 Chingming 393
191 Drinking Wine on Grave Sweeping Day 395
192 Strolling outside Town 397
193 The Swing 399
194 While Drinking at the Chuchiang Waterway - I 401
195 While Drinking at the Chuchiang Waterway - II 403
196 Yellow Crane Tower 405
197 A Traveler's Thoughts on a Spring Evening 407
198 In Reply to Li Tan 409
199 River Village 411
200 Summer Day 413
201 Written at My Wang River Retreat after a Steady Rain 415
202 New Bamboo at East Lake 417
203 Spending a Summer Night with My Cousin Talking about the Past 419
204 Occasional Poem on an Autumn Day 421
205 Visiting Crescent Pond 423
206 Autumn Inspiration - I 425
207 Autumn Inspiration - II 427
208 Autumn Inspiration - III 429
209 Autumn Inspiration - IV 431
210 Aboard a Boat on a Moonlit Night 433
211 Autumn Longing in Ch'ang-an 435
212 Early Autumn 437
213 Mid-Autumn 439
214 At Mister Ts'ui's Villa in Lantien on the Ninth 441
215 Autumn Thoughts 443
216 For Hermit Chu, My Neighbor to the South 445
217 Hearing a Flute 447
218 Winter Scene 449
219 Winter Solstice Eve 451
220 How Plum Flowers Embarrass a Garden 453
221 For My Nephew, Hsiang, on My Demotion and Arrival at Lankuan Pass 455
222 Spears and Shields 457
223 Returning to My Retreat 459
224 A Mountain Widow 461
Postscript 463
Timeline 465
About the Translator 467
Index of Authors 469
Index of Titles 471
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