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Chinese Autobiographical Writing: 15. Chanting About Oneself | Poems by four Song scholars (11th–13th c.)

Chinese Autobiographical Writing
15. Chanting About Oneself | Poems by four Song scholars (11th–13th c.)
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table of contents
  1. Title Page
  2. Copyright
  3. Contents
  4. Preface and Acknowledgments
  5. Translation Conventions
  6. Chronology of Imperial China With Authors of Autobiographies
  7. Introduction
  8. 1. A Son’s Tribute to his Mother | An inscription on a bronze vessel (10th c. BCE)
  9. 2. Crime and Punishment | Personal testimony given in four legal cases (3rd–2nd c. BCE)
  10. 3. A Han Emperor Accepting the Blame | Edict by Emperor Wu 武帝 (r. 141–87 BCE)
  11. 4. Letters Home | Three letters sent by ordinary men and women (3rd c. BCE and 9th–10th c. CE)
  12. 5. A Natural Philosopher’s Account of his Life | Last chapter of his collected essays by Wang Chong 王充 (27–ca. 97 CE)
  13. 6. A Father Writing to his Son | A letter by Zheng Xuan 鄭玄 (127–200)
  14. 7. An Abducted Woman on Returning Home | Poems by Cai Yan 蔡琰 (ca. 177–ca. 249)
  15. 8. Military Men Touting Their Merits | Essays by Cao Cao 曹操 (155–220) and his son Cao Pi 曹丕 (187–226)
  16. 9. The Pain of Separation | Poetic writings by Imperial Consort Zuo Fen 左芬 (ca. 253–300)
  17. 10. An Emperor’s Discourse on Karma and Vegetarianism | Preface by Emperor Wu 梁武帝 (r. 502–549) of the Liang
  18. 11. Late Tang Writers on Life Beyond Office-Holding | Accounts by Bai Juyi 白居易 (772–846) and Lu Guimeng 陸龜蒙 (ca. 836–881)
  19. 12. Mourning Friends and Relations | Elegies by Han Yu 韓愈 (768–824) and Han Qi 韓琦 (1008–1075)
  20. 13. An Advocate of the Simple Life | Autobiography by Liu Kai 柳開 (948–1001)
  21. 14. Records of Things Seen and Heard | Prefaces to five Song miscellanies (11th–13th c.)
  22. 15. Chanting About Oneself | Poems by four Song scholars (11th–13th c.)
  23. 16. An Envoy’s Trip to the Jin Court | Travel diary by Lou Yue 樓鑰 (1137–1213)
  24. 17. Women and Suicide | Writing on an inn wall by Qiongnu 瓊奴 (11th c.) and a poem by Han Ximeng 韓希孟 (mid-13th c.)
  25. 18. Witnessing Dynastic Collapse | Writings by Yuan Haowen 元好問 (1190–1257) and Wen Tianxiang 文天祥 (1236–1283)
  26. 19. Peaceful Abodes | Accounts of their homes by Yelü Chucai 耶律楚材 (1190–1244) and Xie Yingfang 謝應芳(1296–1392)
  27. 20. A Female Doctor’s Life and Work | Preface and postfaces to a book by Tan Yunxian 談允賢 (1461–1556)
  28. 21. An Eccentric Considers Suicide | Self-authored funerary biography by Xu Wei 徐渭 (1521–1593)
  29. 22. Life in the Examination Hell | Preface to a set of examination essays by Ai Nanying 艾南英 (1583–1646)
  30. 23. A Royal Consort’s Song | Music for the zither by Madame Zhong 鐘氏 (fl. 1570–1620)
  31. 24. Environmental Catastrophes | Harrowing reports by Chen Qide 陳其德 (fl. 1640s) and Pu Songling 蒲松齡 (1640–1715)
  32. 25. A Con Man Posing as an Official | Legal Confession of Luo Fenpeng 羅奮鵬 (b. 1726)
  33. 26. A Private Secretary’s Itinerant Life | Year-by-year autobiography by Wang Huizu 汪輝祖 (1730–1807)
  34. 27. Tributes to Close Relatives | Appreciations written by a woman for her husband and a man for his elder sister (18th and 19th c.)
  35. 28. A Teenager Captured by the Nian Rebels | Record of a fifteen-week ordeal by Liu Tang 柳堂 (1844–1929)
  36. 29. Keeping Family Members Informed | Letters to his eldest son by Zeng Guofan 曾國藩 (1811–1872)
  37. Appendix | A Select List of Widely Available Translations of Prose Personal Accounts to 1880
  38. Index

15 CHANTING ABOUT ONESELF Poems by four Song scholars (11th–13th c.)

Song poets describe the most mundane aspects of their daily lives as well as their lofty ambitions and unfulfilled dreams.

Poetry played a larger role in Chinese culture and society than in Western civilization for a variety of reasons. The Classic of Poetry’s (Shijing) classification as a Confucian classic elevated the place of poetic writing and appreciation. Another important factor was the strong belief that good poetry “was the highest form of speaking to someone else, an activity appropriate to all human beings on certain occasions and in certain states of mind.”1 For these reasons, poetry remained a key component of general education for men throughout imperial Chinese history. All educated men grew up memorizing a large number of poems and were trained in the basic rules for the patterns of tones and use of imagery, then tried their hand in composing their own poems. The greatest age of Chinese poetry was the Tang dynasty. The Complete Tang Poems (Quan Tang shi) includes about 49,000 poems by 2,200 poets. Even more survive from the Song, as The Complete Song Poems (Quan Song shi) contains about 270,000 poems by close to 90,000 poets.

Good poetry was often autobiographical. Poets recorded their observations of changes in natural conditions and visits to scenic spots. Other prominent themes included drinking and banqueting, bidding farewell, missing family and friends, and life in exile. All are revealing of the poet’s everyday life and professional experiences. A particular type of poem, entitled “chanting about oneself,” stands out for its vivid depiction of daily and private life. In these poems, the poet often resorts to humor or self-denigration to convey his innermost feelings of contentment, disappointment, or frustration. The selections below vary greatly in their tone but address several topics of general concern to members of the scholar-official class: aging, hobbies and taste, enduring poverty, and office-holding and its alternatives.

Chanting about Myself at Forty, by Wei Ye 魏野 (960–1020)

At rest my heart does not pound,

But I realize that my memory is growing weaker.

Chess skills retrogressing, it is hard to yield to my guests;

Out of practice on my qin, I have to ask my son for the right notes.

Hands lazy, the agricultural tools are left randomly.

Body falling apart, my Daoist gear reveals.

What are the uses of the brush and inkstone

Other than to polish old poems.

Mocking Myself, by Bi Zhongyou 畢仲遊 (1047–1121)

Once there were fresh, delicious crabs under my chopsticks,

Now only old filtered muddy wine in the jug.

When I get drunk today, please do not laugh at me—

The grandson of a past minister of personnel

Pitying Myself, by Bi Zhongyou 畢仲遊 (1047–1121)

I pity myself for wanting to be a scholar despite my poverty and ill health.

For over ten years, I have stayed up late to study,

Once a boy, now already old.

On my desk still a pile of books to be read.

Laughing at Myself, by Zheng Gangzhong 鄭剛中 (1088–1154)

Other people invest their money in fields and gardens,

Then worry about getting rich too slowly.

In my case, I borrow money to buy rare books,

Vexed that I never have enough for all the ones I want.

Since I do not put essential needs first,

How could I have jars filled with grain?

My foolishness makes me laugh and laugh,

Done laughing, I playfully pick up a book to read.

Cautioning Myself, by Lu You 陸游 (1125–1210)

Hair falling out—it gets tangled in my comb in the morning.

Deserted fields get hoed at dusk.

The arrival of cool weather lets me set aside the round fan.

As my health improves, I use my short walking stick less often.

In pursuing the Way of the sages, I have accomplished little,

And I haven’t yet cut off all human ties.

Fortunately, the lonely green lamp is steadfast.

Moving closer to it, I read an unfinished book.

Amusing Myself, by Lu You 陸游 (1125–1210)

For half of my life I was stuck in officialdom and rushed about in society.

Only when drunk did I relax and dream of the quiet life.

Now I get to enjoy having nothing to do.

When tired of reading, I go roaming in the mountains.


SOURCE: Beijing Daxue Guwenxian Yanjiusuo, ed., Quan Song shi 全宋詩 (Beijing: Beijing Daxue Chubanshe, 1986–1998), 2:79.901, 18:1042.11939, 30:1692.19051, 39:2180.24825–26, 40:2207.25260–5261.

Notes

  1. 1. Stephen Owen, “Poetry in the Chinese Tradition,” in Heritage of China: Contemporary Perspectives on Chinese Civilization, ed. Paul S. Ropp (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1990), 294–308.

Further Reading

  • Hawes, Colin C. The Social Circulation of Poetry in the Mid-Northern Song: Emotional Energy and Literati Self-Representation. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2011.
  • Lu You. The Old Man Who Does as He Pleases. Translated by Burton Watson. New York: Columbia University Press, 1973.
  • Owen, Stephen. “The Self’s Perfect Mirror: Poetry as Autobiography.” In The Vitality of the Lyric Voice: Shih Poetry from the Late Han to the Tang, edited by Shuen-fu Lin and Stephen Owen, 71–102. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1986.
  • _____. “Wit and the Private Life.” In The End of the Chinese “Middle Ages”: Essays in Mid-Tang Literary Culture, 83–106. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1996.

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