|
||
|
Fun with Tang Dynasty Poetry: “River Snow”
River Snow A thousand hills --- but no birds in flight,
千山鳥飛絕,萬徑人蹤滅。
Liu Zongyuan (柳宗元, 773 – 819 A.D.), also known as Liu Zihou, was a great poet and literary giant in the Tang Dynasty. Along with Han Yu (韓愈), he was a founder of the Classical Prose Movement (古文運動), which tried to revive poetry of the day by learning from classical masters and their nonpareil essays. He was traditionally revered as one of the Eight Great Prose Masters of the Tang and the Song Dynasties. He has an elegant yet powerful style. His poetry reflects his ethereal and unique style. His poem “River Snow” is a prime example of “minimum words; maximum message,” and has been the subject of numerous landscape paintings. It is also an excellent work of art among Tang Dynasty poems. The Author’s Interpretation: Liu Zongyuan’s civil service career was initially successful, but in 805 A.D. he fell from Emperor Shunzong’s favour because of his association with a failed reformist movement. He was exiled first to Yongzhou in Hunan Province and then to Liuzhou in Guangxi Province. However, the setback allowed his literary career to flourish. The exile tempered his will and morality. He eventually became a Buddhist cultivator. This poem is considered a portrait of his inner world in exile.
|
||