Li He

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Li He
Li He, as depicted in the 1743 book Wanxiaotang Zhuzhuang Huazhuan (晩笑堂竹荘畫傳)
Traditional Chinese李賀
Simplified Chinese李贺
Hanyu PinyinLǐ Hè
Wade–GilesLi3 Ho4
Courtesy name: Changji
Traditional Chinese長吉
Simplified Chinese长吉
Hanyu PinyinChángjí
Nickname: Shigui
Traditional Chinese詩鬼
Simplified Chinese诗鬼
Literal meaningGhost of Poetry
Hanyu PinyinShīguǐ
Nickname: Guicai
Chinese鬼才
Literal meaningSpectral Talent
Hanyu PinyinGuǐcái

Template:Chinese name Li He (c. 790–791c. 816–817) was a Chinese poet of the mid-Tang dynasty. His courtesy name was Changji, and he is also known as Guicai and Shigui.

He was prevented from taking the imperial examination due to a naming taboo. He died very young, and was noted for his sickly appearance.

He was a dilligent poet, going out on journeys during the day and, when a line of poetry came to him, scribbling it down, and completing the poems when he arrived home in the evening. His poems famously explored ghostly, supernatural and fantastic themes.

His popularity and place in the Chinese literary canon has fluctuated throughout the centuries. His idiosyncratic style of poetry was frequently imitated in the middle ages. His popularity suffered from a change in literary tastes during the Qing era, with his works notably being excluded from the influential Three Hundred Tang Poems, but there was a revival of interest in him in the twentieth century. He was among the Tang poets most admired by Mao Zedong.

Biography

Sources

Chapter 137 of the Old Book of Tang[a][1] and chapter 203 of the New Book of Tang[b] each give a brief outline of the biography of Li He.[2]

Li Shangyin, a poet of the following generation, also wrote a Short Biography of Li He (simplified Chinese: 李贺小传; traditional Chinese: 李賀小傳; pinyin: lǐ hè xiǎo chuán).[3] Du Mu, in 831, wrote Li He ji xu (Chinese: 李賀集敘), which is more removed than the affectionate account written by Li Shangyin.[4] Both the official histories are heavily dependant on these earlier records, particularly on Li Shangyin's account.[4]

Ancestry

His family were of distant royal descent (from the Li family who were the ruling dynastic family of the Tang Dynasty),[5] but his branch's fortunes had declined early on, and by Li He's time they were of low rank.[6] Both the Tang state histories refer to him as a "descendant of Zheng Wang", but there are two major theories as to whom Zheng Wang was.[7] The first (and the one with more support among scholars) is that it refers to Zheng Xiao Wang Liang [zh], an uncle of Li Yuan;[7] the other is that it refers to the thirteenth son of Li Yuan, Zheng Wang Yuan Yi [zh].[7]

Birth and early life

He was born in 790 or 791.[c] It seems likely that he was born in the year of the Horse, as some twenty-three of his surviving poems use the horse as a symbol for the poet.[5]

He was a native of Fuchang County (west of modern-day Yiyang County, Henan Province).[8][d]

He started composing poetry at the age of 7, and by around 15 he was being compared to the yuefu master Li Yi.[6]

Political career

When Li was 20, he attempted to take the Imperial Examination, but was forbidden from doing so because of a naming taboo: the first character (晉 jin) of his father's given name (晉肅 Jinsu) was a homonym of the first character (進) of Jinshi (進士), the name of the degree that would have been conferred on him had he passed.[9] Ueki et al. (1999) speculate that this was a pretext devised by rivals, who were jealous of his poetic skill, to prevent him from sitting the examination.[10]

Han Yu, who admired his poetry, wrote Hui Bian (諱弁) to encourage him to take the exam, but Li was ultimately unsuccessful.[6] He served only three years, in the low-ranking office of Fenglilang (奉禮郎)[6] before returning to his hometown.[11]

Sickness and death

He is described as having a very sickly appearance: he was supposedly very thin, had a unibrow, and let his fingernails grow long.[6] Li He died a low-ranking and poor official in 816 or 817,[e] at the age of 26 or 27.[5][f]

The Short Biography of Li He reports that at the hour of his death he was visited by a figure in scarlet who told him that Shangdi had summoned him to heaven to write poetry.[12]

Names

His courtesy name was Changji,[13] and he is also known by a combination of his surname and courtesy name, Li Changji.[14]

He was also known as Guicai (鬼才 "devilish talent") by contrast of his morbid poetic style[g] to Li Bai's Tiancai (天才 "heavenly talent") and Bai Juyi's Rencai (人才 "humanly talent").[15] This title was given him by the Song scholar Qian Yi [zh] in his work Nanbu Xinshu [zh].[16]

He was also dubbed the "Ghost of Poetry" (詩鬼),[17][18] while Li Bai was called the "Immortal of Poetry" (詩仙) and Du Fu the "Sage of Poetry" (詩聖).[19]

Poetry

Collected Songs and Verses of Li He

In literary history, Li is generally considered a poet of the so-called Middle Tang period, which spanned the late-eighth and early-ninth centuries.[20] Among his poetic influences were his older contemporary Meng Jiao and the aforementioned Han Yu.[21] Other sources that have been identified as influencing Li's poetry were the shamanistic elements of the Chu Ci and the idiosyncratic poetry of Li Bai.[21]

About 240[h] of his poems survive.[22] The New Book of Tang reports that few of his poems survived because of their strangeness and because of Li's early death.[23] An anecdote in the Taiping Guangji records that a cousin of Li's was asked to compile a collection of his poems, but because he did not like Li personally he eventually threw what had been collected in the privy.[23]

There are two extant anthologies of his poems: the Collected Songs and Verses of Li He (simplified Chinese: 李贺歌诗篇; traditional Chinese: 李賀歌詩篇; pinyin: lǐ hè gē shī piān) and the Wai Ji (Chinese: 外集; pinyin: wài jí).[1]

The Short Biography of Li He describes him as a diligent poet, who carried an old brocade bag around with him, and when a line of poetry came to him he would jot it down and put it in this bag.[24] After getting home, he would arrange these lines into a poem.[25]

His poetry is unique, filled with fantastic and unusual imagery, which is where he gets his nickname "Guicai" (see above).[26] Virtually none of his surviving poems are in regulated verse form,[1] and his poems make frequent use of inauspicious words such as "aging" (Chinese: ; pinyin: lǎo) and "death" (Chinese: ; pinyin: ).[1] In poems like "Tianshang yao" and "Meng tian", he wrote evocatively of the worlds of gods and Buddhas.[1]

天上謠
Traditional[27]
Tiānshàng Yáo
Pinyin[28]
"In Heaven"
English translation
天河夜轉漂回星,
銀浦流雲學水聲。
玉宮桂樹花未落,
仙妾采香垂佩纓。
秦妃捲簾北窗曉,
窗前植桐青鳳小。
王子吹笙鵝管長,
呼龍耕煙種瑤草。
粉霞紅綬藕絲裙,
青洲步拾蘭苕春。
東指羲和能走馬,
海塵新生石山下。
tiān hé yè zhuǎn piào huí xīng,
yín pǔ liú yún xué shuǐ shēng.
yù gōng guì shù huā wèi luò,
xiān qiè cǎi xiāng chuí pèi yīng.
qín fēi juǎn lián běi chuāng xiǎo,
chuāng qián zhí tóng qīng fèng xiǎo.
wáng zǐ chuī shēng é guǎn cháng,
hū lóng gēng yān zhòng yáo cǎo.
fěn xiá hóng shòu ǒu sī qún,
qīng zhōu bù shí lán tiáo chūn.
dōng zhǐ xī hé néng zǒu mǎ,
hǎi chén xīn shēng shí shān xià.
夢天
Traditional[29]
Mèng Tiān
Pinyin[30]
"Sky Dream"
English translation[31]
老兔寒蟾泣天色,
雲樓半開壁斜白。
玉輪軋露濕團光,
鸞佩相逢桂香陌。
黃塵清水三山下,
更變千年如走馬。
遙望齊州九點煙,
一泓海水杯中瀉。
lǎo tù hán chán qì tiān sè,
yún lóu bàn kāi bì xié bái.
yù lún yà lù shī tuán guāng,
luán pèi xiāng féng guì xiāng mò.
huáng chén qīng shuǐ sān shān xià,
gēng biàn qiān nián rú zǒu mǎ.
yáo wàng qí zhōu jiǔ diǎn yān,
yī hóng hǎi shuǐ bēi zhōng xiè.
A moon's old rabbit and cold toad weeping colors of sky,
lucent walls slant across through half-open cloud towers.
A jade-pure wheel squeezes dew into bulbs of wet light.
Phoenix waist jewels meet on cinnamon-scented paths.
Transformations of a thousand years gallop by like horses,
yellow dust soon seawater below changeless island peaks,
and all China seen so far off: it's just nine wisps of mist,
and the ocean's vast clarity a mere cup of spilled water.

He also gave eerie descriptions of the world of ghosts in his poems "Qiu lai" and "Shen xian qu".[1] The spiritual symbolism Li employed in the latter poem has been called "nearly impenetrable".[32]

秋來
Traditional[33]
Qiū Lái
Pinyin
"Autumn Arrives"
English translation
桐風驚心壯士苦,
衰燈絡緯啼寒素。
誰看青簡一編書,
不遣花蟲粉空蠹。
思牽今夜腸應直,
雨冷香魂吊書客。
秋墳鬼唱鮑家詩,
恨血千年土中碧。
tóng fēng jīng xīn zhuàng shì kǔ,
shuāi dēng luò wěi tí hán sù.
shuí kàn qīng jiǎn yī biān shū,
bù qiǎn huā chóng fěn kōng dù.
sī qiān jīn yè cháng yīng zhí,
yǔ lěng xiāng hún diào shū kè.
qiū fén guǐ chàng bào jiā shī,
hèn xuè qiān nián tǔ zhōng bì.
The young lad, startled to his core by the paulownia wind,[i] is in pain;
his lamp failing him, he can hear the crickets chirping their cold, lonely song.[j]

"Shen xian qu" was the name of a popular folk song going back at least as far as the Six Dynasties period, and Li's poem borrows the name of this song.[35] The song originated in the Nanjing area, as a ritual song meant to be played at religious ceremonies to invite the favour of the gods.[35] Li's poem describes the supernatural world but this is not the case with the original folk song.[35]

神弦曲
Traditional[36]
Shén Xián Qū
Pinyin
"Tune for Unearthly Strings"
English translation
西山日沒東山昏,
旋風吹馬馬踏雲。
畫弦素管聲淺繁,
花裙綷縩步秋塵。
桂葉刷風桂墜子,
青狸哭血寒狐死。
古壁彩虯金帖尾,
雨工騎入秋潭水。
百年老鴞成木魅,
笑聲碧火巢中起。
xī shān rì méi dōng shān hūn,
xuán fēng chuī mǎ mǎ tà yún.
huà xián sù guǎn shēng qiǎn fán,
huā qún sī cài bù qiū chén.
guì yè shuā fēng guì zhuì zǐ,
qīng lí kū xuè hán hú sǐ.
gǔ bì cǎi qiú jīn tiē wěi,
yǔ gōng qí rù qiū tán shuǐ.
bǎi nián lǎo xiāo chéng mù mèi,
xiào shēng bì huǒ cháo zhōng qǐ.
Behind the western mountain the sun sets, and the eastern mountain grows dark;
as the whirlwind blows the horses on, the horses charge and trample the clouds.
The beautiful lute and unadorned flute make music light and welcoming;
in autumn the priestess's pretty garment rustles, stirs up clouds of sand.

He frequently combined colour and feeling imagery in his poetry, as can be seen in his poems "Tianshang yao" (see above) and "Qin wang yin jiu".[1]

秦王飲酒
Traditional[37]
Qín Wáng Yǐn Jiǔ
Pinyin
"The King of Qin Drinks Wine"
English translation[k]
秦王騎虎遊八極,
劍光照空天自碧。
羲和敲日玻璃聲,
劫灰飛盡古今平。
龍頭瀉酒邀酒星,
金槽琵琶夜棖棖。
洞庭雨腳來吹笙,
酒酣喝月使倒行。
銀雲櫛櫛瑤殿明,
宮門掌事報一更。
花樓玉鳳聲嬌獰,
海綃紅文香淺清,
黃娥[l]跌舞千年觥。
仙人燭樹蠟煙輕,
青琴[m]醉眼淚泓泓。
qín wáng qí hǔ yóu bā jí,
jiàn guāng zhào kōng tiān zì bì.
xī hé qiāo rì bō lí shēng,
jié huī fēi jìn gǔ jīn píng.
lóng tóu xiè jiǔ yāo jiǔ xīng,
jīn cáo pí pá yè chéng chéng.
dòng tíng yǔ jiǎo lái chuī shēng,
jiǔ hān hē yuè shǐ dǎo xíng.
yín yún zhì zhì yáo diàn míng,
gōng mén zhǎng shì bào yī gēng.
huā lóu yù fèng shēng jiāo níng,
hǎi xiāo hóng wén xiāng qiǎn qīng,
huáng é diē wǔ qiān nián gōng.
xiān rén zhú shù là yān qīng,
qīng qín zuì yǎn lèi hóng hóng.
The king of Qin tours the cosmos on tigerback,
his sword's glimmer illuminating the clear, blue heavens.
As Xihe whips the sun, glass is chiming;
ashes of the old world, burnt asunder, flit about; peace reigns eternal.
Drinking wine from a dragon-flask, he invites the god of wine to join him,
his gold-set pipa twanging dyang-dyang in the night.
The pitter-patter of the rain on Dongting Lake sounds like the blowing of a flute,
deep in his wine, the King shouts at the moon, causing it to change direction.
Silver clouds piled high, dawn comes to the bejeweled palace;
the doorman announces the coming of night.
In the flower palace, with its jade phoenixes, a woman's charming voice;
a robe made of merfolk's thread and decorated with a crimson pattern, tinged with a faint scent,
is worn by a yellow-robed serving girl who dances a dance of wishing for the king's reign to last a thousand years.
The candles burn light smoke;
the handmaiden's eyes well up with tears of purest water.

His poetic style was dubbed Changji-ti (simplified Chinese: 长吉体; traditional Chinese: 長吉體; pinyin: cháng jí tǐ) by later critics, after his courtesy name.[38] The Song commentator Yan Yu listed this as one of the individual author-based styles of poetry that was frequently imitated.[39]

Reception

Several modern western and Japanese critics, including A. C. Graham, Naotarō Kudō and J. D. Frodsham, have claimed that Li's poetry was not widely read until the modern era, but this is not entirely accurate.[23] In a 1994 survey, Wu Qiming pointed out that Li was in premodern China more subject to imitation than to neglect.[39]

Tang and Song dynasties

Two poets of the generation following Li He, Du Mu and Li Shangyin, commemorated Li in their prose writings: a preface to Li's collected poems and a short biography of Li, respectively.[40] Du Mu's preface in particular is taken as proof that Li's poetry was being compiled and edited within a few decades of his death.[23] The Tang author Pi Rixiu also wrote about Li He's poetry alongside that of Li Bai in his critical work 劉棗強碑.[41]

He was also one of a group of Tang poets frequently quoted in the lyrics of Song-era musicians such as Zhou Bangyan (1056–1121).[42] Yan Yu, in his work Canglang Shihua, contrasted Li to the earlier poet Li Bai.[n][43] The earliest surviving edition of Li's poetry was collected and annotated in the Southern Song dynasty.[23]

Yuan and Ming dynasties

Many shi poets of the Yuan dynasty emulated Li's poetic style.[44] These included Cheng Tinggui (成廷珪),[44] Yang Weizhen,[45] and Gu Ying (顧瑛),[46] as well as the early Ming poet Gao Qi.[47]

The Ming scholar Hu Yinglin read Li's poetry politically as "the tones of a ruined state" and recognized that Li's poetic style was especially influential during the latter years of various dynasties.[39]

Qing dynasty

There was an upswing in popularity of Li's poetry from the late Ming to the mid-Qing dynasties.[39] A great many newly-annotated collections of Li's poetry appeared during this period, and his poetry was widely imitated.[39] The scholar Wang Qi wrote a five-volume commentary on his poetry.[48]

Around the mid-Qing dynasty, though, Li's poetry began to fall out of favour with the literary establishment. The anthologist Shen Deqian included a scant ten of Li's poems in his influential work Tangshi Biecai Ji [zh].[49] Shen was highly critical of his contemporaries' tendency to imitate Li's poetry.[39]

Li's poetry was also conspicuously absent from the Three Hundred Tang Poems, the arbiter of poetic tastes in the late Qing and early twentieth century.[39]

Modern era

Along with Li Bai and Li Shangyin, Li He was one of the "Three Lis" (三李) admired by Mao Zedong.[50]

In 1968, Roger Waters of the rock band Pink Floyd borrowed lines from Li's poetry to create the lyrics for the song "Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun".[51]

In his article on Li for the Chūgoku Bunkashi Daijiten, Japanese sinologist Kazuyuki Fukazawa called him "the representative poet of the Middle Tang".[o][6]

According to French sinologist François Jullien, Li He's poetry was readmitted to the Chinese literary canon "at the end of the nineteenth century ... [when] ... Western notions of romanticism [allowed] the Chinese to reexamine this poet, allowing the symbolism of his poems to speak at last, freeing his imaginary world from the never-ending quest for insinuations."[52]

Paul W. Kroll, in his chapter on Tang poetry for The Columbia History of Chinese Literature, called Li "[t]he most eccentric poet of the T'ang, perhaps in all of Chinese poetry", and dubbed him "the Chinese Mallarmé" for his almost inscrutable poetic style and use of imagery.[32]

Notes

  1. ^ 李賀,字長吉,宗室鄭王之後。父名晉肅,以是不應進士,韓愈為之作《諱辨》,賀竟不就試。手筆敏捷,尤長於歌篇。其文思體勢,如崇巖峭壁,萬仞崛起,當時文士從而效之,無能仿佛者。其樂府詞數十篇,至於雲韶樂工,無不諷誦。補太常寺協律郎,卒,時年二十四。
  2. ^ 李賀字長吉,系出鄭王後。七歲能辭章,韓愈、皇甫湜始聞未信,過其家,使賀賦詩,援筆輒就如素構,自目曰高軒過,二人大驚,自是有名。為人纖瘦,通眉,長指爪,能疾書。每旦日出,騎弱馬,從小奚奴,背古錦囊,遇所得,書投囊中。未始先立題然後為詩,如它人牽合程課者。及暮歸,足成之。非大醉、弔喪日率如此。過亦不甚省。母使婢探囊中,見所書多,即怒曰:「是兒要嘔出心乃已耳。」以父名晉肅,不肯舉進士,愈為作諱辨,然卒亦不就舉。辭尚奇詭,所得皆驚邁,絕去翰墨畦逕,當時無能效者。樂府數十篇,雲韶諸工皆合之絃管。為協律郎,卒,年二十七。與游者權璩、楊敬之、王恭元,每譔著,時為所取去。賀亦早世,故其詩歌世傳者鮮焉。
  3. ^ Ueki et al. (1999, p. 110) give "790?", Huntington (2001, paragraph 46), Noguchi (1994) and Digital Daijisen give 790, while Arai (1959, p. 5), Fukazawa (2013, p. 1219), Gotō (2002, p. 71), Kai and Higashi (2010, p. 833), Britannica Kokusai Dai-Hyakkajiten, World Encyclopedia and Daijirin give 791.
  4. ^ Noguchi (1994) and Britannica Kokusai Dai-Hyakkajiten give his hometown as Changgu (昌谷).
  5. ^ Ueki et al. (1999, p. 110) give "816?", Huntington (2001, paragraph 46), Noguchi (1994) and Digital Daijisen give 816, while Arai (1959, p. 5), Fukazawa (2013, p. 1219), Gotō (2002, p. 71), Kai and Higashi (2010, p. 833), Britannica Kokusai Dai-Hyakkajiten, World Encyclopedia and Daijirin give 817.
  6. ^ Ueki et al. (1999, p. 111), Noguchi (1994) and World Encyclopedia give 27 as his age at time of death.
  7. ^ Huntington (2001, paragraph 46) attributes the reason for the moniker, which she translates "spectral talent", to "his poems of disjointed and fantastic worlds".
  8. ^ Fukazawa (2013, p. 1220) gives a figure of 244.
  9. ^ A wind that blows upon the leaves of the paulownia tree.[34]
  10. ^ Hán sù refers to a drafty, cold white robe, and the poet is comparing the chirping of crickets to the sound of the weaving loom.[34]
  11. ^ This translation is based in part on a modern Japanese gloss of the poem, in Arai and Takahashi (1984, pp. 41–42).
  12. ^ The text is amended here, as Arai and Takahashi (1984, pp. 40-41) take 鵝 é as a scribal error.
  13. ^ The text is amended here in accordance with the Wenyuan Yinghua, following Arai and Takahashi (1984, p. 41); the Quan Tangshi has 清琴.
  14. ^ 人言太白仙才、長吉鬼才、不然。太白天仙之詞、長吉鬼仙之詞耳。
  15. ^ 中唐を代表する詩人 (chūtō o daihyō suru shijin).

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Fukazawa 2013, p. 1220.
  2. ^ Morise 1975, p. 480, note 1; Fukazawa 2013, p. 1220; Endō 2005, p. 1.
  3. ^ Morise 1975, p. 480, note 1; Fukazawa 2013, p. 1220; Noguchi 1994.
  4. ^ a b Morise 1975, p. 480, note 1.
  5. ^ a b c Frodsham 1983.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Fukazawa 2013, p. 1219.
  7. ^ a b c Morise 1975, p. 480, note 2.
  8. ^ Ueki et al. 1999, p. 110; World Encyclopedia 1998; Mypaedia 1996; Digital Daijisen 1998.
  9. ^ Ueki et al. 1999, pp. 110–111; Fukazawa 2013, p. 1219.
  10. ^ Ueki et al. 1999, pp. 110–111.
  11. ^ Ueki et al. 1999, p. 111.
  12. ^ Fukazawa 2013, p. 1219; Noguchi 1994; Hinton 2014, p. 319.
  13. ^ Ueki et al. 1999, p. 101; Fukazawa 2013, p. 1219; Noguchi 1994; Kai and Higashi 2010, p. 833; World Encyclopedia 1998; Britannica Kokusai Dai-Hyakkajiten 2014; [[#CITEREF|]]; Daijirin 2006; Digital Daijisen 1998.
  14. ^ World Encyclopedia 1998; Daijirin 2006.
  15. ^ Ueki et al. 1999, p. 111; Kai and Higashi 2010, p. 833.
  16. ^ Ueki et al. 1999, p. 111; Arai 1959, p. 5.
  17. ^ Tung 2014, p. 143.
  18. ^ "李贺故里文化旅游开发项目" 2012-03-12
  19. ^ Sugitani 2014, p. 46.
  20. ^ Ueki et al. 1999, p. 101; Fukazawa 2013, p. 1219; Noguchi 1994; World Encyclopedia 1998; Britannica Kokusai Dai-Hyakkajiten 2014; Mypaedia 1996; Daijirin 2006; Digital Daijisen 1998; [[#CITEREF|]].
  21. ^ a b Hinton 2014, p. 318.
  22. ^ Kai and Higashi 2010, p. 833.
  23. ^ a b c d e Wu 1998, p. 228.
  24. ^ Ueki et al. 1999, p. 111; Hinton 2014, p. 319.
  25. ^ Hinton 2014, p. 319.
  26. ^ Fukazawa 2013, pp. 1219–1220.
  27. ^ "Chinese Text Project entry 天上謠". Chinese Text Project. Retrieved 2017-02-21.
  28. ^ The Chinese, Japanese, Vietnamese, and Mongolian Language Site Allusions to Classical Chinese Poetry in Pink Floyd (Li He / Li Ho).
  29. ^ "Chinese Text Project entry '夢天'". Chinese Text Project. Retrieved 2017-02-21.
  30. ^ Poetry Nook entry "Mèng Tiān ".
  31. ^ Hinton 2014, p. 322.
  32. ^ a b Kroll 2001, paragraph 88.
  33. ^ "Chinese Text Project entry '秋來'". Chinese Text Project. Retrieved 2017-03-12.
  34. ^ a b Arai 1959, p. 60.
  35. ^ a b c Arai 1959, p. 178.
  36. ^ "Chinese Text Project entry '神弦曲'". Chinese Text Project. Retrieved 2017-03-27.
  37. ^ "Chinese Text Project entry 秦王飲酒". Chinese Text Project. Retrieved 2017-02-25.
  38. ^ Fukazawa 2013, p. 1220; Zeitlin 2007, p. 75.
  39. ^ a b c d e f g Zeitlin 2007, p. 75.
  40. ^ Kroll 2001, paragraph 88; Hinton 2014, p. 318.
  41. ^ Arai 1959, p. 6.
  42. ^ Sargent 2001, paragraph 21.
  43. ^ Gotō 2002, pp. 71–72.
  44. ^ a b Lynn 2001, paragraph 9.
  45. ^ Lynn 2001, paragraph 10; Wixted 2001, paragraph 9.
  46. ^ Lynn 2001, paragraph 11.
  47. ^ Wixted 2001, paragraph 22.
  48. ^ Graham 1971, p. 568.
  49. ^ Bryant 2001, paragraph 11.
  50. ^ Xia 2001, p. 78.
  51. ^ The Chinese, Japanese, Vietnamese, and Mongolian Language Site Allusions to Classical Chinese Poetry in Pink Floyd.
  52. ^ Jullien 2004, p. 73.

Works cited

Further reading

External links