Powered By Blogger

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

TAO YUANMING 365-427 AD


-o0o-

NINTH DAY, NINTH MONTH

Slowly autumn comes to an end.
Painfully cold a dawn wind thicks the dew.
Grass round here will not be green again,
Trees and leaves are already suffering.
The clear air is drained and purified
And the high white sky’s a mystery.
Nothing’s left of the cicada’s sound.
Flying geese break the heavens’ silence.
The Myriad Creatures rise and return.
How can life and death not be hard?
From the beginning all things have to die.
Thinking of it can bruise the heart.
What can I do to lighten my thoughts?
Solace myself drinking the last of this wine.
Who understands the next thousand years?
Let’s just make this morning last forever.

Tao Yuanming, also known as Tao Qian or T'ao Ch'ien, is one of the most foremost Chinese "recluse" poets, in whose poems the theme of countryside solitude particularly resonates.

 -o=0=o-


No comments:

Post a Comment