Zu Yong

Zu Yong
Traditional Chinese 祖詠
Simplified Chinese 祖咏
Literal meaning (given name)

Zu Yong (699–746?) was a Chinese poet of the High Tang period. His courtesy name is unknown.

He passed the imperial examination in 724, but left the capital to live a pastoral life, and composed his most famous poems on nature.

Among his better-known poems are the jueju "On Seeing the Snow Peak of Zhongnan" and the wuyan lüshi "Rufen bie ye".

Biography

Zu Yong was probably born around 699, but this is not certain.[1][lower-alpha 1] He hailed from Luoyang in modern-day Henan Province.[2] He was a childhood friend of the poet Wang Wei.[3]

In 724 he took the imperial examination.[2] He earned the favour of the high-ranking statesman Zhang Yue, but he did not take to life at court, and in his later years retired to his villa in Rufen (simplified Chinese: 汝坟; traditional Chinese: 汝墳; pinyin: Rǔfén, modern-day Fuyang, Anhui Province).[2]

His courtesy name is not known.[3]

Poetry

Zu Yong occupies a prominent position as a nature poet of the High Tang period.[4] In addition to writing about natural scenery, his poems sing the praises of life in seclusion.[4] Thirty-six of his poems survive,[4] and two of his poems were included in the Three Hundred Tang Poems.[5]

He was a close friend of the poet Wang Wei[4] and also an associate of Wang Han.[6]

One of his most famous poems is the wuyan lüshi "Rufen bie ye" (simplified Chinese: 汝坟别业; traditional Chinese: 汝墳別業; pinyin: Rǔfén bié yè), which is considered the representative poem of his post-retirement period.[4]

Traditional[7]Simplified[8]Pinyin[7]
春城無處不飛花,
寒食東風禦柳斜。
春城无处不飞花,
寒食东风御柳斜。
shī lù nóng wéi yè, yí jiā dào rǔ fén.
dú chóu cháng fèi juàn, duō bìng jiǔ lí qún.

The first half of the poem bemoans the solitude and loneliness of the poet's life of farming after leaving court, and then the latter half is filled with love for the new environment in which the poet finds himself.[4]

Another of his best-regarded works is the jueju "On Seeing the Snow Peak of Zhongnan" (simplified Chinese: 终南望馀; traditional Chinese: 終南望餘雪; pinyin: Zhōngnán wàng yú xuě).[1]

There exists a Ming-era compilation called the Zu Yong Ji (simplified Chinese: 祖咏集; traditional Chinese: 祖詠集; pinyin: Zǔ Yǒng-jí; Wade–Giles: Tsu3 Yung3 Chi1; literally: "Zu Yong Anthology").[9]

Notes

    1. Ueki et al. state that his year of birth is not known.

    References

    Cited works

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