Knowledge (XXG)

Meng Jiao

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437:"On the cyclic day Chi-hai of the eighth month in the ninth year of the Yuan-ho period of the T'ang Dynasty, Master Chen Yao, Meng by surname died. He had no sons. His wife, a woman of the Cheng family, informed me. I went out and stood weeping, and then I summoned Chang Chi to mourn with me. The next day I sent a messenger to the eastern capital with money to contribute to the burial expenses. All those who had formerly associated with him came together to send condolences. Then, by mail, I informed the former Minister, now Governor of Hsing -yuan, Yu-ch'ing. During the inter-calary month, Fan Tsung-shih sent his condolences. We told him the burial date and he asked me to write the inscription. I wept, saying, "Oh can I still bear to write my friends epitaph?" The governor of Hsing Yuan sent money to the Meng family to contribute to the funeral expenses and moreover came to discuss family affairs. Fan's envoy asked that the epitaph be speedily done, saying,"If it is not done there will be nothing to protect him from the darkness". So I wrote this preface and this epitaph. The master's taboo name was Chiao (Jiao), and his courtesy name was Tung-yeh. His father, T'ing-fen married a woman of the P'ei family and was selected for appointment of Wei (an entry level official position) at K'un Shan. His father had two more sons, Meng's younger brothers, Feng and Ying, before he died. When Meng was six or seven years old, the beginnings of his character could be seen. When he grew up his spirit was exceedingly lofty but he softened it and made his outer and inner-self excellent and amiable. His appearance was serene and his spirit was pure. He was capable of both respect and friendship. As for his poetry, it pierces one's eye and impales one's heart. It cuts to the point like a thread parting at the touch of a knife. His barbed words and thorny sentences tear at one's guts. His ability at writing is like a spirit's or a ghost's which is glimpsed in between over and over again. He cared only for writing and didn't care what the world thought. Some people said to him that he must explain his poetry or it would not be understandable to later generations. Chiao replied, "I have already put it out there and given it to them. Surely this is enough. Before he was fifty, he began because of his mother's influence, to come to the capital to take the chin-shih examination. When he passed he left. Four years later he was ordered to come to be selected and was appointed the Wei of Li yang. He invited his mother to come to Li Yang. Two years after leaving his position as Wei, the former Minister Cheng, who was the Governor of Ho-nan, memorialized that Meng be made officer in charge of transportation. He was made the provisional officer in charge of land and water transportation.. Cheng Yu-ch'ing personally paid his respects to Chiao's mother inside the door. Five years after she died, Cheng, who was then the Governor of Hsing-yuan, memorialized that Meng be appointed an advisor with the title Ta Li Ping-shih. When Meng was bringing his wife and her family to Hsing yuan, they stopped over at Wen Hsiang. Here, Meng suddenly took ill and died. He was sixty-four. They bought a coffin for the body and he was returned to his home in a carriage. Feng and Ying were both in Chiang-nan. On the day of Keng-shen, in the tenth month, Fan presented all the gifts and contributions for the funeral. They buried him to the east of Loyang and to the left of his ancestors tombs. The extra money was given to his family to carry out the sacrifices. As they were about to bury him, Chang Chi said, "He lifted up virtue and shook splendour that shone even unto the ancients. There is a precedent for those who are virtuous to change their name. How much more so is there for this man? If I call him Chen Yao then his name will be a record of his nature and no one will need an explanation of his character". All agreed to it and so they used it. One who had studied with him, his uncle Meng Chien, (who had been transferred from the Censorate to become Inspector of Che-Tung) said, "In life I was not able to promote him. In death I know how to be in sympathy with his family". The inscription read: "Alas, Chen Yao, he was constant and steadfast and could not be swayed. All that he had to offer the world couldn't be measured but he did not have a chance to show it. Dying he had nothing to leave but the brilliance of his poetry" 423:
Hsiu in the Hsin T'ang Shu (SPTK. po-na edition): " At the age of fifty he passed the chin-shih examination and was appointed to the position of Wei at Li Yang. In the Prefecture there was the T'ou Lai Chin Lake….. there was place where the trees grew densely offering cover and shade. Below this was the lake. Chiao spent his time sitting down by the water and pacing back and forth writing poetry. He neglected his official duties. The District Magistrate reported this to the Prefect and so they hired an acting Wei to substitute for him and they divided his salary in half".
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Hungry spittle flies where the gorge is dangerous, Trees lock their roots around rotten coffins, Rising skeletal and up-right swinging back and forth. As the frost perches, the branches of the trees moan, Soughing mournfully, far off, yet clear. A spurned exile's stripped and scattered guts Sizzle and scald where the water boils up. Life is like a tortured, twisted thread, A road on which we balance, following a single strand. Pouring a libation of tears, to console the water spirits, They shimmer and flash an instant upon the waves.
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Above the gorge, one thread of sky, In the gorge, ten thousand corded cascades. Above, the splintered shards of slanted light, Below, the pull of the restless roiling flow. Broken souls lie dotted here and there, Freezing in the gloom of centuries. At noon the sun never settles above the gorge.
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states that Meng was 46 when he passed the Chin-shih, in the 12th year of the Chen Yuan period (796). His poverty was not substantially alleviated by his passing the imperial examinations. He was ultimately appointed to an entry-level position in the imperial bureaucracy; however, as noted by Ou-yang
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At night I am reading Meng Jiao's poetry. His small words are like ox-hairs. A cold lamp casts a dim light. Occasionally you come across a good line, At first it's like eating a tiny fish, What you get out of it isn't worth the trouble. Sometimes it's like cooking a crab, After all that time,
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has recently shown an interest in translating some of Meng's poems (about 53) of which some 500 odd are extant. His book is entitled "The Late Poems of Meng Chiao" published by Princeton University Press 1996. Su Tung-p'o a noted Sung dynasty scholar and poet did not think much of Meng's poetry. He
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Meng Jiao was born into difficult times. His pursuit of poetry and reluctance until late in life to write and pass the imperial examinations (which if taken earlier in life might have eventually lead to a well-paid political career) resulted in his living a life in which necessities were scarce.
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At the time of Meng Jiao's moving there, despite the period of disturbance, Luoyang was still one of the world's most populous and cosmopolitan cities, and a central nexus of social and cultural life in Tang China. In Luoyang, Meng Jiao found inclusion in a poetic circle including
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examination, but not until the age of forty six sui (Zhenyuan 12). Meng Jiao was part of the literary circle centering on Han Yu and Jang Ji. Meng actually has a poem amongst his collected works entitled "After Passing the Examination". Fan Ju-lin in
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all there is to chew on are empty claws. Why should you let your two ears suffer, Having to listen to this cold cicada's cry. The best thing to do is get rid of it, And drink some of my sweet wine.
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launched a rebellion against the central government of Tang. Meng Jiao grew up during a time of military and economic disturbances as a result of this rebellion, which was known initially as the
459:). Around 500 of his poems survive, many upon the themes of poverty and cold, and typified by the strong—and sometimes shocking—imagery advocated by Han Yu. Two of his poems are included in the 1197: 489:
With Su Tung-p'o's critique in mind one has to question his assessment when reading the following poem ( one of a set of ten) grouped under the common title "Sorrow in the Gorges":
1204: 362:, but subsequently resulted in continuous disturbances to the political economy and basic safety of the citizenry which the central authority of Tang was unable to control. 326:. The year he was born was also the year in which the Tang dynasty's military expansionism began to reach its limits, with major military defeats both versus the 1282: 1180: 354:). Both battles resulted in major losses to Tang both in terms of troop strength and prestige. Shortly after Meng Jiao's birth, towards the end of 755, 950: 1242: 819: 739: 374:
poet-monks of the region. Eventually, at forty years of age, his wandering ways lead to his settling in the area of the major metropolis of
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Ueki, Hisayuki; Uno, Naoto; Matsubara, Akira (1999). "Shijin to Shi no Shōgai (Mō Kō)". In Matsuura, Tomohisa (ed.).
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Nevertheless, his commitment to poetry resulted in him becoming an influential leader in terms of poetic innovation.
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Meng Jiao spent many years as a recluse and a poet in Southern China, associating himself with the
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It has been said that as a result of an unwillingness to write even the first stage of the
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After his death, Han Yu wrote an epitaph on his life and work. A rough translation is:
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as "The Song of a Wandering Son"—is one of the most famous Classical Chinese poems.
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style (which can also be considered to be a type of "folk-song-styled-verse", or
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His poetry is generally written in the five-character per line
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An Anthology of Chinese Literature: From Beginnings to 1911
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Sunflower Splendor: Three Thousand Years of Chinese Poetry
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An Anthology of Chinese Literature: Beginnings to 1911
187: 798:(in Japanese). Tokyo: Taishūkan Shoten. p. 110. 509:, there had been no studies of Meng Jiao in English. 85: 71: 1214: 1205:
The Columbia Anthology of Modern Chinese Literature
1189: 1168: 1117: 1041: 987: 966: 296:Meng Jiao was born in 751. He was from what is now 181: 176: 158: 144: 139: 121: 114: 100: 93: 79: 65: 58: 53: 35: 30: 21: 870:that include collected poems of Meng Jiao at the 501:Prior to the 1975 publication of Stephen Owen's 164: 150: 944: 309: 266: 256: 41: 8: 616: 604:(New York, London: W.W. Norton, 1996): 479. 951: 937: 929: 734:. New York: The New York Review of Books. 378:, as an impoverished and unemployed poet. 304:, in China; but, at that time was Wukang ( 173: 50: 751:. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux. 814:. Rutland, Vermont: Charles E. Tuttle. 593: 749:Classical Chinese Poetry: An Anthology 18: 7: 463:. One of which, "遊子吟"—translated by 1283:People from Deqing County, Zhejiang 833:The Poetry of Meng Chiao and Han Yü 503:The Poetry of Meng Chiao and Han Yü 14: 857: 787:. New York, London: W.W. Norton. 700:Original translation, R.E. Young 682:Original translation, R.E. Young 547: 533: 519: 322:), in the Tang Chinese province 1066:New Songs from the Jade Terrace 812:The Four Seasons of Tang Poetry 709:Original translation R.E. Young 128: 107: 1243:Three Hundred Tang Poems poets 267: 257: 225:(751–814) was a Chinese 188: 86: 72: 42: 1: 1176:Chinese poems (category list) 471:as "Wanderer's Song", and by 467:as "A Traveller's Song", by 856:(public domain audiobooks) 1299: 204: 1268:9th-century Chinese poets 1263:8th-century Chinese poets 772:San Jose State University 310: 199: 172: 165: 151: 49: 26: 1087:Three Hundred Tang Poems 974:Classical Chinese poetry 795: 563:Classical Chinese poetry 461:Three Hundred Tang Poems 456:Three Hundred Tang Poems 236:Three Hundred Tang Poems 1181:List of poems (article) 810:Wu, John C. H. (1972). 732:Poems of the Late T'ang 431:Meng Jiao died in 814. 783:Owen, Stephen (1996). 730:Graham, A. C. (1977). 482:wrote a mocking poem: 1169:Individual poems list 979:Modern Chinese poetry 837:Yale University Press 507:Yale University Press 403:Imperial Examinations 1125:Antithetical couplet 1008:Six Dynasties poetry 872:Chinese Text Project 1273:Poets from Zhejiang 1258:Writers from Huzhou 1190:Modern compilations 1080:Complete Tang Poems 360:An Lushan Rebellion 300:in the province of 253:traditional Chinese 1278:Tang dynasty poets 1073:Nineteen Old Poems 850:Works by Meng Jiao 420:T'ang Teng K'o Chi 409:examination system 340:Kingdom of Nanzhao 263:simplified Chinese 1230: 1229: 1052:Classic of Poetry 820:978-0-8048-0197-3 740:978-1-59017-257-5 366:Life in the South 328:Abbasid Caliphate 203: 202: 195: 194: 135: 134: 60:Standard Mandarin 1290: 1222:Cantonese poetry 953: 946: 939: 930: 861: 860: 807: 719: 716: 710: 707: 701: 698: 692: 689: 683: 680: 674: 671: 665: 662: 656: 653: 647: 644: 638: 635: 629: 626: 620: 617:Ueki et al. 1999 614: 605: 598: 557: 552: 551: 543: 541:Biography portal 538: 537: 536: 529: 524: 523: 522: 395:, Zhang Ji, and 313: 312: 270: 269: 260: 259: 191: 190: 174: 168: 167: 154: 153: 131: 130: 110: 109: 89: 88: 75: 74: 51: 45: 44: 19: 1298: 1297: 1293: 1292: 1291: 1289: 1288: 1287: 1233: 1232: 1231: 1226: 1215:Regional styles 1210: 1185: 1164: 1113: 1044:and collections 1043: 1037: 983: 962: 957: 858: 846: 831:Owen, Stephen. 828: 826:Further reading 797: 793:Kanshi no Jiten 790: 727: 722: 717: 713: 708: 704: 699: 695: 690: 686: 681: 677: 672: 668: 663: 659: 654: 650: 645: 641: 636: 632: 627: 623: 615: 608: 599: 595: 591: 553: 546: 539: 534: 532: 525: 520: 518: 515: 499: 494: 487: 443: 429: 405: 384: 368: 346:, (near modern 338:and versus the 336:Battle of Talas 294: 285: 245: 220: 17: 12: 11: 5: 1296: 1294: 1286: 1285: 1280: 1275: 1270: 1265: 1260: 1255: 1250: 1245: 1235: 1234: 1228: 1227: 1225: 1224: 1218: 1216: 1212: 1211: 1209: 1208: 1201: 1193: 1191: 1187: 1186: 1184: 1183: 1178: 1172: 1170: 1166: 1165: 1163: 1162: 1155: 1148: 1141: 1134: 1127: 1121: 1119: 1115: 1114: 1112: 1111: 1104: 1097: 1090: 1083: 1076: 1069: 1062: 1055: 1047: 1045: 1039: 1038: 1036: 1035: 1030: 1025: 1020: 1015: 1010: 1005: 1003:Jian'an poetry 1000: 994: 992: 985: 984: 982: 981: 976: 970: 968: 964: 963: 960:Chinese poetry 958: 956: 955: 948: 941: 933: 927: 926: 925: 924: 900: 899: 898: 897: 862: 845: 844:External links 842: 841: 840: 827: 824: 823: 822: 808: 788: 781: 768: 742: 726: 723: 721: 720: 718:Leung, p. 715. 711: 702: 693: 684: 675: 666: 657: 648: 639: 630: 621: 619:, p. 110. 606: 600:Stephen Owen, 592: 590: 587: 586: 585: 580: 575: 570: 565: 559: 558: 544: 530: 514: 511: 498: 495: 491: 484: 442: 439: 428: 425: 404: 401: 383: 380: 367: 364: 344:Southeast Asia 293: 290: 284: 281: 244: 241: 201: 200: 197: 196: 193: 192: 185: 179: 178: 177:Transcriptions 170: 169: 162: 156: 155: 148: 142: 141: 137: 136: 133: 132: 125: 123:Middle Chinese 119: 118: 116:Middle Chinese 112: 111: 104: 98: 97: 95:Yue: Cantonese 91: 90: 83: 77: 76: 69: 63: 62: 56: 55: 54:Transcriptions 47: 46: 39: 33: 32: 28: 27: 24: 23: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 1295: 1284: 1281: 1279: 1276: 1274: 1271: 1269: 1266: 1264: 1261: 1259: 1256: 1254: 1251: 1249: 1246: 1244: 1241: 1240: 1238: 1223: 1220: 1219: 1217: 1213: 1207: 1206: 1202: 1200: 1199: 1195: 1194: 1192: 1188: 1182: 1179: 1177: 1174: 1173: 1171: 1167: 1161: 1160: 1156: 1154: 1153: 1149: 1147: 1146: 1142: 1140: 1139: 1135: 1133: 1132: 1128: 1126: 1123: 1122: 1120: 1116: 1110: 1109: 1105: 1103: 1102: 1098: 1096: 1095: 1091: 1089: 1088: 1084: 1082: 1081: 1077: 1075: 1074: 1070: 1068: 1067: 1063: 1061: 1060: 1056: 1054: 1053: 1049: 1048: 1046: 1040: 1034: 1031: 1029: 1026: 1024: 1021: 1019: 1016: 1014: 1011: 1009: 1006: 1004: 1001: 999: 996: 995: 993: 991: 986: 980: 977: 975: 972: 971: 969: 965: 961: 954: 949: 947: 942: 940: 935: 934: 931: 923: 919: 915: 911: 907: 904: 903: 902: 901: 895: 891: 887: 883: 879: 876: 875: 873: 869: 868: 864:Books of the 863: 855: 851: 848: 847: 843: 838: 834: 830: 829: 825: 821: 817: 813: 809: 805: 801: 794: 789: 786: 782: 779: 778: 773: 770:Leung, K.C. 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Graham 460: 454: 453:, as in the 444: 436: 433: 430: 419: 412: 406: 385: 372:Zen Buddhist 369: 332:Central Asia 319: 314:; 295: 286: 276: 271:; 261:; 251:was Dongye ( 247:Meng Jiao's 246: 234: 231:Tang dynasty 222: 221: 214: 207:Chinese name 183:Romanization 67:Hanyu Pinyin 31:Chinese name 16:Chinese poet 1118:Major forms 1033:Qing poetry 1028:Ming poetry 1023:Yuan poetry 1018:Song poetry 1013:Tang poetry 725:Works cited 646:Hinton, 252 637:Hinton, 237 628:Hinton, 237 583:Tang poetry 229:during the 211:family name 1253:751 births 1248:814 deaths 1237:Categories 1108:Zhuying ji 998:Han poetry 988:Poetry by 967:Major eras 757:0374105367 673:Graham, 57 589:References 352:Erhai Lake 108:Maang Gaau 87:Meng Chiao 81:Wade–Giles 356:An Lushan 283:Biography 223:Meng Jiao 73:Mèng Jiāo 22:Meng Jiao 1101:Wen Xuan 922:Book 381 918:Book 380 914:Book 379 910:Book 378 906:Book 377 894:Book 376 890:Book 375 886:Book 374 882:Book 373 878:Book 372 854:LibriVox 804:41025662 747:(2008). 513:See also 302:Zhejiang 205:In this 160:Hiragana 129:Mɐng Kau 102:Jyutping 990:dynasty 839:, 1975. 691:Wu, 155 664:Wu, 154 655:Wu, 154 573:Jia Dao 497:Studies 393:Jia Dao 382:Luoyang 376:Luoyang 348:Xiaguan 334:in the 306:Chinese 37:Chinese 1059:Chu Ci 818:  802:  763:  755:  738:  568:Han Yu 441:Poetry 414:jinshi 389:Han Yu 324:Huzhou 320:Wǔkāng 316:pinyin 277:Dōngyě 273:pinyin 209:, the 1159:yuefu 796:漢詩の事典 578:Li He 451:yuefu 447:gushi 427:Death 397:Li He 350:, by 292:Birth 243:Names 189:Mō Kō 146:Kanji 816:ISBN 800:OCLC 761:ISBN 753:ISBN 736:ISBN 227:poet 216:Meng 166:もうこう 1145:shi 852:at 505:by 342:in 330:in 279:). 213:is 1239:: 1152:qu 1138:fu 1131:ci 920:, 916:, 912:, 908:, 892:, 888:, 884:, 880:, 874:: 835:. 759:/ 609:^ 399:. 391:, 318:: 311:武康 308:: 275:: 268:东野 265:: 258:東野 255:: 152:孟郊 43:孟郊 952:e 945:t 938:v 896:, 806:. 767:. 219:.

Index

Chinese
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyin
Wade–Giles
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutping
Middle Chinese
Middle Chinese
Kanji
Hiragana
Romanization
Chinese name
family name
Meng
poet
Tang dynasty
Three Hundred Tang Poems
courtesy name
traditional Chinese
simplified Chinese
pinyin
Deqing County
Zhejiang
Chinese
pinyin
Huzhou
Abbasid Caliphate
Central Asia
Battle of Talas
Kingdom of Nanzhao

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