The Jiyue of the Tang Dynasty
(618-907) had a profound influence on the social life with its amazing
creativity and left vivid images in various literary and art works -- poem,
tales of marvels, painting, sculpture, etc. These images still draw the
appreciation and imagination of today's people.
Among the numerous poems on dances written
in the Tang Dynasty, the best known is the great poet Du Fu's work, Beholding
the Jianqi (Sword) Dance by Madame Gongsun, in which he gave the dance a
fine description:
There used to be a beautiful woman named
Madame Gongsun whose sword Jianqi would always make a stir. The audience
gathered in a vast group and each of them was shocked by her dance. Both the
heaven and the earth changed colors while she was dancing. The dazzling flash of
the sword was like the nine suns shot down from heaven by the ancient hero Hou
Yi. Her vigorous and brisk steps were those of the gods riding across the sky on
dragons. She began like the thunders controlling their rage; she ended like the
peaceful oceans gathering their waves.
The poet used wild imaginations through a
series of moving comparisons to catch the dazzling spirit of Madame Gongsun's
sword dance. Vigorous as flying dragons, shining like nine suns, the dance
forced the mountains to bow, the wind and clouds to turn color. This poem and
the above-quoted Song to the Dance in Feathery Clothing by Bai Juyi were
the two priceless jade pieces in the dance poems of the Tang Dynasty.
At the end of the Tang Dynasty, the blossom
of the Jiyue dance also came to an end. Although it had some development
in the Song Dynasty (960-1279), such as the dances of Women Dance Team and
Children Dance Team in the imperial court, its scale was never the same as in
the Tang Dynasty. There were still official, camp and family Jiyue
performers, but their influence and scale were far from those in the Tang
Dynasty.