Metaphysical Poetry refers to a genre of
Chinese poetry prevailed in the Eastern Jin Dynasty (317-420), which is in an
effort to elucidate the Taoism and Buddhism philosophy.
In the Wei and Jin dynasties (220-420), the
society became more and more turbulent. In order to stay away from chaos, the
scholar-bureaucrats and literati usually pinned hope on metaphysics. To the end
of the Western Jin Dynasty (265-316), this social ethos gradually influenced the
area of poetry. In the Eastern Jin Dynasty, Buddhism became popular and it
gradually blended with local metaphysics. A considerable number of literati took
the form of the poetry to express their own understandings of metaphysical
philosophy. It is said that almost all the poetries at that time took
Laozi as the tenet, and Fu was considered only the footnotes of
Zhuangzi.
The emergence of this genre of poetry
reflected the influence of metaphysics in the area of literature, but its
substance was different from the thoughts of early metaphysicians such as Wang
Bi, He Yan, Ruan Ji and Ji Kang. At the end of the Western Jin Dynasty, the
combination of local metaphysics and Buddhism became the thoughts of
distinguished and privileged families, reflecting the escapism of the
scholar-bureaucrats at that time. Sun Chuo and Xu Xun were the representative
poets of Metaphysical Poetry, but the literary value of their works was not high
and thus most of their works were not handed down. There were only twelve extant
poems of Sun Chuo and three of Xu Xun. The Metaphysical Poetry attached much
importance to artistic concepts, and even the descriptions of natural sceneries
were usually used as the subjects to appreciate metaphysics. Among them, there
were some written very gracefully with noticeable literary talent. The poems of
natural scenery written by Xie Lingyun and Tao Yuanming were also influenced by
the Metaphysical Poetry in some way.