German philosopher Hegel believed that Chinese people had no national epic, because
their way of observing and thinking was like prose. So China really has no
national epic? The answer is yes.
In Shangsong (song
lyrics mostly collected from the Shang Dynasty) and Daya (The Major
Festal Odes) of The Book of Songs, one can find a good number of memorial
songs to ancestors and odes to heroes who established the Shang
(17th- 11th century BC) and Zhou (11th century
BC - 256BC) dynasties, such as Liezu, Xuanniao, Changfa, Ying Wu,
Shengmin, Gong Liu, Wenwang, Daming, and so on. As ancient ballades produced
in childhood of human beings that record the birth of one's own nation or heroic
exploits are called epics, the poems mentioned just now can be recognized as the
earliest epics in China.
From Bianwen, Sufu, Ciwen
in the Tang Dynasty (618-907), Guzici, Zhugongdiao, Qiatanci in the
Song, Liao and Jin dynasties (960-1234), to Gushutanci in the Yuan
Dynasty (1279-1368), after long period of development, long narrative poems
(like Iliad and Odyssey) became mature.
Minorities had created
numerous narrative ballads of folk legends since the Tang and Song dynasties
(618-1279), some of which were real long national epics such as Mongolians'
King Gesar, Kirgizs' Manas, Naxis' Creation of the World,
Mongolians' Geser, and so on. Put in the grove of world's classical
literature, they are not second to any ancient Greek or Indian
epics.