The Complete Anthology of Tang
Poetry, edited during the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911),
contains over 48,900 poems in 12 volumes by more than 2,200 poets. The
collection provides a magnificent insight into all aspects of the social life of
the period.
By the imperial edict of Emperor Kangxi
(1654-1722), the voluminous work was compiled ten officials of the Qing Dynasty
(1644-1911), including Peng Dingqiu and Cao Yin, based on other anthologies and
completed in 1705.
The Complete Anthology of Tang Poetry
was preceded by Han-style folk songs and music, then
works from writers and attached biographies of the past dynasties basically
according to sequence of time, and finally couplet, works about monks, Taoists,
immortals, deities, ghosts, monsters, as well as dreams, banters, songs, proverb
riddles, and so on. It not only included works of all famous poets in the Tang
Dynasty, but also widely collected works of ordinary writers and various people,
fully demonstrating the prosperity of the Tang poetry.
In the year 1982, a supplementary book to
the collection, compiled by Wang Chongmin and two others, including about 1,800
odd poems, was published. From the two books alone we can read today more than
50,000 poems of the Tang Dynasty (618-907), and it is many times more than the
total amount of poems produced in some thousand years before the Tang Dynasty
that have been handed down. In some thousand years after Tang, in other
dynasties, no poetry collections as voluminous as that of Tang were ever
published either.