The Tang Dynasty (618-907) was the golden
age of Chinese poetry. In the number of poems and variety of poetic forms, the
beauty of imagery and broadness of themes, Tang poetry surpassed all that had
preceded it. Poetic Genius (Li Bai), Sage of Poetry (Du Fu), Buddhist Poet (Wang
Wei) and Poet Ghost (Li He) were all Tang poets.
Li Bai
Li Bai (701-762), the most outstanding poet
at the height of the Tang Dynasty, is one of the great romantic poets after Qu
Yuan. He was later called the "poetic genius." Li Bai's life was full of
frustration and his thoughts were complex. Besides a great talent for poetry, Li
Bai had also an air of a swordsman, hermit, Taoist and adviser. Notions of
Confucianism, Taoism and chivalry were all embodied in his character. His life
philosophy was "rest on one's laurels."
Li Bai's extant works include more than 900
poems, which artistically recount his own life, social reality and the spirit of
the High Tang Dynasty. Li Bai had great political ambitions all through his life
and he never concealed his yearning for fame and honor in his poems, as in
Chant of Liang Fu- A Small Hill, Read the Story of Zhuge Liang,
and To Cai Xiong.
Li Bai revered the chivalrous spirit when he
was young and wrote many poems on this, like Song of a Swordsman. Three
years of political life in Chang'an exerted a great influence on Li Bai's
literary creation. He found that his own political ideals were in sharp
contradiction with the seamy sides of social reality, which inspired him to
write a series of famous poems to express his frustrations, such as Hard Goes
the Way, Ancient Poems, and Drinking Alone at A Cold
Night-A Reply to Wang the Twelfth among His Brothers. Li Bai was a
roamer all through his life and traveled all over the country, visiting many
famous mountains and rivers.
In the poem he gives full play to his wild
imaginations of spiritual pursuit, which greatly soothes a soul so frustrated
with the real world. The concluding lines, "How can I serve the haughty with my
head down? No, I shall keep my heart buoyant and free forever, Oh!" resonates
with his unyielding reputation as an upright scholar.
As a great national poet Li Bai showed a
great concern about war. He expressed ardent praise for soldiers defending the
country's frontiers and relentlessly castigated the warlike ruling class, as
reflected in his poems Song of the Frontier, Wars at the South of the
Town, and so on. Li Bai also wrote many Yuelu poems (poems imitating
folksongs and ballads) describing the hardships of common people and expressing
his deep sympathy for them, for example, The Ballad of Changgan and The Song
of Wu by Zi Ye.
Li Bai's poems have great artistic appeal.
As a romantic poet, he brought into play all means of romantic expression and
achieved perfect unity between content and form in his poetry. Li Bai's poetry
has an intense subjective and self-expressive tendency, and his emotions were
always expressed with momentum of an avalanche.
Extreme exaggeration, apt comparison and
profound imagination affected a high realism. When reading the lines, "Slashing
water with the blade of my sword, it flows on all the more. I raise my goblet,
drown my dolor deep, yet it waxes doubly sore," readers cannot help being moved
by the despair a midst the grandiloquence. This expressive technique is
especially seen in poems Traveling to Tianmu Mountain in a Dream: A Parting
Song and Difficult is The Way to Shu.
Du Fu
The poems of Du Fu (712-770), the exemplary
realistic poet in the history of Chinese literature, mirror the social outlook
of the once prosperous Tang Dynasty in decline. Du's poems are rich in social
content, and have a distinct epochal character and a definitive political
inclination. Du Fu's poetry fervently appeals to the nation in the uplifting
spirit of self-sacrifice. Du Fu was, therefore, called The Sage of Poetry and
his poems are praised as "epic poetry."
Du Fu wrote more than 1,000 poems throughout
his life, the famous ones included Three Officers, Three Partings, A
Song of Chariots, My Thatched Hut is Wrecked by the Autumn Wind, A
Song of Fair Ladies and A Spring View. Du Fu's poetry offered great
sympathy to common people and revealed the sharp contradiction between the
exploiters and the exploited in feudal society.
In writing poems, Du Fu often hid his
subjective feelings behind objective description. For example, in A Song of
Fair Ladies, he did not denounce Lady Yang and her brother's wanton way of
life directly but described their finery and diet in great detail, which
implicitly unveils the poet's attitude.
The language in Du Fu's poems is simple,
easy and natural. Du Fu was good at accentuating a character's personality
through soliloquy and common sayings. He was particularly skillful at detailing
characterization, best illustrated in the paragraph describing the wife and
children in Expedition to the North. The style of Du Fu's poetry can be
summarized as deep, implicit and modulated in tone.
All of these merits establish Du Fu's status
as The Sage of Poetry in a history of more than 3,000 years of Chinese
literature.
Wang Wei
Wang Wei (701 -761) was skilled at depicting
natural scenery in five-character lines. The extant works of Wang Wei include
more than 400 poems. His landscape and pastoral poems mainly describe his
reclusive life and the beautiful scenery in Zhongnan and Wangchuan. Wang Wei was
keenly perceptive of nature and always patterned his poems with a painter's
craft. Commenting on Wang Wei's works, people often say, "There is poetry in his
painting and painting in his poetry." Wangchuan Ji - A Collection of Wang
Wei's Poetry shows off the best of Wang Wei's poetics. The language in Wang
Wei's poetry is fresh and refined.
Wang Wei is a master of "impersonality,"
often completely disappearing into his poems of nature. His poetry is a record
of a long struggle to be free of desire, free even of the desire to be free.
Therefore, he was later honored as Buddhist Poet
Li He
Li He (791-817), a late Tang Dynasty Chinese
poet noted for this pessimism and inclination towards the supernatural. He
adapted the aestheticism popular in the Tang Dynasty in his poetry.
Li He was of royal blood and began to write
poetry at the age of seven. His poetic style was bizarre and quite
extraordinary, savoring very much of the ghostly world; hence his nickname,
Poet-Ghost. Each morning he would go out on a horse, followed by a boy carrying
a bag on his shoulder. Whenever inspired, he would immediately jot down a few
lines at random, to be thrown into the bag. Back home at night, he would sort
out what he had written and try to compose complete poems. This practice
infuriated his mother who thought his health might be unduly undermined. This
turned out to be prophetic for Li He died at the age of twenty-seven.
Li He's poetry was popular at the time but
eventually fell out of favor with later generations, who preferred a more
natural, balanced style.
Writing rather late in the Tang period, Li
He's short life is an intense experience of his surroundings marked by
persistent adversity. Never successful in attaining the government positions
demanded by Confucian ideals, he spent his years riding out of his house every
day and dashing off poems on scraps of paper to revise at night. His poetry thus
reveals a great ability to capture the fleeting moment and freeze a passing
sensation to savor later.