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Li Po (A.D., 701-762) lived in T’ang Dynasty China, but his influence has spanned the centuries: the pure lyricism of his poems has awed readers in China and Japan for over a millennium, and through Ezra Pound’s translations, Li Po became central to the modernist revolution in the West. His work is suffused with Taoism and Ch’an (Zen) Buddhism, but these seem not so much spiritual influences as the inborn form of his life.
164 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 762
Thoughts in Night Quiet
Seeing moonlight here at my bed,
and thinking it's frost on the ground,
I look up, gaze at the mountain moon,
then back, dreaming of my old home.
Quiet Night Thoughts
In front of my bed
moonlight is shining down --
I thought it was frost
shimmering on the ground.
Lifting my head
I watch the bright moon;
lowering my head
I miss my northern home.
Thoughts on a Quiet Night
Before my bed the light is so bright
it looks like a layer of frost
lifting my head I gaze at the moon
lying back down I think of home.
Heaven temple, Shui-hsi Monastery:
east wall lit beneath cloud brocade,
sounds of a clear stream tumbling past,
green bamboo harboring tower rooms.
War last year at the Sang-kan's headwaters;
war this year on the roads at T'sung River.
Thoughts of you unending
here in Ch'ang-an,
crickets where the well mirrors year-end golds cry out
autumn, and under a thin frost, mats look cold, ice-cold.