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A Hundred and Seventy Chinese Poems (1919).djvu
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Title
A Hundred and Seventy Chinese Poems
Author
Various
Translator
Arthur Waley
Year
1919
Publisher
Alfred A. Knopf
Location
New York
Source
djvu
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CONTENTS
PART I
PAGE
Introduction
15
The Limitations of Chinese Literature
17
Technique
22
The Method of Translation
33
Bibliographical Notes
35
Chapter One:
Battle
39
The Man-Wind and the Woman-Wind
41
Master Tēng-t'u
43
The Orphan
45
The Sick Wife
47
Cock-Crow Song
48
The Golden Palace
49
"Old Poem"
50
Meeting in the Road
51
Fighting South of the Castle
52
The Eastern Gate
53
Old and New
54
South of the Great Sea
55
The Other Side of the Valley
56
Oaths of Friendship
57
Burial Songs
58
Seventeen Old Poems
59–68
The Autumn Wind
69
Li Fu-jēn
70
Song of Snow-white Heads
71
To his Wife
73
Li Ling
74
Lament of Hsi-chün
75
Ch'in Chia
76
Ch'in Chia's Wife's Reply
77
Song
78
Chapter Two:
Satire on Paying Calls in August
83
On the Death of his Father
84
The Campaign against Wu
85
The Ruins of Lo-yang
86
The Cock-fight
88
A Vision
89
The Curtain of the Wedding Bed
90
Regret
91
Taoist Song
92
A Gentle Wind
93
Woman
94
Day Dreams
95
The Scholar in the Narrow Street
96
The Desecration of the Han Tombs
97
Bearer's Song
99
The Valley Wind
100
Chapter Three:
Poems by T'ao Ch'ien
103–116
Chapter Four:
Inviting Guests
119
Climbing a Mountain
120
Sailing Homeward
121
Five "Tzǔ-yeh" Songs
122
The Little Lady of Ch'ing-hsi
123
Plucking the Rushes
124
Ballad of the Western Island in the North Country
125
Song
127
Song of the Men of Chin-ling
128
The Scholar Recruit
129
The Red Hills
130
Dreaming of a Dead Lady
131
The Liberator
132
Lo-yang
133
Winter Night
134
The Rejected Wife
135
People hide their Love
136
The Ferry
137
The Waters of Lung-t'ou
138
Flowers and Moonlight on the Spring River
139
Tchirek Song
140
Chapter Five:
Business Men
145
Tell me now
146
On Going to a Tavern
147
Stone Fish Lake
148
Civilization
149
A Protest in the Sixth Year of Ch'ien Fu
150
On the Birth of his Son
151
The Pedlar of Spells
152
Boating in Autumn
153
The Herd-Boy
154
How I sailed on the Lake till I came to the Eastern Stream
155
A Seventeenth-century Chinese Poem
156
The Little Cart
156
PART II
Introduction
161
By Po Chü-i:
An Early Levée
171
Being on Duty all night in the Palace and dreaming of the Hsien-yu Temple
172
Passing T'ien-mēn Street in Ch'ang-an and seeing a distant View of Chung-nan Mountain
173
The Letter
174
Rejoicing at the Arrival of Ch'ēn Hsiung
176
Golden Bells
177
Remembering Golden Bells
178
Illness
179
The Dragon of the Black Pool
180
The Grain-tribute
182
The People of Tao-chou
183
The Old Harp
185
The Harper of Chao
186
The Flower Market
187
The Prisoner
188
The Chancellor's Gravel-drive
192
The Man who Dreamed of Fairies
193
Magic
195
The Two Red Towers
197
The Charcoal-seller
199
The Politician
201
The Old Man with the Broken Arm
202
Kept waiting in the Boat at Chiu-k'ou Ten Days by an adverse Wind
205
On Board Ship: Reading Yüan Chēn's Poems
206
Arriving at Hsün-yang
207
Madly Singing in the Mountains
208
Releasing a migrant "Yen" (Wild Goose)
209
To a Portrait Painter who desired him to sit
211
Separation
212
Having climbed to the topmost Peak of the Incense-burner Mountain
213
Eating Bamboo-shoots
214
The Red Cockatoo
215
After Lunch
216
Alarm at first entering the Yang-tze Gorges
217
On being removed from Hsün-yang and sent to Chung-chou
219
Planting Flowers on the Eastern Embankment
220
Children
221
Pruning Trees
222
Being visited by a Friend during Illness
223
On the way to Hangchow: Anchored on the River at Night
224
Stopping the Night at Jung-yang
225
The Silver Spoon
226
The Hat given to the Poet by Li Chien
227
The Big Rug
228
After getting Drunk, becoming Sober in the Night
229
Realizing the Futility of Life
230
Rising Late and Playing with A-ts'ui, aged Two
231
On a Box containing his own Works
232
On being Sixty
233
Climbing the Terrace of Kuan-yin and looking at the City
234
Climbing the Ling Ying Terrace and looking North
235
Going to the Mountains with a little Dancing Girl, aged Fifteen
236
Dreaming of Yüan Chēn
237
A Dream of Mountaineering
238
Ease
239
On hearing someone sing a Poem by Yüan Chēn
240
The Philosophers
241
Taoism and Buddhism
242
Last Poem
243
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