Lu You
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Names | |
---|---|
Xìng 姓: | Lù 陸 |
Míng 名: | Yóu 游 |
Zì 字: | Wùguàn 務觀 |
Hào 號: | Fàngwēng 放翁 |
Lu You (陆游 or 陸游 styled 務觀, 1125- 1210), was a Chinese poet of the southern Song dynasty.
Contents |
[edit] Career
[edit] Early career
Lu You came from a family in which there were some government officials. At that time the southern Song dynasty was frequently invaded by the Jin Dynasty (金國). When he was one, Kaifeng (汴京 or 開封), the capital of Northern Song dynesty had been captured by the troops of Jin Dynasty. Lu You, who was still an infane, fled with his family. Because of the family influence and social turbulence in childhood, Lu You was committed to save the nation by ousting the Jurchens (女真人).
[edit] Marriage
[edit] Official Career
He passed the civil service examination, but was unsuccessful in his official career: he adopted a patriotic stance, advocating the expulsion of the Jurchen (女真) from northern China, but this position was out of tune with the times. He retired to Shaoxing (紹興) in frustration. His wife died in 1197.
[edit] Style
Lu You wrote over ten thousand poems, in both the shi (詩) and ci (詞) forms, plus a number of prose works. In his poetry he continues to articulate the beliefs which cost him his official career, calling for reconquest of the north. Watson identifies these works as part of the legacy of Du Fu (杜甫). Watson compares a second body of work, poems on country life and growing old, to those of Bai Juyi (白居易) and Tao Qian (陶潛). Lu You had written a lot of poem in his whole life, more than 10000, still having 9300 after erasing some of them by Lu You himself. His period of style can be divided into three period.
[edit] First Period
[edit] Second Period
[edit] Third Period
[edit] Bibliography
[edit] Books
- 《劍南詩稿》
- 《渭南文集》
- 《放翁逸稿》
- 《南唐書》
- 《老學庵筆記》
- 《放翁家訓》
- 《家世舊文》
[edit] Poems
[edit] Further reading
- Burton Watson (ed.) (1984), The Columbia Book of Chinese Poetry, Columbia University Press, ISBN 0-231-05683-4.
- Burton Watson (trans.) (1994) The old man who does as he pleases, Columbia University Press, ISBN 0-231-10155-4.