Li Bai
Li Bo (Cheenese: 李白, Lǐ Bo or Lǐ Bó; lived 701 – 762), umwhile kent in the Wast bi the transliteration Li Po,[1][2] wis a major Cheenese poet. He is regarded as one of the greatest poets in Cheenae's Tang period, which is often considered China's "golden age" of poetry.[2][3] He was part of the group of Chinese scholars called the "Aicht Immortals o the Wine Cup" in a poem by fellae poet Du Fu. Approximately 1,100 poems attributed to Li Bai remain the day.,[4] including thirtie-fower in the popular anthology, Three Hundred Tang Poems.
Li Bai travelled extensively "looking for patrons",[5] became weel kent for his consumption o wine,[6] served for brief periods unner the emperor, an made his livin throu his poetry.[7] He dee'd frae illness.
In China, his poem "Quiet Night Thoughts", reflecting a nostalgie o a traveller away frae hame,[8] haes been widely "memorized by school children an quoted by adults".[9]
In the West his influences include mony translations, adaptations, an muckle inspiration.
References
[eedit | eedit soorce]- ↑ World and Its Peoples: Eastern and Southern Asia By Marshall Cavendish Corporation. p. 109 [1]
- ↑ a b The New York Times guide to essential knowledge: a desk reference for the ... By The New York Times p. 57 [2]
- ↑ China By Damian Harper, Thomas Huhti. Lonely Planet. p.74
- ↑ China : a cultural and historical dictionary By Michael Dillon. Routledge. p.185 [3]
- ↑ China : a cultural and historical dictionary By Michael Dillon
- ↑ Classical Chinese Poetry: An Anthology By David Hinton p.173. Macmillon [4]
- ↑ Speaking of Chinese By Raymond Chang, Margaret Scrogin Chang
- ↑ How to read Chinese poetry: a guided anthology By Zong-qi Cai p. 210. Columbia University Press [5]
- ↑ Speaking of Chinese By Raymond Chang, Margaret Scrogin Chang p. 176 WW Norton & Company [6]
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