Playlist: Great Tang Poets: Du Fu (721-770)

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What Makes Du Fu the “Greatest Tang Poet”?

China

Language & Literature

Duration:

1:50 min

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Du Fu (Tu Fu in Wade-Giles romanization) was a scholar-official who lived at a time of great turbulence in China. Corruption and nepotism at the Tang court prompted a rebellion, led by the general An Lushan, against the capital city of Chang'an (An Lushan Rebellion, 755-762). The Tang empire was fatally shaken and a prolonged era of internal strife brought Tang dynastic rule to an end in 907.

Transcript

"On the River," by Du Fu

On the river, every day these heavy rains—

bleak, bleak, autumn in Ching-ch'u

High winds strip the leaves from the trees;

through the long night I hug my fur robe.

I recall my official record, keep looking in the mirror,

recall my comings and goings, leaning alone in an upper room.

In these perilous times I long to serve my sovereign—

old and feeble as I am, I can't stop thinking of it!

Paul Rouzer: Undoubtedly, the greatest of the Tang Dynasty poets, and I think without fearing disagreement, the greatest poet of the Chinese tradition, period, is Du Fu, who lived at the first half of the eighth century AD.

What makes Du Fu so great is a complicated question to answer. Perhaps one of the main reasons is the fact that he took his obligations as a Confucian statesman, a Confucian official, extremely seriously. Probably more seriously than a good many of the poets of his own time.

He related his own life rather intimately to the rise and fall of the Chinese dynasty. And whenever anything occurred in the Chinese polity that had wide consequences for the Chinese people at large, Du Fu himself reacted to these particular events with a great deal of passion and emotion.

Stephen Owen: Du Fu was from a good Confucian background. His grandfather had been a famous court poet. He was obviously extremely knowledgeable, but there was something a little bit wrong with Du Fu. Some of things didn't quite go right for him. He was never able to make his way in the Tang government.

"I Stand Alone," by Du Fu

A single bird of prey beyond the sky.

a pair of white gulls between riverbanks.

Hovering wind tossed, ready to strike;

the pair, at their ease, roaming to and fro.

And the dew is also full on the grasses,

spiders' filaments still not drawn in.

Instigations in nature approach men's affairs—

I stand alone in thousands of sources of worry.


Du Fu's "On the River" from The Columbia Book of Chinese Poetry, Burton Watson, ed. and trans. (New York: Columbia University Press, 1984) p. 234.

Du Fu's "I Stand Alone" from An Anthology of Chinese Literature, Stephen Owen, ed. and trans. (New York: W.W. Norton, 1996) p. 426.

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About the Speakers

Robert B. Oxnam
President Emeritus, Asia Society

Stephen Owen
James Bryant Conant University Professor; Professor of Comparative Literature, Harvard University

Paul Rouzer
Associate Professor, Department of Asian Languages and Literatures, University of Minnesota

Bibliography

The Art of Chinese Poetry
By James J. Y. Liu
Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1962

The Columbia Book of Chinese Poetry: From Early Times to the Thirteenth Century
Translated and edited by Burton Watson
New York: Columbia University Press, 1984

The Great Age of Chinese Poetry: The High T’ang
By Stephen Owen
New Haven: Yale University Press, 1981

Poems of the Late T’ang
Translated by A. C. Graham
Baltimore: Penguin Books, 1965

The Poetry of the Early T’ang
By Stephen Owen
New Haven: Yale University Press, 1977

“Tang Poetry: A Return to Basics”
By Burton Watson
In Masterworks of Asian Literature in Comparative Perspective, edited by Barbara Stoler Miller
Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe, 1994

Related Videos

Introduction to Tang Poetry
Great Tang Poets: Wang Wei (699-761)
Great Tang Poets: Li Bo (701-762)

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