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JIANG KUI (1155-1221)
Jiang Kui, also known as the White Stone
Daoist, came from Boyang, Jiangxi, though his
father -- a scholar-official -- moved the family
to Hebei when Jiang Kui was a boy. His father
died young, so he was raised by his sister and
her husband. As a youth, Jiang Kui was a famous
prodigy. He was a musician, a critic, and a poet
in the Southern Song dynasty and he lived in the
areas of Suzhou, Hangzhou, Nanjing, and Huzhou
in the lower Yangtze River area. Jiang Kui was
not himself successful in finding a career in
officialdom, and so lived by selling his
calligraphy and relying on patrons. He wrote
extremely important works of poetics and notes
on ci music and invented seventeen lyric form (ci)
tune-patterns. His poems "Hidden Fragrance" and
"Sparse Shadows" are two of the best-known and
beloved Chinese poems about plum blossoms.
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Dream on the Eve of the
Lantern Festival, To the Tune of "Partridge Sky"
The Fei River flows east and never stops.
It was a mistake to have planted the seed of
love.
In my dream I saw you, though not as clear as in
a painting.
A mountain bird's trill suddenly startled awake
in darkness.
The spring is not yet green,
but my hair has already turned into silk.
Apart so long, the pain numbs,
but on each night of the red lotus lanterns,
we know we miss each other from different ends
of the earth.
---Translated by Tony Barnstone and
Chou Ping
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