A Hundred and Seventy Chinese Poems. Anonymous
PART II
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Introduction | 105 |
By Po Chü-i: | |
An Early Levée | 115 |
Being on Duty all night in the Palace and dreaming of the Hsien-yu Temple | 116 |
Passing T’ien-mēn Street in Ch’ang-an and seeing a distant View of Chung-nan Mountain | 116 |
The Letter | 117 |
Rejoicing at the Arrival of Ch’ēn Hsiung | 118 |
Golden Bells | 119 |
Remembering Golden Bells | 120 |
Illness | 120 |
The Dragon of the Black Pool | 121 |
The Grain-tribute | 123 |
The People of Tao-chou | 123 |
The Old Harp | 125 |
The Harper of Chao | 125 |
The Flower Market | 126 |
The Prisoner | 127 |
The Chancellor’s Gravel-drive | 131 |
The Man who Dreamed of Fairies | 132 |
Magic | 134 |
The Two Red Towers | 135 |
The Charcoal-seller | 137 |
The Politician | 138 |
The Old Man with the Broken Arm | 139 |
Kept waiting in the Boat at Chiu-k’ou Ten Days by an adverse Wind | 142 |
On Board Ship: Reading Yüan Chēn’s Poems | 142 |
Arriving at Hsün-yang | 143 |
Madly Singing in the Mountains | 144 |
Releasing a migrant “Yen” (wild Goose) | 145 |
To a Portrait Painter who desired him to sit | 146 |
Separation | 147 |
Having climbed to the topmost Peak of the Incense-burner Mountain | 148 |
Eating Bamboo-shoots | 149 |
The Red Cockatoo | 149 |
After Lunch |
150
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