- translation: "Encountering Sorrow") is an
ancient Chinese poem from the
anthology Chuci traditionally attributed to Qu Yuan. Li Sao
dates from the 3rd
century BCE...
- pinyin: Yuǎnyóu; English: Far Roaming) is a
short work
anthologized in the
Chuci (楚辭
Songs of Chu,
sometimes called The
Songs of the South). "Yuanyou" is...
-
typical Han
poetry styles, and with Qu Yuan's
style in The Lament. Some
Chuci poems use the
typical Book of
Songs (Shijing) four
syllable line, with its...
- ground?
Where did the seas and
rivers flow? The (early
second century CE)
Chuci commentary of Wang Yi 王逸
answers that
Yinglong drew
lines on the ground...
-
changes in how
Daoists viewed immortality.
Early text such as Zhuangzi,
Chuci, and
Liezi texts allegorically used xian
immortals and
magic islands to...
- This is a list of the
sections and
individual pieces contained within the
ancient poetry anthology Chu Ci (traditional Chinese: 楚辭;
simplified Chinese:...
-
prominent members of the
Shanashen Trahen Osh
mountain range,
namely the
chucis and the
kracenard pine rallies,
running perpendicular and far from one another...
- line-lengths and
other influences from the
poetry typical of the
state of Chu. The
Chuci collection consists primarily of
poems ascribed to Qu Yuan (屈原) (329–299...
- "Heavenly Questions",
contained in the
Chuci anthology,
traditionally attributed to the
authorship of Qu Yuan of Chu. The
Chuci (together with some of its commentaries)...
- (universal resonance) and
completely overwhelms his detractors. The
southern Chuci (2nd
century CE),
which has
Daoist elements although not
strictly a "Daoist...