Li Qingzhao | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
李清照 | |||||||||
![]() Statue of Li Qingzhao in the Li Qingzhao Memorial,Zhangqiu District,Jinan | |||||||||
Born | 1084 | ||||||||
Died | 1155 (aged 70–71) | ||||||||
Occupation(s) | Poet, essayist | ||||||||
Notable work | Afterword toCatalogue of Inscriptions on Metal and Stone Ci of Shuyü | ||||||||
Spouses |
| ||||||||
Parent | Li Gefei (father) | ||||||||
Chinese name | |||||||||
Chinese | 李清照 | ||||||||
| |||||||||
Yi'an Jushi | |||||||||
Chinese | 易安居士 | ||||||||
| |||||||||
Li Qingzhao (Chinese:李清照; 1084 – ca. 1155),[1]art nameYi'an Jushi (Chinese:易安居士), was a Chinese poet and essayist of theSong dynasty.[2] She is considered one of the greatest poets in Chinese history.[3]
Li Qingzhao was born in 1084 in Jinan,Shandong province. She was born to a family ofscholar-officials. Her father, Li Gefei, was an academic professor, a famous essayist, and a member of a poetry and literary circle led bySu Shi. Her mother was a renowned poet descended from prime minister Wang Kung-ch'en. The family had a large collection of books, and Li was able to receive comprehensive education in her childhood. Her poems showed her girlish innocence, sharp mind, and love of nature, such as "Happy Memories: Dreamland". Since she was a teen, she studied hard and had an in-depth understanding of literature.[4] As a teenager, she started to develop a career as a poet by writing two poems inshih form to rhyme with a poem by a friend.[5]
Li's poetry was already well known within elite circles by 1101, when, aged eighteen, she marriedZhao Mingcheng. They had numerous similarities and both lovedpoetry,literature, sculpture in bronze and stone,painting, andcalligraphy.[4] After her husband started his official career, he was often absent from home. They were not particularly wealthy but enjoyed collecting inscriptions and calligraphy. Since Li spent a quite happy time with her husband, her poetic style became calmer and more elegant.[4] Li and her husband collected many books. They often wrote poems for each other as well as about bronze artifacts of theShang andZhou dynasties. Her early poetry portrays her carefree days as a woman of high society, and is marked by its elegance.
Unfortunately, their marital bliss was only temporary because of theJin-Song wars between the Song dynasty and theJurchens. TheNorthern Song capital ofKaifeng fell in 1127. Fighting took place in Shandong and their house was burned. Citizens of Zhao country, including Li and Zhao, endured countless sufferings and fled south of theYangtze River. The couple took many of their possessions when they fled toNanjing, where they lived for a year. Zhao died of typhoid fever in 1129 on the route to an official post, and Li never recovered. She wandered aimlessly after her husband's death. It was then up to her to keep safe what was left of their collection. Li described her married life and the turmoil of her flight in an afterword to her husband's posthumously published work,Catalogue of Inscriptions on Metal and Stone [zh].
Li subsequently settled inHangzhou, where the Song government made its new capital after the war against the Jurchens. During this period, she continued writing poetry but her later work was full of nostalgic memories of her husband and her hometown.[4] She also kept working on completing theCatalogue of Inscriptions on Metal and Stone. The book was mainly about the calligraphy on bronze and stones; it also mentions the documents Li and Zhao collected and viewed. According to some contemporary accounts, she was briefly married to a man namedZhang Ruzhou [zh] who treated her badly, and she divorced him within months.[6] She survived the criticism of this marriage. It is widely believed that she died around the age of 71, but no records of this remain.[4]
Unfortunately, many of her poems disappeared in the following turbulent years, which became an irreparable loss to Chinese literature.[4] Only around a hundred of her poems are known to survive, mostly in theci form and tracing her varying fortunes in life. A few poems in theshi form also survived, as did the afterword toCatalogue of Inscriptions on Metal and Stone and a study ofci poetry.
Li's life was full of twists and turns and her poems can be split into two main parts - the dividing line being when she moved to the south. During the early period, most of her poems were related to her feelings as a maiden. They were more like love poems. After her move to the south, they were closely linked with her hatred of the war against the Jurchens and her patriotism. She is credited with the first detailed critique of the metrics of Chinese poetry. She was regarded as a master of the "subtle and concise style"zh:婉約派.
One of Li's famousci poems is "A Dream Song" (simplified Chinese:如梦令;traditional Chinese:如夢令;pinyin:Rú Mèng Lìng), written when she was living inJinan and recalling the events of her hometown before her marriage. Therefore, she wrote it between the ages of 16 and 17 (the second year of Yuan Fu ofSong Zhezong, 1099). This is also known as her first poem.[7] Translator Jiaosheng Wang translates as:
Chinese | English |
---|---|
《如梦令·常记溪亭日暮》 常记溪亭日暮, 沉醉不知归路。 兴尽晚回舟, 误入藕花深处。 争渡,争渡,惊起一滩鸥鹭。[4] | It was a day at Brookside pavilion[8] That I often fondly remember, When, flushed with wine We could hardly tear ourselves away From the beautiful view of sunset. Returning late by boat When we'd enjoyed our fill, We got lost and strayed To where the clustered lotuses Were at their thickest. Pushing and thrashing, Pushing and thrashing as best we could, We scared into flight A shoreful of dozing egrets and gulls. |
Chinese | English |
---|---|
《如梦令·昨夜雨疏风骤》 昨夜雨疏风骤,浓睡不消残酒。 试问卷帘人,却道海棠依旧。 知否,知否?应是绿肥红瘦。 | Late night wind howled with light shower,[9] Still hungover despite my heavy slumber. Ask for shades to be rolled from sill, Was told myHaiTang blossomed still. Oh honey! But don't you know? Tis the season reds ebb and greens flow.[10] |
"Qingzhao Garden" is located at the bank ofBaimai Spring inMingshui, covering 18,000 square meters, including 1,270 square meters of buildings, 1,500 square meters of water, and 10,000 square meters of green space. It was officially opened on May 1, 1997, and is the most significant memorial to Li.[11]
Qingzhou Li Qingzhao Memorial Hall is located at the Yangxi Lake outside the west gate of Qingzhou Ancient City. It covers an area of about 630 square meters. The building faces south; there are tunnels in the entrance to the north, road east built, shun river building, west of the four pine pavilion, are ofQing dynasty architecture. At the end of the corridor is a quadrillion built in 1993; on the door, there is a well-known poet Xiao Lao writing tablet "Li Qingzhao Memorial Hall".
Jinan Li Qingzhao Memorial Hall is located in Baotu Spring Park, in a courtyard on the north side of Liuxu Spring, with 360 square meters. In the Northern Song dynasty, this courtyard was the courtyard of the Zhang family in Jinan. In theJin dynasty, it was changed toLinquan Running. In the late Qing dynasty, it was changed to the ancestral temple ofDing Baozhen. In the early Qing dynasty, the poet Tian Wen wrote a poem titled "Visiting Li Yian Old House at Liuxu Spring." People mistakenly thought that Li's former residence was near Liuxu Spring. Later, literati and poets all joined the club. Thus it was said that Li's old house was in Jinan. Moreover, Li was once respected as the lotus root god and was enshrined in the Lotus Shrine beside Daming Lake in Jinan. Since the Qing dynasty, Jinan people have been awarded Li "Lotus Godness" for sacrificing.
Jinhua Li Qingzhao Memorial Hall is located in the southern corner of Jinhua City, Bayong Road. Ba Yong Lou was built by Shen Yue, governor ofDongyang, in the first year of Qilongchang in the Southern dynasty. In 1994, Ba Yong Lou Cultural Relics Conservation and Management Office changed the main hall of Ba Yong Lou into Li Qingzhao Memorial Hall.
Since Li Qingzhao once lived near Qingbo Gate of West Lake in Hangzhou, the relevant authorities built the Qingzhao Pavilion in the Stream of the Metasequoia forest in the Willow Waves And Orioles Park, which was opened in 2002.[12]
Two impactcraters,Li Ch'ing-Chao onMercury[13] and Li Qingzhao onVenus,[14] are named after her.
"A Dream Song" and "Sheng Sheng Man"[15] have been set to music as part of the song cycle 'Chinese Memories' by composer Johan Famaey in 2011.
In 2017, the composerKarol Beffa wroteFragments of China (Klarthe), setting four of her poems to music.[citation needed]River of Stars, a novel byGuy Gavriel Kay set in a fictionalizedSong China, features a protagonist inspired by Li Qingzhao, as acknowledged by the author in the book.[16]
In the 2022 video gameTerra Invicta, the leader of the Academy faction is named in honor of Li Qingzhao.