Little Primer of Du Fu, Poems 11-15
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
This week we're reading poems 11 through 15, inclusive.
How to Read Chinese Poetry has two chapters on forms Du Fu uses extensively:
Ch 8, Recent Style Shi Poetry, Pentasyllabic Regulated Verse (Wuyan Lüshi)
Ch 9, Recent Style Shi Poetry, Heptasyllabic Regulated Verse (Qiyan Lüshi)
Three other chapters on other verse forms that Du Fu sometimes employs, or which people quoting Du Fu employ, also mention him:
Ch 10, Recent Style Shi Poetry, Quatrains (Jueju): some mention of Du Fu’s “Three Quatrains, No. 3”
Ch 14, Ci Poetry, Long Song Lyrics on Objects (Yongwu Ci): some mention of Du Fu's “Beautiful Lady” (Jiaren)
Ch 18, A Synthesis: Rhythm, Syntax, and Vision of Chinese Poetry: some mention of Du Fu’s poem “The Jiang and Han Rivers”
Additional Reading for this Week: Chapter 8
Re: 15. 天末懷李白 Tiān-mò huái Lǐ Bái
“The ‘wronged ghost’ is the spirit of the fourth-century B.C. poet Ch’ü Yüan, who was banished by the king of Ch’u as a result of false allegations made against him by his enemies and finally drowned himself in the river Mi-lo.” Is this dragon boat boy?
Re: 15. 天末懷李白 Tiān-mò huái Lǐ Bái