Shi Jing
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Shi Jing (Simplified Chinese: 诗经; Traditional Chinese: 詩經; pinyin: Shī Jīng; Wade-Giles: Shih Ching), translated variously as the Classic of Poetry, the Book of Songs or the Book of Odes, is the earliest existing collection of Chinese poems. It comprises 305 poems, some possibly written as early as 1000 BC. Its compilation is traditionally ascribed to Confucius.
It is divided into:
characters | pinyin | meaning | |
---|---|---|---|
風 | 风 | fēng | 160 folk songs (or airs) |
小雅 | 小雅 | xiǎoyǎ | 74 minor festal songs (or odes traditionally sung at court festivities) |
大雅 | 大雅 | dàyǎ | 31 major festal songs, sung at more solemn court ceremonies |
頌 | 颂 | sòng | 40 hymns and eulogies , sung at sacrifices to gods and ancestral spirits of the royal house. |
The work is one of the Wu Jing (Simplified Chinese: 五经; Traditional Chinese: 五經; pinyin: Wǔ Jīng), or Five Classics, canonized by the Han Dynasty (206 BC–220 AD), whose scholars framed the 305 poems as having been edited by Confucius from a total corpus of some three-thousand poems. The 305 poems had to be reconstructed from memory by classicists since the previous Qin Dynasty (221 BC-206 BC) had burned the poems along with other classical texts. (There are, in fact, a total of 308 poem titles that were reconstructed, but the remaining three poems only have titles without any extant text).
The poems are written in four character lines. The airs are in the style of folk songs, although the extent to which they are real folk songs or literary imitations is debated. The odes deal with matters of court and historical subjects, while the hymns blend history, myth and religious material.
Commentators have also given the Book of Songs a second tripartite division based on their use of literary figures and devices, into fu, bi and xing poems. Roughly:
characters | pinyin | meaning | |
---|---|---|---|
賦 | 赋 | fù | fu poems are those with a straightforward narrative content |
比 | 比 | bǐ | bi are those with explicit comparisons |
興 | 兴 | xìng | xing are based on implied comparisons |
Contents |
[edit] Contents
[edit] GuoFeng
group | char | group name | poem #s |
---|---|---|---|
01 | 周南 | Odes of Zhou & South | 001-011 |
02 | 召南 | Odes of Shao & South | 012-025 |
03 | 邶風 | Odes of Bei | 026-044 |
04 | 鄘風 | Odes of Yong | 045-054 |
05 | 衛風 | Odes of Wei | 055-064 |
06 | 王風 | Odes of Wang | 065-074 |
07 | 鄭風 | Odes of Zheng | 075-095 |
08 | 齊風 | Odes of Qi | 096-106 |
09 | 魏風 | Odes of Wei | 107-113 |
10 | 唐風 | Odes of Tang | 114-125 |
11 | 秦風 | Odes of Qin | 126-135 |
12 | 陳風 | Odes of Chen | 136-145 |
13 | 檜風 | Odes of Kuai | 146-149 |
14 | 曹風 | Odes of Cao | 150-153 |
15 | 豳風 | Odes of Bin | 154-160 |
[edit] XiaoYa
group | char | group name | poem #s |
---|---|---|---|
01 | 鹿鳴 之什 | Decade of Lu Ming | 161-170 |
02 | 白華 之什 | Decade of Baihua | 170-175 |
03 | 彤弓 之什 | Decade of Tong Gong | 175-185 |
04 | 祈父 之什 | Decade of Qi Fu | 185-195 |
05 | 小旻 之什 | Decade of Xiao Min | 195-205 |
06 | 北山 之什 | Decade of Bei Shan | 205-215 |
07 | 桑扈 之什 | Decade of Sang Hu | 215-225 |
08 | 都人士 之什 | Decade of Du Ren Shi | 225-234 |
[edit] DaYa
group | char | group name | poem #s |
---|---|---|---|
01 | 文王之什 | Decade of Wen Wang | 235-244 |
02 | 生民之什 | Decade of Sheng Min | 245-254 |
03 | 蕩之什 | Decade of Dang | 255-265 |
[edit] Song
group | char | group name | poem #s |
---|---|---|---|
01 | 周頌 | Sacrificial Odes of Zhou1 | 266-296 |
01a | -清廟之什 | Decade of Qing Miao | 266-275 |
01b | -臣工之什 | Decade of Chen Gong | 276-285 |
01c | -閔予小子之什 | Decade of Min You Xiao Zi | 286-296 |
02 | 魯頌 | Praise Odes of Lu3 | 297-300 |
03 | 商頌 | Sacrificial Odes of Shang1 | 301-305 |
note: alternative divisions may be topical or chronological (Legges): Song, DaYa, XiaoYa, GuoFeng
[edit] Translations
- The Book of Odes, in The Sacred Books of China, translated by James Legge, 1879
- The Book of Songs, translated by Arthur Waley, edited with additional translations by Joseph R. Allen, New York: Grove Press, 1996.
- ShiJing, translated by YunZhong Xu, edited by ShengZhang Jiang, Hunan, China: Hu Nan Chu Ban She, 1993.
- The Shi King: The Old "Poetry Classic" of the New York: Paragon Book, 1969.
- The Classic Anthology Defined by Confucius, translated by Ezra Pound, Cambridge: Harvard U Press, 1954.
- The Book of Odes, translated by Bernhard Karlgren, Stockholm: The Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities, 1950.
[edit] External links
- Legge's translation of the Shi Jing at Chinese text initiative
- The Book of Odes in Chinese arrayed with James Legge translation.
- Shiijing with Mao prefaces and Zhu Xi commentary by Harrison Huang
The Four Books and Five Classics (四書五經) | |
The Four Books: |
The Great Learning (大學) | The Doctrine of the Mean (中庸) | The Analects (論語) | The Mencius (孟子) |
---|---|
The Five Classics: |
Classic of Changes (易經) | Classic of Poetry (詩經) | Classic of Rites (禮記) | Classic of History (書經) | Spring and Autumn Annals (春秋) |
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