Li He

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Li He

Li He, as depicted in the book Wan hsiao tang-Chu chuang-Hua chuan (晩笑堂竹荘畫傳), published in 1921.
This is a Chinese name. The family name is Li (李).
Simplified Chinese 李贺
Traditional Chinese 李賀
Hanyu Pinyin Lǐ Hè
Wade–Giles Li Ho
Courtesy name (''zi''): Changji
Simplified Chinese 长吉
Traditional Chinese 長吉
Hanyu Pinyin Chángjí
Common nickname
Simplified Chinese 诗鬼
Traditional Chinese 詩鬼
Literal meaning Ghost/Spirit Poet
Hanyu Pinyin Shīguǐ
See Names section for more information

Li He (790–816), courtesy name Changji, was a short-lived Chinese poet of the late Tang Dynasty, known for his dense and allusive use of symbolism, for his use of synecdoche, for his vividly imaginative (and often fantastic) imagery, and for his otherwise sometimes unconventional style of poetry. However, these qualities lead to a revival of interest in him and his poetry in the twentieth century.

Biography

A native of Changgu (昌谷, in modern-day Luoyang, Henan), Li was discouraged by some of his contemporaries from taking the Imperial Examination owing to naming taboo: his father's name happened to sound similar to Jinshi. Encouraged by Han Yu, who admired his talent, Li took the examination but failed it. Despite his distant royal ancestry (to the Li family who were the ruling dynastic family of the Tang Dynasty),[1] Li He died a low-ranking and poor official, at the age of about 27: various dates are given for him, some more credible than others. According to Frodsham (1983), "the weight of evidence suggests that he was born in a Horse year, since he wrote no less than twenty-three poems in which the horse stands as a symbol for himself".[2]

Works

About 240 of Li He's poems survive. His works were admired by the group of poets in the late Tang Dynasty who practiced similar poetic techniques. His collected poems were prefaced by Du Mu, and a short biography was written by Li Shangyin. Although his works were admired by many during and since his lifetime, they were not accepted in the canonical tradition: none of his poems made their way into the popular anthologies such as the Three Hundred Tang Poems.

Evaluation

According to Sinologist Francois Jullien Li He's poetry was readmitted "at the end of the nineteenth century ... [when] ... Western notions of romanticism [ allowed] the Chinese to reexamine this poet, allowing the symbolism of his poems to speak at last, freeing his imaginary world from the never-ending quest for insinuations." (Detour and Access, p. 73)

Names

Known as an eccentric poet, Li was dubbed "Ghost of Poetry" (詩鬼), while Li Bai was called an "Immortal of Poetry" (詩仙) and Du Fu "Sage of Poetry" (詩聖). Along with Li Bai and Li Shangyin, Li He is one of the "Three Lis" (三李), loved by Mao Zedong, and others.

In popular culture

Notes

  1. Frodsham (1983)
  2. Frodsham (1983)

References

  • Francois Jullien. Detour and Access: Strategies of Meaning in China and Greece. ISBN 1-890951-11-0
  • J. D. Frodsham (1970). The Poems of Li Ho (791-817). Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-815436-4.
  • J. D. Frodsham (1983). The Poems of Li He (790-816). San Francisco: NorthPointPress. ISBN 0-86547-084-7.
  • A. C. Graham (1977). Penguin Classics: Poems Of The Late Tang. Penguin Group.
  • Qian, Zhongnian, "Li He". Encyclopedia of China (Chinese Literature Edition), 1st ed.

External links

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