Palace Song, Gu Kuang (Tang Shi #278)
Thursday, 1 August 2019 07:51In the jade tower halfway to heaven, song and dance begin—
Wind brings the harmonious laughter and chatter of palace concubines.
Shadows depart the Moon Hall; I hear the nighttime water clock;
I roll up the crystal curtain, and draw near the Autumn River.
宫词
玉楼天半起笙歌,
风送宫嫔笑语和。
月殿影开闻夜漏,
水晶帘卷近秋河。
The Moon Hall is the palace of Chang’e, goddess of the moon. The Autumn River is the Milky Way, which becomes prominent in the early night sky in autumn. I like the intricate parallels of mundane and celestial details in this.
(I want fan art for this one.)
—L.
Wind brings the harmonious laughter and chatter of palace concubines.
Shadows depart the Moon Hall; I hear the nighttime water clock;
I roll up the crystal curtain, and draw near the Autumn River.
宫词
玉楼天半起笙歌,
风送宫嫔笑语和。
月殿影开闻夜漏,
水晶帘卷近秋河。
The Moon Hall is the palace of Chang’e, goddess of the moon. The Autumn River is the Milky Way, which becomes prominent in the early night sky in autumn. I like the intricate parallels of mundane and celestial details in this.
(I want fan art for this one.)
—L.
no subject
Date: 1 August 2019 18:08 (UTC)no subject
Date: 1 August 2019 19:08 (UTC)BTW, the for the shadows departing is 开, with a base sense of open rather than leave -- it's as if the shadows are opening up, allowing the speaker to see the Moon Hall. Its semantic parallel is 卷, roll up -- just as "hear" and "draw near" are semantic parallels. A strikingly intricate construction, this poem.
no subject
Date: 1 August 2019 19:16 (UTC)no subject
Date: 1 August 2019 19:23 (UTC)But images? Oh, what a richness!
no subject
Date: 1 August 2019 19:24 (UTC)no subject
Date: 1 August 2019 19:56 (UTC)moon hall | shadows | open/start (moving) || hear | night | water-clock
crystal | curtain | roll up || draw near | autumn | river
Each line is has two phrases: the first, a 2-character descriptor for the subject of a verb; the second, a verb with an implied subject of the speaker with a direct object that's a noun of time modifying a water-related object. Across the two phrases, words in same function are either similar (such as the water-related clock and river) or direct contrasts (such as open and roll up).
Tight, tight writing -- especially there's also a pattern of tones to maintain.
no subject
Date: 1 August 2019 20:25 (UTC)no subject
Date: 1 August 2019 23:43 (UTC)Nice.
(I want fan art for this one.)
(Can't draw, but want to see it if you get it.)
no subject
Date: 2 August 2019 15:10 (UTC)