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         Meng Chiao:     more detail
  1. The Late Poems of Meng Chiao by Meng Chiao, 1996-12-23
  2. The Poetry of Meng Chiao and Han Yu by Stephen Owen, 1975-09
  3. The Poetry of Meng Chiao and Han Yu by Stephen Owen, 1975
  4. The autumn colors on the Ch'iao and Hua Mountains;: A landscape by Chao Meng-fu (Artibus Asiae) by Chu-tsing Li, 1965

41. SummerCh
208); Wang Chihuan (193); Meng Hao-jan (194); meng chiao (222); Han Shan/Cold Mountain(228); Li Ho (235), Li Shang-yin (237); Yu Hsuan-chi (241); Liu Tsung
http://mason.gmu.edu/~kzhang/chin310.html
George Mason University
Department of Modern and Classical Languages

Chinese 310—Survey of Traditional Chinese Literature, Fall 2002
Instructor: Dr. Karl K. Zhang
Office: 215-A Thompson Hall
Phone: (703) 993-4231
Email: kzhang@gmu.edu
Web Page: http:// mason.gmu.edu/~kzhang/
Meeting Time: MWF 12:30 p.m.-1:20 p.m.
Meeting Place: Thompson Hall 112
Office Hours: WF 10:30 a.m-11:30 a.m., and by appointment Summary of the Course : An introduction of the outlines of Chinese literature from the beginning to the nineteenth century, presented through literary sources arranged in roughly chronological order. Our readings include poetry, fiction and personal essays as well as documents of philosophy, history, religion, and transcribed oral records. No one can expect to “cover” traditional Chinese literature in one semester, but I hope that you will leave this course with a sense of the richness of the literature, a basic map of China’s literary development, and an interest in investigating it further. My Expectations of You : Participation in class is very important, because I take serious the idea that my job is not simply to “present” material but to work through, analyze and add to it. Classes will be a combination of lecture and discussion. Be sure to have the material read before class meeting so that you can contribute to the discussions. This course fulfills the General Education literature requirement, so in addition to weekly take-home short reaction papers, you will also write for me two one-hour exams and two papers (five to eight pages each) on assigned topic. Point breakdown: participation, 20%; weekly short reaction papers, 20%; first exam, 20%; second exam, 20%; research paper, 20%.

42. The Analects Of Confucius
His books include translations of ancient poets Tu Fu, T'ao Ch'ien,meng chiao, and Li Po, as well as the contemporary poet Bei Dao.
http://www.counterpointpress.com/1887178635.html
"The collection of aphoristic sayings attributed to [Confucius] lyrically translated in this compelling new version, has arguably had a deeper impact on more people's lives than any other in human history... Attractively printed, this classic is a treasure for all who would understand the ways of human community." NAPRA ReView
David Hinton
Photo credit: John Puleio
THE ANALECTS OF CONFUCIUS
Confucius

While Confucius failed in his lifetime to rescue a crumbling civilization with his teachings, he was to become the most influential sage in human history. His thought, still remarkably current and even innovative after 2,500 years, survives him in The Analects a collection of brief aphoristic sayings that has had a deeper impact on more people's lives over a longer period of time than any other book in human history. Formulated in the ruins of a society that had been founded on untenable spiritualistic concepts of governance, Confucius's philosophy postulated a humanistic social order that has survived as China's social ideal ever since. Beginning with the realization that society is a structure of human relationships, Confucius saw that in a healthy society this structure must be a selfless weave of caring relationships. Those caring relationships are a system of "ritual" that people enact in their daily lives, thus infusing the secular with sacred dimensions.

43. Mencius
His books include translations of the ancient poets Tu Fu, T'ao Ch'ien,meng chiao, and Li Po, as well as the contemporary poet Bei Dao.
http://www.counterpointpress.com/1887178627.html
"A vibrant translation that captures the subtlety, complexity, ambiguity, and profound depth of the Eastern text." Library Journal "The roots of Zen are evident throughout these wonderful teaching stories brought to life by Hinton's crisp and vital prose."
NAPRA Review "I came away from this complex text with a clearer picture of it than I had ever enjoyed before." Inquiring Mind
David Hinton
Photo credit: John Puleio
MENCIUS

Translated by David Hinton
This ancient text records the teachings of Mencius (4th C. B.C.E.), the second originary sage in the Confucian tradition, which has shaped Chinese civilization for over two thousand years. In a culture that makes no distinction between those realms we call the heart and the mind, Mencius was the great thinker of the heart, and it was he who added the profound inner dimensions to the Confucian vision. Given his emphasis on the heart, it isn't surprising that his philosophical method is literary in nature: story and anecdote full of human drama and poetic turns of thought. Indeed, the text is considered a paragon of literary eloquence and style. This volume is the second in a series of translations presenting the four central masterworks of ancient Chinese thought: classics that will stand as definitive translations for our era. Series translator David Hinton is known for the poetic fluency he brings to his award-winning work. His new versions are not only inviting and immensely readable, but they also apply a much-needed consistency to key terms in these texts, lending structural links and philosophical rigor to a canon that has only been rendered in a hodgepodge of styles. Other titles in the series are:

44. Salon Wanderlust | "Questions Of Heaven"
She had read the poems of meng chiao, Li Ho, Su T'ung Po, and Tu Fu, and knew a littleabout Buddhism, though she thought it odd that I wanted to climb all the
http://www.salon.com/april97/wanderlust/passages970429.html
F E A T U R E S Bad Trips
By Don George, Editor Visit Friendly Uzbekistan!
Duck the gunfire, bribe the officials, drink the Cipro
By Doug Fine Big Island Blacktop
Chasing the heart of Hawaii
By Shirley Streshinsky
Books
on Hawaii
Getting there
D E P A R T M E N T S Romancing the Road
First Tango in Paris
A romantic tale
By Jenn Shreve Books on Paris Getting there Passages: "Questions of Heaven" Buddhist with a backpack By Gretel Ehrlich Table Talk - Knowing the Japanese Salon Taste Adventures in eating Your virtual travel agency E A R L I E R Tuesday April 22 A night from hell in Los Angeles By Don George, Editor Giving good gnocchi By Linda Watanabe McFerrin Meeting Moses on Mount Sinai By Deb Fellner Passages: "The River at the Center of the World" By Simon Winchester Postmark: Lamu By Don Meredith Readers' Tips and Tales A full list of all Wanderlust articles questions of heaven T H E C H I N E S E J O U R N E Y S O F A N A M E R I C A N B U D D H I S T e x c e r p t By Gretel Ehrlich Beacon Press, Boston 121 pages, Nonfiction The road to Emei Shan w e spent the night at a hotel catering to Chinese tourists going up the mountain. My translator, Zha Yu, who preferred her adopted American name of Vivian, was young and efficient, bright and well traveled. The daughter of a physicist, she had been allowed to travel out of the country, had seen the Louvre, and knew which films were being censored in China. Her regular job at Chengdu television studio was not so busy that she couldn't moonlight as a translator. She had read the poems of Meng Chiao, Li Ho, Su T'ung Po, and Tu Fu, and knew a little about Buddhism, though she thought it odd that I wanted to climb all the way up a sacred mountain when I could have been driven.

45. CLASSIFIEDS.TERADEX.COM - Entertainment/Literature/Authors/M
MacDonald, John, Mencken, Henry Louis, MacLeish, Archibald, meng chiao,Machado, Antonio, Meng Haoran, Machen, Arthur, Meredith, Christopher,
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46. Fine Books - Poetry Books - Chinese Poetry - Lowest Prices Guaranteed
46. The Late Poems of meng chiao (Lockert Library of Poetry in Translation) ~ Usuallyships in 24 hours Chiao Meng, et al / Princeton Univ Pr / March 1997 Read
http://finebooks.bizland.com/pchinese.html

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Amazon Videos Amazon Toys ... Amazon.com order info -Comments?- zhuw@okcom.net Fine Books Poetry Books / Chinese Welcome to the Chinese Poetry Books section of Fine Books. Here are excellent Chinese poetry books filled with exquisite poems by revered authors.
The Clouds Should Know Me by Now : Buddhist Poet Monks of China Usually ships in 24 hours
Red Pine(Editor), et al / Publishers' Group West / November 1998 Read more about this title...
The Selected Poems of Li Po Usually ships in 24 hours
Li Po, et al / New Directions / May 1996 Read more about this title...
Maples in the Mist : Poems for Children from the Tang Dynasty Usually ships in 24 hours
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47. Counterbalance Poetry | Sam Hamill
His translation of Heading South by Tu Fu (712770) Audio Video.His translation of Despair by meng chiao (751-814) Audio Video.
http://www.counterbalancepoetry.org/samhamill.htm
Click on the picture to see a full-size image of Sam Hamill. Poetry Readings: A translation of the preface to The Art of Writing by Chinese poet Lu Chi (261-303
Audio
Video
Paul Hansen's translation of "Moored for the Night At the Lan-chi Riverside Courier Station," by Chinese poet Yang Wan-li (1124-1206). (From Before Ten Thousand Peaks, Copper Canyon Press, 1980).
Audio
Video
"Anoint the Ariston," by the contemporary Greek poet and Nobel Prize winner Odysseas Elytis, translated by Olga Broumas.
Audio
Video
"No Gain"
Audio
Video
His translation of "Visiting Pai-an Pavilion," by Chinese poet Hsieh Ling-yun (385-433)
Audio
Video
His translation of "Poem" by Wang Fan-chih (590-660). Audio Video His translation of "Saying Good-bye in a Ch'in-ling Wineshop" by Li Po (701-762), China's most famous poet. Audio Video his translation of "In Praise of Rain," by Tu Fu (712-770) Audio Video His translation of "Moon, Rain, Riverbank" by Tu Fu (712-770) Audio Video His translation of "Heading South" by Tu Fu (712-770) Audio Video His translation of "Heading South" by Tu Fu (712-770) Audio Video His translation of "Despair" by Meng Chiao (751-814) Audio Video His translation of "After Reading Lao Tzu" by Po Chu-i (772-846)

48. Waiting For The Unicorn: Table Of Contents
Crossing Several Mountain Ridges after a Snowfall Getting Up Early at LakesidePavilion Two Poems Night at an Inn Written in the Style of meng chiao Li Tz'u
http://www.indiana.edu/~iupress/books/0-253-36321-7tc.html
TABLE OF CONTENTS Waiting for the Unicorn Poems and Lyrics of China's Last Dynasty, 1644-1911 Edited by Irving Yucheng Lo and William Schultz
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Abbreviations
Part I: Poets of the Seventeenth Century
Ch'ien Ch'ien-Yi (1582-1664)
Two Quatrains on the ...Album by Hsiao Po-yu...
Watching a Game of Chess: Second Series
Written in Prison
Upon Reading the boudoir Poems of Mei-ts'un: Impressions Drinking Wine: Second Series Wu Wei-Yeh (1609-1672) The Song of Yuan-yuan Leaving T'u-sung at Dawn Blocked by Snow Ancient Sentiments Written in Jest: On "The Old Man Who Rolled with the Punch" Chin Jen-Jui (1610?-1661) The Tiniest of Lives Capriciousness Don't Ask Last Word: For My Son Yung Huang Tsung-Hsi (1610-1695) Rising Early...to Leave Tung-ming Ch'an Monastery Miscellaneous Songs from Living in the Mountains: Three Selections Cold-night Moonin the Manner of Meng Tung-yeh Hearing the Cuckoo...[1646] Encountering Fire in Early Spring, 1662 Encountering Fire Again in the Fifth Month Ku Yen-Wu (1613-1682) Ching-wei Eight Feet Mocking Myself Po-hsia Sung Wan (1614-1673) On Hearing a Cricket in the Boat Songs Composed in Prison: Four Selections A Song of a Fisherman A Ballad of the Righteous Tiger Random Poem on the Lake A Miscellany on the Garden of Autumn Clouds...

49. Where We Live: Poetry Of New Mexico
The Chinese poet meng chiao (752814), as translated by Sam Hamill, introduces issue3 Despise poetry, and you'll be named to office./ But to love poetry is
http://www.nmculturenet.org/literary/french/

Jimmy Santiago Baca
's breakthrough book has to be his first, "Immigrants in Our Own Land"...it is the landmark, if only because its existence is so unlikely. Like the works of, say, Melville, Whitman and Dickinson... more Anne Valley-Fox
It may not be unprecedented, but surely it is unusual, for a journal to turn its entire contents over to the work of one author. Happily, that is what “Fish Drum Magazine” has recently done ... more Arthur Sze: "The Redshifting Web: Poems 1970-1998"
This is a full and rewarding book; its 262 pages of poetry fill the mind and delight the sensuous imagination... more Miriam Sagan: "The Art of Love"
Among those at the center of contemporary poetry in New Mexico stands Miriam Sagan, teacher, editor, and, above all, poet... more The Santa Fe Poetry Broadside
Almost all the poets represented in the Broadside live in New Mexico; the exceptions are few... more Poem of the Week
It is no small thing to live in the awareness that poetry is all around us, at our elbows-not part of some distant past, but a living force... more Introduction
October 1, 1999: Today begins a new series on New Mexico CultureNet, to be called "Where We Live: Poetry of New Mexico."...

50. NEA: Explore: Writer's Corner: David Hinton
Hinton's books include translations of the ancient poets Tu Fu, Li Po, T'ao Ch'ien,meng chiao, Po Chüi, and Hsieh Ling-yün, as well as the contemporary
http://arts.endow.gov/explore/Writers/hinton.html
NEA Home New on the Site Learn About the NEA Apply for a Grant Manage Your Award NEA Partnerships Publications Endowment News Explore Art Forms Federal Opportunities Search/Site Map Writer's Corner Climbing Green-Cliff Mountain in Yung-chia
translated by David Hinton Taking a little food, a light walking-stick,
I wander up to my home in quiet mystery, the path along streams winding far away
onto ridgetops, no end to this wonder at slow waters silent in their frozen beauty
and bamboo glistening at heart with frost, cascades scattering a confusion of spray
and broad forests crowding distant cliffs. Thinking it's moonrise I see in the west
and sunset I'm watching blaze in the east, I hike on until dark, then linger out night
sheltered away in deep expanses of shadow. Immune to high importance: that's renown.
Walk humbly and it's all promise in beauty, for in quiet mystery the way runs smooth,
ascending remote heights beyond compare. Utter tranquillity, the distinction between
yes this and no that lost, I embrace primal

51. Guardian Unlimited Books | By Genre | Review: A Shame To Miss
And I'm still marvelling at the way in which 8thcentury meng chiao's Impromptu (translated by AC Graham) is so close in tone and detail to verses in the
http://books.guardian.co.uk/reviews/childrenandteens/0,6121,795285,00.html
Go to: Guardian Unlimited home UK news World news Archive search Arts Books Business EducationGuardian.co.uk Film Football Jobs MediaGuardian.co.uk Money The Observer Online Politics Shopping SocietyGuardian.co.uk Sport Talk Travel Audio Email services Special reports The Guardian The weblog The informer The northerner The wrap Advertising guide Crossword Headline service Syndication services Events / offers Help / contacts Information Newsroom Soulmates Style guide Travel offers TV listings Weather Web guides Guardian Weekly Money Observer Home Guardian Review By genre Reviews ...
Buy A Shame to Miss Volume 3 at WHSmith.co.uk

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ed Anne Fine During the Eden years after they first learn to read, young children make little distinction between poetry and prose. They read something for what it's about, not for the form in which it's written.

52. When I Find You Again It Will Be In Mountains
Visits of T'ang Wench'i Getting Up Sick Sent to Chang-sun Ch'i-ch'iao, a MountainFriend Sent to Monk Wu-k'o Lamenting the Death of meng chiao Lamenting the
http://www.yakrider.com/Resources/excerpts/whenifindyou.htm
An excerpt from
When I Find You Again It Will Be In Mountains:
Selected Poems of Chia Tao Translated by Mike O'Connor
[This excerpt has been kindly provided by National Book Network and is used with the permission of Wisdom Publications.] EXCERPTS: INTRODUCTION Introduction Chia Tao (779-843) was a Ch'an (Zen) Buddhist monk until the age of thirty-one, when he took the extraordinary step of leaving the Buddhist order. His motives for this are not known, but his poems clearly reflect a life-long reverence for Buddhism. It is probable, however, that Chia Tao's decision had to do with his aspiration to devote himself more fully to the practice of poetry, a practice regarded by many at the time to be incompatible with formal religious life. It can be presumed that he also felt the need for a wider range of experience than monasticism afforded. Chia Tao began his secular life in Ch'ang-an (modern-day Sian), the political and cultural capital of the T'ang Dynasty (618-906), where he was welcomed by prominent poets and became a member of a talented literary circle. He had less luck with political life, possibly serving in unspecified government positions in the capital and then, after suffering banishment late in life, in two minor provincial posts. He was always poor and often in bad health, but he stuck to the poetry. Chia Tao was born in Fan-yang (near today's Beijing) in 779. Twenty-four years earlier, the An Lu-shan rebellion had begun a warring and socially tumultuous period that all but ended one of the most culturally celebrated and economically prosperous reigns in the history of China. An Lu-shan, a powerful frontier commander, made war on the court and House of T'ang, and Emperor Hsuan-tsung (735-755), a generous patron of the arts, was ultimately forced by the rebels to abandon the capital at Ch'ang-an.

53. AYA - Graduate School Alumni
of Chinese poetry, Owen is the author of a long list of widely hailed and frequentlytaught books and articles, including The Poetry of meng chiao and Han Yu
http://www.aya.yale.edu/grad/2001.htm

AYA Home
Graduate School Alumni Graduate School Alumni 2001 Wilbur Cross Medal Recipients E Elliot M. Meyerowitz '77 Ph.D., Biology
Stephen Owen '68 B.A., '72 Ph.D., East Asian languages and Literatures
Roger N. Shepard '55 Ph.D., Psychology

54. Coman: Six Poems
Marginalia in a Guidebook. The danger of the road is not in the distance,ten yards is far enough to break a wheel. meng chiao.
http://eserver.org/clogic/2-1/comann.html
Six Poems Brad Comann Buddhas Polyethlyene catches on parts
of bodies tooled out of pink sandstone, and carts
trundle the head-pieces off, to be eyed
in a nearby shop, centuries of heads pried,
cracked from torsos leaving bent knees
behind, smooth as abalone,
leaving thin robes folded back revealing
one of the shoulders or a wheel
etched In those meditating handsLaw
of Cause and Effect now a flawed
symmetry between walls of brick and mortarthose fingers like thick branches too commonplace for collectors who want instead the faces chipped from prangs expensive beyond belief although undecorated with squares of gold leaf attention saved for the bronze images that survived Burmese troops and the aging sunlight: only one of Him sits in the former temple where a monk trims a votive candle and the One looks immovable, eyelids on the verge of closing on us who surge by the altarpieced fast as the slowest walk

55. Chinese Anthology
His books include The Poetry of meng chiao and Han Yü, The Poetry of the EarlyT'ang, The Great Age of Chinese Poetry The High T'ang, Traditional Chinese
http://www.wwnorton.com/english/chinese/
Winner of the 1997 American Literary Translators Association
Outstanding Translation Award
An
A nthology of
C hinese
L iterature
Beginnings to 1911
edited and
translated by

Stephen Owen

0-393-97106-6 (paper>
0-393-03823-8 (cloth) Contents Ordering Info Sales Reps English ... Norton The Definitive Anthology of Chinese Literature Hailed as a groundbreaking text in Chinese Studies, An Anthology of Chinese Literature brings together representative works from the first millenium B.C. to the end of the imperial system in 1911. This collection of over 600 pieces, translated with great clarity and sense of the original, presents the tradition in historical and aesthetic context. Moving roughly chronologically through the tradition, An Anthology of Chinese Literature gathers texts in a variety of genressongs, letters, anecdotes, poetry, political oratory, plays, traditional literary theory, and moreto show how the essential texts build on and echo each other. Coupled with highly readable commentary, this innovative structure uniquely highlights the interplay among Chinese literature, culture, and history. A Teaching Anthology Classroom tested

56. Lists.village.virginia.edu/listservs/spoons/cybermind.archive/internet/la
The Case of the Real After meng chiao Shogi, and not a man in sight, undertow beneath
http://lists.village.virginia.edu/listservs/spoons/cybermind.archive/internet/la

57. Literature/Authors/M/Meng Chiao - Fractured Atlas Links Directory
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58. Poets & Writers - Grants & Awards 1997 July/August
Zero (translated with Yanbing Chen), The Selected Poems of Lí Po (both publishedby New Directions), and The Late Poems of meng chiao (Princeton University).
http://www.pw.org/mag/ga9707.htm
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1997 Harold Morton Landon Translation Award David Hinton of East Calais, Vermont, received the $1,000 Harold Morton Landon Translation Award for his three translations published in 1996: Bei Dao's Landscape Over Zero (translated with Yanbing Chen), (both published by New Directions), and The Late Poems of Meng Chiao (Princeton University). Rosmarie Waldrop was the judge. The award is given annually for a book of poetry translated into English by a U.S. translator and published by a U.S. press. Collaborative translations are eligible, but translations of anthologies are not. For the 1998 competition, publishers may submit books published in 1997. Rachel Hadas will judge. Deadline: December 31. Send an SASE for complete guidelines. New Chancellors Donald Justice was elected to the Academy of American Poets Board of Chancellors. He succeeds Anthony Hecht. The board is made up of 12 eminent American poets. The other 11 members are John Ashbery, Daniel Hoffman, John Hollander, Richard Howard, Carolyn Kizer, Maxine Kumin, J.D. McClatchy, W.S. Merwin, Mark Strand, Mona Van Duyn, and David Wagoner. Chancellors of the Academy of American Poets may serve up to two consecutive terms of 12 years each and are elected by current chancellors. There is no application process. The Academy of American Poets, Harold Morton Landon Translation Award, 584 Broadway, Suite 1208, New York, NY 10012-3250. (212) 274-0343, extension 14. India Amos, Awards Administrator.

59. Untitled Document
Allen S. Weisss The Theater of Possession. Octovio Paz The Stone Rainbow. DavidHinton meng chiao. JP Seaton Kuan Hsiu. Jed Rasula James John Garth Wilkinson.
http://www.webdelsol.com/Sulfur/Sulfur 33_contents.htm
Sulfur Issue #
Contents Editor's Note: Larry Eigner: The hours, keepers of Heaven Gustaf Sobin: The Green Tears of St. Tratian Jacques Roubaud: Troubadour Amors (Tr. by Richard Sieburth) Karin Lessing: Ten Sonnets by Louise Labé August Kleinzahler: James Laughlin: Some Amatory Epigrams from the Greek Anthology Martha Ann Selby: from the Gathasaptasati Hiroaki Sato: Princess Shikishi: A 100-poem Sequence Erasmus Darwin: from The Temple of Nature Basil Bunting: The Lion and the Lizard Gary Snyder: Under the Hills Near the Morava River George Economou: Alanus de Insulis Duende, Muse, and Angel Anselm Hollo: The Complete Poems of Hipponax of Ephesus George Economou: from William Langland's Piers Plowman (The C-Text) Kevin Magee: Millstone Robert Kelly: Pasts César Vallejo: At Baudelaire's Tomb Will Alexander: Charles Fourier: Spark of the Harmonian Lightning Wheel Allen S. Weisss: The Theater of Possession Octovio Paz: The Stone Rainbow David Hinton: Meng Chiao J.P. Seaton:

60. Directory :: Look.com
Terrence (3) Mcdonald, Gregory (2) Meacham, Beth (1) Medved, Maureen (3) Melville,Herman (58), Menander (2) Mencken, Henry Louis (20) meng chiao (1) Meng
http://www.look.com/searchroute/directorysearch.asp?p=41229

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