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Song Ruozhao (Chinese: 宋若昭; 761–828) was a Chinese Confucian scholar, poet and imperial official of the Tang dynasty (618–906). Her extant works include one poem, a short fiction story and her annotation to her sister's work: Analects for Women, a book about the proper roles and code of conduct for women, and a biography of Niu Yingzhen.
Title or descriptive name Author [note 1] Poetic era (Chinese) Dates Chinese poetry collection Chinese Pinyin "Alas That My Lot Was Not Cast" Zhuang Ji (or, Yan Ji) [note 2] Ancient: Late BCE - Early AD: Chu ci: 哀時命: Āi shí mìng "Bu Ju" Uncertain [note 3] Ancient: Late BCE - Early AD: Chu ci: 卜居: Bǔ Jū "Changsha (poem)" Mao ...
Zhang Ruoxu (Chinese: 張若虛; Wade–Giles: Chang Jo-hsü; ca. 660 – ca. 720) was a Chinese poet of the early Tang dynasty from Yangzhou in modern Jiangsu province. He is best known for "Spring River in the Flower Moon Night" (Chun Jiang Hua Yue Ye, 春江花月夜), one of the most distinctive and influential Tang poems, which has inspired numerous later artworks.
Li Qingzhao (Chinese: 李清照; 1084 – ca. 1155), [1] art name Yi'an Jushi (Chinese: 易安居士), was a Chinese poet and essayist of the Song dynasty. [2] She is considered one of the greatest poets in Chinese history.
Poems of a thousand masters enjoyed long-standing popularity as a beginner's textbook, as it's "easy to memorize and chant, and has circulated widely". [1]: 226 It was top listed into the core elementary curriculum together with Three character classic (三字经, Sanzi Jing), Hundred surnames (百家姓, Baijia Xing), and Thousand character classics (千字文, Qianzi Wen), nick named "Three ...
Xu Zhimo (徐志摩, Wu Chinese pronunciation: [ʑi tsɿ mu], Mandarin: [ɕy̌ ʈʂî mwǒ], 15 January 1897 – 19 November 1931) was a Chinese romantic poet and writer of modern Chinese poetry who strove to loosen Chinese poetry from its traditional forms and to reshape it under the influences of Western poetry and the vernacular Chinese language. [1]
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Qin Guan (traditional Chinese: 秦觀; simplified Chinese: 秦观; 1049 – c. 1100) was a Chinese poet of the Song Dynasty. His courtesy name was Shaoyou (少游). Taixu was also his courtesy name. His pseudonym was Huaihai Jushi (淮海居士) and Hangou Jushi (邗溝居士).