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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

1. 0300018223: "The Poetry Of Meng Chiao And Han Yu" By Stephen Owen @ BookFinder.c
Find the best deals on The Poetry of Meng Chiao and Han Yu by Stephen Owen (0300018223)
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2. 62% Discount On The Late Poems Of Meng Chiao - New & Used Books
The Late Poems of Meng Chiao New Used Books on 64% Discount. Compare prices on 126 book stores. Find the lowest price.
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3. Meng Jiao
MENG JIAO (MENG CHIAO) (751814) Meng Jiao came from Huzhou-Wukang (present-day Deqing County, Zhejiang province
http://web.whittier.edu/academic/english/Chinese/Meng Jiao.htm
Chinese Poets by Dynasty Chinese Poets by Pinyin Name Chinese Poets by Wade-Giles Name Pinyin/ Wade-Giles Conversion ... HOME Meng Jiao (Wade-Giles name: Meng Chiao) MENG JIAO (MENG CHIAO) (751-814)
gu shi ). Though Meng Jiao was popular enough in his own time, his reputation went into a tailspin some centuries after his death, because of his brash, disturbing, and jarring verse, which seemed to lack grace and decorum. In fact, it wouldn't be an exaggeration to say that his verse has inspired not so much neglect as active hatred, even in such distinguished readers as Su Shi, who states baldly in his two poems "On Reading Meng Jiao's Poetry" that "[he] hate[s] Meng Jiao's poems," which sound to him like a "cold cicada wail":
My first impression is of eating little fishes
What you get's not worth the trouble;

4. The Drunken Boat Fall 2000-Meng Chiao
Despair by Meng Chiao, copyright 2000 by Sam Hamill. Reprinted from Crossing the Yellow River Three Hundred Poems from the Chinese, translated and introduced by Sam Hamill.
http://www.thedrunkenboat.com/mengchiao.htm
Crossing the Yellow River: Three Hundred Poems from the Chinese , translated and introduced by Sam Hamill.
All titles at bn.com by Sam Hamill
Feature
on Hamill's translations. Meng Chiao
Despair

Despise poetry, and you’ll be named to office.
But to love poetry is like clinging to a mountain:
frozen, holding tight, facing death,
days of sorrow followed by sorrow.
The bourgeoisie are jealous of those
who love poetry: they flash teeth like knives.
All the old sages are long since dead, but bureaucrats still gnaw their bones. Now I’m frail, dying like a frond. All my life I sought a noble calm, a calm I could never achieve. And the noisy rabble mocked me.

5. Classical Chinese Poetry: "The Stones Where The Haft Rotted"
The following fairly late poem was written by the poet Meng Chiao during the ninth century CE. The Stones Where the Haft Rotted
http://web.cn.edu/kwheeler/chinese_poetry_stones.html
The following fairly late poem was written by the poet Meng Chiao during the ninth century CE. "The Stones Where the Haft Rotted" Less than a day in paradise, And a thousand years have passed among men. While the pieces are still being laid on the board All things have changed to emptiness. The woodman takes the road home, The haft of his axe has rotted in the wind: Nothing is what it was but the stone bridge Still spanning a rainbow cinnabar red. 1. The imagery here is of the board-game Go , in which two players consecutively place black and white stones representing Yin and Yang on a board in strategic positions to occupy or control as much space as possible. In Chinese folklore, a traveller in remote regions might come across a strange man on a mountain-top who offers to play a game. Like Rip Van Wrinkle, or people who visit fairy-land in European mythology, the participant plays a game, and when he steps away discovers that many years have passed in what seem like moments. kwheeler@cn.edu

6. Meng Chiao
Selected openaccess documents for Meng Chiao and related authors
http://unjobs.org/authors/meng-chiao

7. Chiao Meng : The Late Poems Of Meng Chiao
Published in English Binding Hardcover Pages 104 Date 199612-23 ISBN 0691012377 Publisher Princeton University Press Weight 0.65 pounds Size 6.0 x 9.0 x 0.5 inches
http://bookmooch.com/detail/0691012377
Chiao Meng : The Late Poems of Meng Chiao
Author: Chiao Meng Title: The Late Poems of Meng Chiao Moochable copies: No copies available Amazon suggests: Selected Poems of Tu Fu The Mountain Poems of Hsieh Ling-Yun The Selected Poems of Po Chu-I (New Directions Paperbook) The Mountain Poems of Meng Hao-jan The Selected Poems of T'ao Ch'ien Topics: Ancient China Chinese History Refinements Textbook Buyback World Literature Published in: English Binding: Hardcover Pages: Date: ISBN: Publisher: Princeton University Press Weight: 0.65 pounds Size: 6.0 x 9.0 x 0.5 inches Description: Product Description
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8. The Late Poems Of Meng Chiao
The Late Poems of Meng Chiao. Princeton (1996) Translated by David Hinton. Meng Chiao (751814) wrote most of these experimental poems between 807-814.
http://blog.lemuriabooks.com/2009/09/the-late-poems-of-meng-chiao/
Lemuria Bookstore Blog
Out of My Bone: The Letters of Joy Davidman
The Late Poems of Meng Chiao
September 11th, 2009 No Comments Poetry Zen
The Late Poems of Meng Chiao Princeton (1996)
Translated by David Hinton Meng Chiao (751-814) wrote most of these experimental poems between 807-814. Late Poems Written by John Tags:
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9. Luciole Press Blog: Two Classical Chinese Poems: "Impromptu" By Meng Chiao, And
Toughest job in the world Marisol Valles Garcia, 20, becomes police chief in one of Mexico's most violent border towns because no one else will do it
http://blog.luciolepress.com/2008/08/22/two-classical-chinese-poems-impromptu-by
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10. Meng Chiao | LibraryThing
Books by Meng Chiao The Late Poems of Meng Chiao, Jonggestorven abrikozen
http://www.librarything.com/author/chiaomeng

11. Where We Live: Poetry Of New Mexico
The Chinese poet Meng Chiao (752814), as translated by Sam Hamill, introduces issue 3 Despise poetry, and you'll be named to office./ But to love poetry is like clinging to a
http://www.nmcn.org/poetry/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 Introduction
October 1, 1999: Today begins a new series on New Mexico CultureNet, to be called "Where We Live: Poetry of New Mexico."... more
"The Drunken Boat"
By R.W. French

12. Meng Chiao - Monrovia, CA | MyLife™
See what Meng Chiao of Monrovia is up to at MyLife™. Use our advanced people search to find friends like Meng.
http://www.mylife.com/c-436823971
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13. The Lovely Bones: Poems Of The Late T'ang - April 30, 2008 - The New York Sun
Tu Mu calls himself a drifter in the blue houses, that is, a frequenter of brothels, while Meng Chiao complains that the cold wind harshly combs my bones, noting, rather
http://www.nysun.com/arts/lovely-bones-poems-of-the-late-tang/75582/

14. Meng Chiao Sample Translation
DAVID HINTON Chinese Poetry. Home Chinese Poetry Chinese Philosophy Poetry Meng Chiao The Late Poems of Meng Chiao Laments of the Gorges 3 Triple Gorge one thread of heaven over
http://www.davidhinton.net/Pages/Meng Chiao Sample.html
DAVID HINTON Chinese Poetry Home Chinese Poetry Chinese Philosophy Poetry ... Meng Chiao The Late Poems of Meng Chiao Laments of the Gorges
Triple Gorge one thread of heaven over
ten thousand cascading thongs of water,
slivers of sun and moon sheering away
above, and wild swells walled-in below,
splintered spirits glisten, a few glints
frozen how many hundred years in dark
gorges midday light never finds, gorges
hungry froth fills with peril. Rotting
coffins locked into tree roots, isolate
bones twist and sway, dangling free, and grieving frost roosts in branches, keeping lament's dark, distant harmony fresh. Exile, tattered heart all scattered away, you'll simmer in seething flame here, your life like fine-spun thread, its road a trace of string traveled away. Offer tears to mourn the water-ghosts, and water-ghosts take them, glimmering. Water swords and spears raging in gorges, boats drift across heaving thunder. Here in the hands of these serpents and snakes

15. The Intersection Of Space And Time - A Special Section On Cultural Geography - T
THIS POEM IS FROM THE LATE T'ang Dynasty in China, written by Meng Chiao in about 810 A.D. It is the product of a short episode in Chinese literature characterized by a deviation
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1510/is_n58/ai_6409711/
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    Reference Publications
    The intersection of space and time - a special section on cultural geography - transcript
    Whole Earth Review Spring, 1988 by Christopher L. Salter
    THE INTERSECTION OF SPACE AND TIME WANDERING ON MOUNT CHUNG-NAN South Mountain stuffs all heaven and earth, Sun and moon grow up from its stones. The high peak at night holds back the sun, The deep vales are never bright by day. Natural for mountain people to grow straight: Where paths are steep the mind levels. A long wind drives the pines and cypresses With a sound which sweeps the thousand hollows clean. Who comes here regrets that he ever studied Morning after morning, to be close to floating fame. THIS POEM IS FROM THE LATE T'ang Dynasty in China, written by Meng Chiao in about 810 A.D. It is the product of a short episode in Chinese literature characterized by a deviation from the strict formalism of classical verse. Such a break from tradition allowed for the incorporation of images and language that sounded a chord distinct from orthodox poetry. In the case of the work of Meng Chiao, it resonated of strong landscape imagery. Why in the world would a talk about geography as history open with an obscure Chinese ode? What is there in poetry that might suggests a union between two disciplines supposedly as distinct as geography and history? Or, what is the purpose in using a poem to express objective social-science reality as we try to compare two different fields?

16. Poets And Translators - Fall 2000
All poetry and translation in this issue in alphabetical order. Poets from Israel Mordechai Beck Jeffrey Green Poets from China Li Po Hsu Hsuan Meng Chiao
http://www.thedrunkenboat.com/transpge3.htm
All poetry and translation in this issue in alphabetical order.
Poets from Israel:
Mordechai Beck

Jeffrey Green

Poets from China:
Li Po

Hsu Hsuan

Meng Chiao

T’ao Ch’ien
...
Yuan Chen

Poets from the United States: Aliki Barnstone W.D. Ehrhart Robert Gibbons Daniela Gioseffi ... Eleanor Wilner More translations in our Spring Issue Summer Issue Poets and Translators - Fall 2000 Sam Hamill
Along with Crossing the Yellow River: Three Hundred Poems from the Chinese , Sam Hamill’s celebrated translations include The Art of Writing: Lu Chi’s Wen Fu The Essential Chaung Tzu , and The Essential Basho . He is the author of a dozen volumes of original poetry, including Destination Zero: Poems 1970-1995 and Gratitude , as well as three collections of essays, the most recent of which is a A Poet’s Work . He is Founding Editor of Copper Canyon Press and contributing editor of American Poetry Review
Crossing the Yellow River: Three Hundred Poems from the Chinese , translated with an introduction by Sam Hamill):
Hsu Hsuan (916-991) was an accomplished editor who rose to the position of Supervising Censor before being banished to Shensi Province. Li Po (701-762) is China’s most famous poet, one whose biography is thoroughly infused with the stuff of legend, much of which may have been generated by the poet himself. Imprisoned as a traitor, pardoned, exiled, celebrated, granted amnesty, he lived on the edge. He was a consummate panhandler and an epic drinker. Despite a complex vocabulary and rich, varied meters, he claimed to have never revised a poem. Legend says he drowned in the Yellow River, drunk, trying to embrace the reflection of the moon in 762.

17. The Late Poems Of Meng Chiao
David Hinton's translation of The Late Poems of Meng Chiao, classical Chinese poetry by the experimental T'ang Dynasty poet.
http://www.davidhinton.net/Pages/Meng Chiao.html
DAVID HINTON Chinese Poetry Home Chinese Poetry Chinese Philosophy Poetry The Late Poems of Meng Chiao Late in life, Meng Chiao (751-814 C.E.) developed an experimental poetry of virtuosic beauty, a poetry that anticipated landmark developments in the modern Western tradition by a millennium. With the T'ang Dynasty crumbling, Meng's later work employed surrealist and symbolist techniques as it turned to a deep introspection. This is truly major work, work that may be the most radical in the Chinese tradition. And though written more than a thousand years ago, it is remarkably fresh and contemporary. But in spite of Meng's significance, this is the first volume of his poetry to appear in English.
Until the age of forty, Meng Chiao lived as a poet-recluse associated with Ch'an (Zen) Buddhist poet-monks in south China. He then embarked on a rather unsuccessful career as a government official. Throughout this time, his poetry was decidedly mediocre: conventional verse inevitably undone by his penchant for the strange and surprising. After his retirement, Meng developed the innovative poetry translated in this book. His late work is singular not only for its bleak introspection and ":avant-garde" methods, but also for its dimensions: in a tradition typified by the short lyric poem, this work is made up entirely of large poetic sequences.
Winner of the Landon Translation Prize (Academy of American Poets)
Princeton
Sample Poems
DAVID HINTON Poetry Chinese Poetry

18. Cheng Hui
Su Tungp’o (1037-1101) indeed does slam Meng Chiao’s poetry in “Reading the Poetry of Meng Chiao.” But Cheng Hui (fl. 1210) also pokes fun at Meng in “Complaint of Meng
http://www.fascicle.com/issue01/Poets/hui1.htm
C H E N G H U I
SIX POEMS
translated, with annotation, by John Bradley
But what if some pain in the rear
reader of your poetry
complains that your words
flicker and fracture His eyes stutter and stammer
across the page
a river of light pulsing
far stronger than any words And so he declares your poetry
simply does not measure up to that of . . . . . or to . . . . . or even to . . . . . in a thousand thousand years how do you know who they will call the lotus blossom and who sick monkey dung. n e x t [ page 1 of 6 ]

19. Meng-Chiao Tsai - Taiwan | LinkedIn
Experience Animator, Digimax Inc
http://www.linkedin.com/in/mengchaio
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20. Found In The Translation - The Boston Globe
David Hinton has translated the poetry of Wang Wei, Lao Tzu, Meng Chiao, and a host of other major classical Chinese poets. Most of that work has been turned into books such as
http://www.boston.com/lifestyle/articles/2008/11/01/found_in_the_translation/

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