国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

CULTURE

CULTURE

Characters for the world

Growing interest in Chinese sees the language cross borders and enhance a sense of common purpose, Fang Aiqing reports.

By Fang Aiqing????|????China Daily????|???? Updated: 2024-05-11 11:21

Share - WeChat
Chinese poetry enthusiast Sarah Bitter experiences street food in the country.[Photo provided to China Daily]

She translates this "poem of witness" as: "A small, lonely peach blooms in pale rose, fog blurs the grass and the evening's crows. Ruined walls surround the old well, in house after house live only shadows."

Having recognized the different preferences for the use of metaphor in Chinese and English poetry, Bitter has also discovered the visual and musical aspects of Chinese poetry.

From her perspective, Chinese poetry, especially ancient verses, look well-organized, often having a rectangular shape, condensed in meaning and economic in the selection of words, whereas poems in English look like "caterpillars crawling along the page". Despite that, she still loves English-language poetry.

Additionally, the rhymes and tones often make Chinese poems sound amazing, she says.

Bitter's first encounter with a Chinese poem was in high school. It was Tang Dynasty (618-907) poet Li Bai's Chang Gan Xing, translated by US poet and critic Ezra Pound with the title The River-Merchant's Wife: A Letter.

She was impressed then by the beautiful translation that mostly deals with childhood sweethearts, a shy bride and the mounting intimacy of the newlyweds.

However, it was not until she learned Chinese and was able to read the original text many years later, that she was better able to understand the wife's resolution of pent-up love, which is conveyed at the end of the poem, as the result of her hopeless wait for her long-since departed husband.

"Looking at the translation and the original side by side reminds me of how glad I am that I can read the original text myself and develop my own understanding of it."

Since Bitter received her master's degree in creative writing at the University of Washington several years ago, she has continued to learn Chinese out of interest, using poetry as her study material instead of practical textbooks.

She writes poems herself. Looking back, she discovered that the repetition of lines in one of them, Luohua Shijie (Season of Fallen Petals) — imagery typical of ancient Chinese poems — was subconsciously influenced by Song Dynasty (960-1279) female poet Li Qingzhao, one of her favorite classical Chinese poets.

Li Qingzhao's poetry tracks the ups and downs of her life. Bitter particularly reads childhood fun and a teenage girl's secret thoughts in her words.

She really likes that her passion for rowing and regattas is echoed by Tang and Song poets, who were also passionate for this practice.

She adds that her rowing teammates love her amateur translations of these poems from ancient China, such as one that describes rowing as "embroidering the water", and Li Qingzhao's line: "A stroke, a stroke, a shoal of plovers rise in surprise."

"There's probably a lot of influence from Chinese poetry and the Chinese language in my work, and I'm certain my work is more interesting because of it," she says.

|<< Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next   >>|

Registration Number: 130349

Mobile

English

中文
Desktop
Copyright 1994-. All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co(CDIC).Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form.
桐城市| 汾西县| 陆河县| 宜城市| 舒城县| 赞皇县| 中宁县| 怀集县| 漳州市| 白银市| 梓潼县| 瓦房店市| 贞丰县| 铅山县| 高陵县| 东辽县| 华坪县| 阿拉善左旗| 芜湖县| 白朗县| 苏州市| 文昌市| 沿河| 南靖县| 庆阳市| 延吉市| 陆河县| 灵武市| 怀仁县| 平阴县| 耒阳市| 清远市| 新源县| 怀远县| 成武县| 齐河县| 米易县| 且末县| 平凉市| 南和县| 克什克腾旗|