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"Yang's Su Shi
poems are fabulous; his typographically four-square
form is a real innovation. I love the way the rhythmic rests
and
line-breaks furrow these small plots of arable poetry."
—Richard
Sieburth
Su Shi was born in Meishan,
Sichuan Province in the year 1037 and died in 1101 (from Harefoot
to
Henry I in Anglo-Saxon terms). As poet-painter-calligrapher
he is recognized as the singular figure of the Song Dynasty.
He
excelled at many different literary styles and wrote at least
twenty-four hundred poems. At age twenty-two he passed the
highest imperial examinations and for the rest of his life moved
from
post to post as a rootless, wandering government magistrate.
Twice he was exiled. He wrote East Slope—a
cycle of eight poems with a preface—during the first
of these periods in 1081, while farming a plot of land on East
Slope. A Daoist-Confucian-Buddhist
spirit flows through these poems like a sparkling spring of
thought-words, firmly rooted to earth and field. It was here
he named himself
Su Dongpo (Su of East Slope). His life-practice of writing
can be summed up by this description he once gave of Wu Daozi's
paintings: "New
ideas follow the inner pattern; subtle mysteries arise outside
bold unrestraint." This gorgeous, bilingual edition of
East Slope is threaded together with photographic images and
includes
an informative afterword by the translator, Jeffrey Yang.
Jeffrey Yang works as the poetry editor for New Directions Publishing.
He has published a limited-edition translation of Tang-Song Dynasty
poems called Rhythm 226. His collection of poems, An Aquarium,
will be published by Graywolf Press in the Fall of 2008.
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