A Feast of Lanterns, by L. Cranmer-Byng, [1916], at sacred-texts.com
Introduction | |
Moon | |
Flowers | |
Dragons | |
Sources of Inspiration | |
Chinese Verse Form | |
Epochs in Chinese Poetry | |
Conclusion | |
Lines From The Tomb Of An Unknown Woman | |
A Word From The Wind | |
Wang Po | |
A King of Tang | |
Wang Wei | |
While Roses Fall | |
Li Po | |
Along the Stream | |
The Palace of Chao-Yang | |
The Two Visits | |
Visit to the Cold Clear Spring | |
Visit to the White Stream Rapids | |
Spring Rhapsodies | |
I. Delight | |
II. Sadness | |
III. Sorrow | |
Bright Autumntide | |
| |
Tu Fu | |
In Exile | |
The Ghost-Road | |
Sailing across Lake Mei-Pei | |
Ch‘Ang Ch‘ien | |
The Tomb of Chao-Chün | |
Ts‘ui Hao | |
Boating Song of the Yo Eh | |
Han Yü | |
Disappointment | |
Po Chü-I | |
In Yung-Yang | |
Rain at Dawn | |
Myself | |
Morning Studies | |
The Little Crow | |
At Forty-one | |
A Night on Lake T‘ai | |
Ou-Yang Hsiu | |
Return | |
The Pavilion of Abounding Joy | |
Wild Geese | |
Bell Hill | |
Songs of the Night | |
Wang An-shih | |
At the Parting Ways | |
Su Tung-p‘o | |
Dreaming at Golden Hill | |
At the Kuang-li Pavilion | |
Farewell to Chao Tâ-lin | |
On the River at Hui-Ch‘ung | |
| |
Liu Tzu-hui | |
Listening to the Harp | |
Autumn Moonlight | |
Wen T‘ung | |
Morning | |
Evening | |
Lu Yu | |
Song of Three Gorges | |
Liu Ch‘ang | |
Autumn Thoughts | |
On Waking from Sleep | |
Anon | |
Riding by Moonlight | |
Liu Chi | |
The Convent of Siang-Fu | |
Night, Sorrow, and Song | |
Yang Chi | |
Lines Written in Exile | |
Anon | |
Plum Blossom | |
Calycanthus Flower | |
Yuan Mei | |
A Feast of Lanterns | |
A Medley of Perfume | |
Willow Flowers | |
Illusion | |
The Secret Land | |
In an Old Library | |
A Challenge from the Moon | |
After the Rain | |
Home | |
Note |