Book detail: Chinese Poems is presented as a focused source page for quotations connected with this book, collection, transcript, or source record.
Chinese poetry encompasses one of the world's oldest continuous literary traditions, with roots extending over two millennia. Classical forms include shi, ci, and qu, governed by strict tonal patterns, line lengths, and rhyme schemes. The tradition is marked by prominent movements and schools, from the Book of Songs and the works of Qu Yuan through the Tang and Song golden ages, when regulated verse reached particular refinement. Common subjects include landscape, friendship, political exile, philosophical contemplation, and the passage of time. The genre employs characteristic techniques such as parallelism, allusion, and imagistic compression. Modern Chinese poetry has developed through vernacular language reform, engagement with Western forms, and responses to social transformation. Anthologies bearing this title typically present selected works in translation, often organized by period, author, or theme, and may include both original texts and interpretive material to assist readers unfamiliar with the cultural and linguistic context.
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