In this hazy, misty spring time, how we long for the bright, clear autumn. This is how Liu Yuxi, the great late Tang dynasty poet, sees autumn. Read it out loud to be one with him:-
Liu Yuxi (772-842): Autumn
Song, 1 of 2 (As of old when autumn ...)
1 As of old when autumn falls, themes forlorn we bemoan;
2 But I say the autumn day excels any spring morn
known.
3 Flapping skywards, a crane, past clouds white in
the sun,
4 O how my muse of poesy to the heavens azure has
flown.
Translated by Andrew W.F. Wong (Huang Hongfa) 譯者: 黃宏發
22nd October 2008 (revised 23.10.08; 27.10.08;
28.10.08; 10.9.2013)
Translated from the original - 劉禹錫: 秋詞 2首 其1 (自古逢秋 ...)
1 自古逢秋悲寂寥
2 我言秋日勝春朝
3 晴空一鶴排雲上
Notes:
* The original is in 7-character
lines; I have been able to reduce this English rendition into a hexameter (6
metrical feet). The rhyme scheme is AAXA
as in the original.
* Line 1: I had originally used “autumn comes” but have
now decided for “autumn falls”. I had
used “men bemoan” but have now decided for “we bemoan”.
* Line 2: I had considered “surpasses” but have decided
for “excels”.
* Line 3: I had originally penned the line as “Up and soaring
a crane, through the clouds of the sunlit sky” which I find unsatisfactory. Firstly, “Up and soaring … through clouds”,
though an adequate translation of上,
is less than adequate to translate 排雲. Secondly, “clouds” (which implies cloudiness/a
cloudy day) and “sunlit sky” (which implies a sunny sky/a sunny day) are
contradictory. I have now scrambled the
line into “Flapping skywards a crane, past clouds white in the sun”.
* Line 4: I had first penned “And to the azurean skies
above, my poetic passion has flown”, but have now decided for “O how my muse of
poesy, to the heavens azure has flown” dropping the word “azurean” which may be
considered archaic.