Today, I am posting my latest rendition of yet another tune lyric poem 詞 by the great Song 宋 dynasty lady poet Li Qingzhao 李清照. The poem was probably written some time after the death of the poet's husband Zhao Mingcheng 趙明誠. The poem is a superb example of a plain and personal yet subtle and restrained elegy mourning the loss of her husband.
Li Qingzhao (1084-1151): Nan Ge Zi (A
Southern Song) – Mourning the Dead
1
Up in the heavens, the starry river turns;
2
Down here on earth, curtains, drapes hang low.
3
The air chilling, my tears dripping, dousing my mat and pillow;
4
I rise to disrobe my silken o'erclothes, and idly wonder
4a How old the night has grown.
5
‘Tis a robe of small lotus-pods, patched on in green,
6
And a few leaves of the lotus, gilt-threaded, yellowed.
7
The same seasonal clime of old time, the selfsame old-time robe;
8
Only my sentiments aren't quite the same, as those I'd known
8a In our days in time of old.
Translated by Andrew W.F. Wong (Huang
Hongfa) 譯者: 黃宏發
26 June 2019 (revised 3.7.19; 4.7.19;
5.7.19; 9.7.19; 12.7.19; 14.7.19; 20.7.19; 31.7.19)
Translated from the original - 李清照: 南歌子 -- 悼亡
1
天上星河轉
2
人間簾幕垂
3
涼生枕簟淚痕滋
4
起解羅衣 聊問
4a 夜何其
5
翠貼蓮蓬小
6
金銷藕葉稀
7
舊時天氣舊時衣
8
只有情懷不似
8a 舊家時
Notes:
*Form, Metre and Rhyme: The original is a tune lyric poem or “ci” 詞 to the tune of Nan
Ge Zi 南歌子 (A Southern Song), entitled 悼亡
“Mourning the Dead”, which is in 2 stanzas of 26 characters (=single
syllable words) each with a line length pattern of 5-5/ 7-9 (or 4-5)// 5-5/ 7-9
(or 4-5)//. This English rendition follows the same pattern, counting feet or
beats (not words nor syllables) for the line length. This English rendition also follows strictly
the rhyme scheme of the original: xA/ AA (or AxA)// xA/ AA (or AxA). Unable to find perfect rhyme words (as there
are far fewer such words in the English language than the Chinese), I have used the assonance of
the “ou” sound as rhyme: “low -2”, “pillow -3”, “grown -4a”,
“yellowed -6”, “robe -7”, and “old -8a”.
*Line 1:
天 (sky) 上 (above) is rendered as “Up in the heavens”. 星
(stars) 河
(river) refers to the Milky Way and is translated literally as
“the starry river”, and 轉
(turn), also literally as “turns”.
*Line 2:
人 (human beings) 間
(amid, world) is rendered as “Down here on earth”. I suggest reading “here” unstressed. 簾幕 (screen, curtain) 垂
(drop closed) is translated as “curtains, drapes hang low”.
*Line 3: 涼 (coolness) 生 (emanating) is
rendered as “The air chilling”. 枕 (pillow) 簟 (mat) is translated
literally as “my mat and pillow” and moved to the end of the line. 淚
(tears) 痕
(stain) 滋
(thrive) is rendered as “my tears dripping, dousing …” and
moved to the middle of the line.
*Lines 4 and 4a: 起
(rise) 解
(untie) 羅
(silk) 衣 (clothes) in line 4 is rendered as “I rise to disrobe my silken
o’erclothes”. 聊 (casually) 問 (ask) in line 4 is rendered as "and idly wonder, and 夜 (night) 何其 (how so) in line
4a, as “How old the night has grown”. I am grateful to the famed Chinese poetry translator 許淵冲 Xu Yuanchong from whom I have borrowed his rendition of the same as “Wondering how old night has grown” (p. 403 in
his “Bilingual Edition 300 Song Lyrics”, Higher Education Press, Beijing, 2004).
*Lines 5 and 6: In the original, these 2 lines describe the
embroidery on a piece of clothing without saying it is a piece of clothing and
without indicating whether it is being changed into or changed out of. These lines follow from “I disrobe …” in line
4. To make sense of them, I have added
“’Tis a robe of” to begin the lines. The
very specific word “robe” is chosen as it makes better sense for an embroidered
piece of clothing, after having considered the less specific words of “gown” and
“dress” which can refer to nightclothes.
*Line 5:
翠 (green) 貼 (patched) is rendered as “patched on in green”. 蓮
(lotus) 蓬
(pods) 小
(small) is literally translated as “small lotus-pods”. These reveal that the pattern of the
embroidery on the dress is primarily that of many new and young, therefore, “small”
and “green” lotus-pods which would eventually bear a myriad of lotus
seeds. I take this pattern to be a wish
for plentiful off-springs, or 百子千孫
(hundred sons, thousand grandsons).
*Line 6:
For 金 (gold, gilt) 銷
(melt metal), I had originally considered “embroidered in
gold” but have decided for “gilt-threaded, yellowed”, using “gilt-threaded” to render
the meaning of the original which, in my view, means “stitched with gold thread”. To follow “gilt-threaded”, I have added
“yellowed” (after considering “, yellow” or “in yellow”, or even with
“embroidered” replacing “gilt-threaded”) to spell out the colour to complete
the picture of a few withered, hence, yellowed lotus leaves in the background of many
green lotus-pods. 藕 (lotus) 葉 (leave) 稀 (sparse) is
translated literally as “And a few leaves of the lotus”.
*Line 7:
天氣 (climate, weather) is rendered as “seasonal clime” which is autumn
as implied but not specified (“air chilling” and “mat” in line 3) in the poem,
and 衣 is translated specifically as “robe” to refer back to “disrobe” in
line 3 and “robe” in line 5. 舊 (old) 時 (time) which
appears twice in the line is rendered as: “The same (seasonal clime) of old time”
in the first half line, and “the selfsame old-time (robe)” in the second half line. 舊時衣 should be taken to refer to "the very robe/ clothes she used to wear". The second half line was originally rendered as "the very same old robe". I have now revised it to "the selfsame old-time robe" (the selfsame = the very). With this: the 3 words of "same", "old" and "time" are all replicated not only in these 2 half lines but also in the 舊(家)時 in line 8a.
I have revised "are not the same" in line 8 to "aren't quite the same" which is less categorical, hence, closer in meaning to 不似 which it translates. Lines 8 and 8a now read:
ReplyDelete8 Only my sentiments aren't quite the same
8a As those I'd known in our days in time of old.
These revisions (together with the relevant notes) have now been effected in the original post.
Lines 4+4a and 8+8a in the original Chinese are in fact not 4 lines but 2 9-character lines, each split into 2 half lines. I have rearranged them from a 4-5 split to a 6-3 split. The same is done to this English rendition without changing a single word. The lines now read:
ReplyDelete4 I rise to disrobe my silken o'erclothes, and idly wonder
4a How old the night has grown.
8 Only my sentiments aren't quite the same, as those I'd known
8a In our days in time of old.
I have revised the second half of line 7 from "the very same old robe" to "the selfsame old-time robe" to make it possible to replicate the 3 words "same", "old" and "time" in the last 3 lines of the poems. These lines (with the 3 said words in brackets) now read:
ReplyDelete7 The [same] seasonal clime of [old] [time], the self[same] [old]-[time] robe;
8 Only my sentiments aren't quite the [same], as those I'd known
8a In our days in [time] of [old].
This revision and the note on line 7 are all effected in the original post.
I have nothing valuable to add, I just want to say that, for a beginning student in classical Chinese like me, this is great. Thank you for your work.
ReplyDelete