Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Authors - Li Po

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 1     1-20 of 183    1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Li Po:     more books (101)
  1. The Selected Poems of Li Po by Bai Li, David Hinton, et all 1996-05
  2. Li Po and Tu Fu: Poems Selected and Translated with an Introduction and Notes (Penguin Classics) by Arthur Cooper, Tu Fu, 1973-07-30
  3. The Works Of Li Po, The Chinese Poet (1922) by Shigeyoshi Obata, 2008-06-02
  4. Five T'ang Poets by Wang Wei, Li Po, et all 1990-03
  5. Endless River: Li Po and Tu Fu : A Friendship in Poetry
  6. Facing the Moon: Poems of Li Bai and Du Fu by Li Bai or Li Po, Du Fu or Tu Fu, 2007-10-15
  7. Poetry and Career of Li Po (Ethical & Religious Classics of E.& W.) by Arthur Waley, 1951-06
  8. Ha li po te (4) - huo bei de kao yan ('Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire' in Traditional Chinese Characters) by J. K. Rowling, J.K. Rowling, 2001-12
  9. The Works of Li Po: The Chinese Poet by Bai Li, Shigeyoshi Obata, 2010-04-22
  10. The Ascended Masters: Who Are They & What Are Their Teachings? by Li Po, 2004
  11. Li Pai: 200 Selected Poems by Li Po, 1981-09
  12. The Poet Li Po (Pali Language Texts-Chinese) by Teng C. Yung, 1975-09
  13. Like Li-po Lauging at the Lonely Moon by Chuck Taylor, 2008-11
  14. The poet Li Po, A.D. 701-762 by Arthur. Waley, 1919-01-01

1. THE LI PO SOCIETY OF AMERICA
Welcome to the li po Society of America online. The li po Society of America is a cultural association dedicated to
http://www.levity.com/interbeing/lipo.html
Welcome to the Li Po Society of America online. The Li Po Society of America is a cultural association dedicated to bridging East and West, now in its twelfth year. Here's a list of some of our publications:
  • The Moon ~ (a bilingual Chinese poetry anthology for beginning students)
  • Mountain of Interbeing ~ zen poems by Wang Wei
  • Cathay, Revisted
  • 40 Songs of Xanadu
  • 35 Chinese Folk Songs
  • Chinese Fables for Children
  • Adventures in Haikuland
  • Love Poems of the Sixth Dalai Lama
  • River Willows and Other Senryu We're posting samples of each, bit by bit. We'll also be using hypertext to demonstrate some unique properties of Asian poetics and unveiling some other surprise delights. So stop by again, from time to time.
For further information, please write to: The Li Po Society of America
1024 Powell Street
San Francisco, CA 94108-1546 or Gary Gach , Secretary General
return to Gary's home page

2. Li Po
li po (Àî °×) This page includes both English and Chinese versions. All Chinese texts are in GB code
http://www.dpo.uab.edu/~yangzw/libai.html
Li Po (Àî °×)
This page includes both English and Chinese versions. All Chinese texts are in GB code About the poet
Drinking Alone with the Moon

A Farewell to Secretary Shu-yun at the Hsieh Tiao Villa in Hsuan-Chou

The Hard Road
...
On Climbing in Nan-king to the Terrace of Phoenixes

3. Li Po
Contains poems by li po, the Taoist poet.Category Society Religion and Spirituality Taoism Arts......li po. DRINKING ALONE BY MOONLIGHT. Three Poems 1. A cup of wine,under the flowering trees; I drink alone, for no friend is near.
http://www.poetrystore.com/lipo.html
Li Po
DRINKING ALONE BY MOONLIGHT
Three Poems
A cup of wine, under the flowering trees;
I drink alone, for no friend is near.
Raising my cup I beckon the bright moon,
For he, with my shadow, will make three men.
The moon, alas, is no drinker of wine;
Listless, my shadow creeps about at my side.
Yet with the moon as friend and the shadow as slave
I must make merry before the Spring is spent.
To the songs I sing the moon flickers her beams;
In the dance I weave my shadow tangles and breaks. While we were sober, three shared the fun; Now we are drunk, each goes his way. May we long share our odd, inanimate feast, And meet at last on the Cloudy River of the sky.(i) II IN the third month the town of Hsien-yang Is thick-spread with a carpet of fallen flowers. Who in Spring can bear to grieve alone? Who, sober, look on sights like these? Riches and Poverty, long or short life, By the Maker of Things are portioned and disposed; But a cup of wine levels life and death And a thousand things obstinately hard to prove. When I am drunk, I lose Heaven and Earth

4. Li Po
li po (A.D. 701 762)
http://www.cs.uiowa.edu/~yhe/poetry/li_po_poems.html

5. Poetry Reading - China The Beautiful
English translation of Li Bai's poems. Li Bai Poetry. li po, Li TaiPo. English Translation
http://www.chinapage.com/libai/libai2e.html
Li Bai Poetry
[Li Po, Li Tai-Po] English Translation You ask me why I dwell in the green mountain; I smile and make no reply for my heart is free of care. As the peach-blossom flows down stream and is gone into the unknown, I have a world apart that is not among men.
[To Chinese text

[43] Green Mountain Chang-an one slip of moon; in ten thousand houses, the sound of fulling mallets. Autumn winds keep on blowing, all things make me think of Jade Pass! When will they put down the barbarians and my good man come home from his far campaign? [To Chinese text
[04] Ziyi Song Amidst the flowers a jug of wine, I pour alone lacking companionship. So raising the cup I invite the Moon, Then turn to my shadow which makes three of us. Because the Moon does not know how to drink, My shadow merely follows the movement of my body. The moon has brought the shadow to keep me company a while, The practice of mirth should keep pace with spring. I start a song and the moon begins to reel, I rise and dance and the shadow moves grotesquely.

6. Li Po
li po (701762) was probably the greatest Chinese poets of premorden times.
http://www.dpo.uab.edu/~yangzw/libai1.html
Li Po (701-762) was probably the greatest Chinese poets of premorden times. It is generally agreed that he and Tu Fu raised in the shih form to its highest level of powerand expressiveness; later poets at times approached but never surpassed them.
Li Po's distinctionlies in the fact that he brought an unparalleled grace and eloquence to his treament of the traditional themes,a flow and grandeur that lift his work far above of mere immitation of the past. Another characteristic of his poetry is the air of playfulness, hyperbole and outright fantasy that infuses much of it.
Li Po grew up in Szechwan in western China and later traveled extensively in the eastern and central regions.Around 742 he gained recognition from emperor Hsuan-tsung (Xuan Zong) and was appointed to a post in the Hanlin Academy, but a few years later he was exiled from the capital as a result of slanders. He fled south at the time of the rebellion in 755 and entered the service of Prince Yung. The Prince's downfall involved Li Po in a second exile, though he was eventuallypardoned and resumed his life of wandering.
from the Columbia Book of Chinese Poetry Drinking Alone with the Moon From a pot of wine among the flowers
I drank alone.There was no one with me

7. Poetry Magazine, Classic Poet: Li Po, November 2000
li po (701762). by Doug Tanoury,
http://www.poetrymagazine.com/archives/2000/November00/po.htm
Li Po (701-762)
by Doug Tanoury,
Associate Editor
CHINA Also known as Li Bo, Li Bai is one of the most celebrated poets of the golden age of Chinese poetry. He lived in the first half of the 8 th century, during the T’ang Dynasty. It is difficult to separate legend and myth from the actual history of Li Po’s life. Yet poetry was practiced and celebrated among the nobility in China. In-depth knowledge of this art form and its history was a prerequisite for the educated. Poetry was equated with "chi", the source of human energy and balance that also forms the basis of the ancient Chinese method of medicine called acupuncture. At 19 Lo Po’s is said to have left home to live with a Taoist recluse. His writing reflect Taoist influences, in both its reflective and contemplative tone as well with its close connection, if not preoccupation, with nature. Raised in Szechwan province in western China, Li Po traveled extensively in the eastern and central regions. The emperor Hsuan-tsung (Xuan Zong reigned AD 712-756) recognized Li Po appointed him to a post in the famous Hanlin Academy that Hsuan-tsung was forming. Li Po was obviously a poet of the Chinese imperial court. Legend has it that caught up in political intrigue, he was forced from the emperor’s court and traveled much of China. Through several exiles, imprisonments and pardons, Li Po seems to always be swept up in the political winds of the moment, much more like a politician than a poet.

8. Li Po (2)
li po. LAZY MAN'S SONG. AD 811). I HAVE got patronage, but am toolazy to use it; I have got land, but am too lazy to farm it. My
http://www.poetrystore.com/lipo(2).html
Li Po
LAZY MAN'S SONG
[A. D. 811)
I HAVE got patronage, but am too lazy to use it;
I have got land, but am too lazy to farm it.
My house leaks; I am too lazy to mend it.
My clothes are torn; I am too lazy to darn them.
I have got wine, but am too lazy to drink;
So it's just the same as if my cellar were empty.
I have got a harp, but am too lazy to play;
So it's just the same as if it had no strings.
My wife tells me there is no more bread in the house;
I want to bake, but am too lazy to grind.
My friends and relatives write me long letters; I should like to read them, but they're such a bother to open. I have always been told that Chi Shu-yeh* Passed his whole life in absolute idleness. But he played the harp and sometimes transmuted metals, So even he was not so lazy as I. * Also known as Chi K'ang. A famous Quietist.
WINTER NIGHT
[Written during his retirement in 812]
MY house is poor; those that I love have left me; My body is sick; I cannot join the feast. There is not a living soul before my eyes As I lie alone locked in my cottage room.

9. Li Po
Poetry li po. 701762 AD. Also RomanisedLi Pai, Li T'aipo, Li Bai, et cetera.
http://cscs.umich.edu/~crshalizi/Poetry/Li_Po/
Poetry
Li Po
701762 A.D. Also Romanised Li Pai, Li T'ai-po, Li Bai, et cetera. Versions by Ezra Pound , which are (to put it as politely as possible) questionable translations but vintage Pound:

10. Li Po's Hermitage
li po's Hermitage Adventure Gaming. AD D2 Generic Character Generator for MSDOS. Welcome.li po is a peace-loving human cleric of the Kwan Yin sect.
http://www.pathguy.com/lipo.htm
Li Po's Hermitage Adventure Gaming for MS-DOS.
for MS-DOS.
Alternity Science Fiction Character Generator
for MS-DOS
Alternity Spaceship Generator
for MS-DOS
Birthright Character Generator
for MS-DOS.
Dark Sun 2 Character Generator
version 2.3a and documentation for MS-DOS.
Lankhmar Character Generator

Jakandor Character Generator

Planescape Character Generator
for MS-DOS.
Psionics Character Generator
for MS-DOS.
Red Death Character Generator
for MS-DOS. for MS-DOS; now version 4.20.

11. Li Po's Alternity Page
MS-DOS character and spaceship generation software.Category Games Roleplaying Genres Science Fiction Alternity...... li po is pleased to offer a MSDOS character generator and a spaceship generatorfor players of TSR's fantastic new science fiction game, Alternity .
http://www.pathguy.com/alter.htm
Li Po's Alternity Page MS-DOS Character Generators Li Po is pleased to offer a MS-DOS character generator and a spaceship generator for players of TSR's fantastic new science fiction game, "Alternity". He and I hope that this helps generate interest and sales for this wholesome, masterfully-prepared gaming system. You must run the program from an MS-DOS prompt, and it must be in a directory with eight or fewer letters in its name. Since this is an ongoing project, Li Po still needs testers. The current version offer "Star Drive", "Dark Matter", and independent options. If you would like a free copy of the generator, and to receive updates, send your request to erf@uhs.edu . Mention "Alternity" on your subject line. If you prefer, you can download directly... Versions:
    1.00 "Player's Handbook" rather than early edition
    1.01 Corrected costs for skills associated with two professions
    1.02 Unarmed damage listed
    1.03 Initial last resort point assignment corrected, skills modifiers to resistance modifiers corrected, scores for purchased broad skills applied to unpurchased their specialty skills
    1.04 Weapons, cybergear, short sheets for supporting cast. The original (pre-release) limits on high scores (i.e., a human can have only one 14, etc.) made optional.

12. Thanks For Visiting!
li po's Guide to Advanced Dungeons and Dragons has shifted dimensionsto http//www.pathguy.com/lipo.htm. Thanks for visiting!
http://www.worldmall.com/erf/lipo.htm
Li Po's Guide to Advanced Dungeons and Dragons has shifted dimensions to http://www.pathguy.com/lipo.htm Thanks for visiting!

13. Li Po (2)
This page contains poems by li po, the Chinese poet li po. LAZY MAN'S SONG
http://www.poetrystore.com/lipo%282%29.html
Li Po
LAZY MAN'S SONG
[A. D. 811)
I HAVE got patronage, but am too lazy to use it;
I have got land, but am too lazy to farm it.
My house leaks; I am too lazy to mend it.
My clothes are torn; I am too lazy to darn them.
I have got wine, but am too lazy to drink;
So it's just the same as if my cellar were empty.
I have got a harp, but am too lazy to play;
So it's just the same as if it had no strings.
My wife tells me there is no more bread in the house;
I want to bake, but am too lazy to grind.
My friends and relatives write me long letters; I should like to read them, but they're such a bother to open. I have always been told that Chi Shu-yeh* Passed his whole life in absolute idleness. But he played the harp and sometimes transmuted metals, So even he was not so lazy as I. * Also known as Chi K'ang. A famous Quietist.
WINTER NIGHT
[Written during his retirement in 812]
MY house is poor; those that I love have left me; My body is sick; I cannot join the feast. There is not a living soul before my eyes As I lie alone locked in my cottage room.

14. Li Po
iu. Both were friends of li po. ** The Mountain. li po travelled around easternTzechiang for an extended period when he was young. ** Hsieh
http://www.cs.uiowa.edu/~yhe/poetry/li_po_main.html
Gazing at the Cascade on Lu Mountain Where crowns a purple haze
Ashimmer in sunlight rays
The hill called Incense-Burner Peak, from far
To see, hung o'er the torrent's wall,
That waterfall
Vault sheer three thousand feet, you'd say
The Milky Way
Was tumbling from the high heavens, star on star
Compare this poem with Tu Fu 's "Gazing at The Great Mount" Night Thoughts
(Written to Music) The bright moon shone
before my bed, I wondered was it frost upon the ground? I raised my head to gaze at the clear moon, Bowed my head remembering my old home. The Borderland Moon (Written to Music) A clear moon rising over T'ien Shan* Glides into a boundless sea of cloud; Steady wind from the far, far distance Howls across the Yü-men pass. The Sons of Han descend the Pai-teng road,** Tartars peer into the Kokonor; Since the old days this was a battleground From which no living man ever returned.

15. Seventeen Lyrics Of Li Po
Harry Partch's. Seventeen Lyrics of li po. The Seventeen Lyrics of li po were composedbetween 1931 and 1933 and are among Partch's earliest extant compositions.
http://www.webcom.com/~tmook/lipo.html
Harry Partch's
Seventeen Lyrics of Li Po
Tzadik (TZ7012) Stephen Kalm , Intoning Voice
Ted Mook
, tenor violin "The Tzadik disc is welcome simply because it is the first new issue of Partch's music in a couple of decades. The recorded sound is far and away the finest of any Partch disc..." (American Record Guide, Sept./Oct. 1996) Total time: 36:46
  • 1. The Long Departed Lover 1:30
  • 2. On the City Street :39
  • 3. An Encounter in the Field :53
  • 4. The Intruder 1:14
  • 5. On Ascending the Sin-Ping Tower 1:47
  • 6. In the Springtime on the South Side of the Yangtze Kiang 3:32
  • 7. The Night of Sorrow 1:46
  • 8. On Hearing the Flute in the Yellow Crane House 1:58
  • 9. On Hearing the Flute at Lo-Cheng One Spring Night 1:46
  • 10. A Dream 5:49
  • 11. On Seeing Off Meng Hao-Jan 2:26
  • 12. On the Ship of Spice-wood 3:09
  • 13. With a Man of Leisure 1:10
  • 14. A Midnight Farewell 1:49
  • 15. Before the Cask of Wine 2:52
  • 16. By the Great Wall 2:03
  • 17. I am a Peach Tree 2:17

An Encounter in the Field
(153K, Aiff file)
I am a Peach Tree
(247K, Aiff file) PROGRAM NOTES: "I am first and last a composer. I have been provoked into becoming a musical theorist, and instrument builder, a musical apostate, and a musical idealist, simply because I have been a demanding composer.

16. Li Po
10 A Vindication. 11 Nefarious War. 12 Before The Cask of Wine. Source. Introduction.li po was probably born about 701 CE, and is believed to have died in 762.
http://www.humanistictexts.org/LiPo.htm
Click Home For Topic Search, Up For Period Summary Contents Introduction 1 On A Picture Screen 2 To Wang Lun 3 Three—With the Moon and His Shadow ... Source
Introduction
Li Po was probably born about 701 CE, and is believed to have died in 762. He was a native of Sezchaun and while still in his teens retired to mountains in the north of the province to live with a religious recluse by the name of Tunyen-tzu. The two of them were said to keep strange birds as pets. Li Po later traveled down the Yangtze to Yun-meng, a town north of the river and Tung-ting Lake, where he married. From then on his occupation became that of a wandering poet. Throughout his life he produced an abundance of poems on many different subjects—particularly nature, wine, friendship, solitude, and the passage of time. He has since become recognized by many as the greatest of the highly talented array of Tang poets. He stayed for a few years in various places, traveled extensively, and became for a time one of the Six Idlers of the Bamboo Valley , who celebrated wine and song in the mountains of Chu-lai. All this did not provide a satisfactory existence for his first wife, who left him with their two children. He appears to have married three times.

17. Li Po's
Literary San Francisco li po's. Unmistakable with 762). li po's work celebratesnatural beauty, love, friendship, solitude, and drink. He
http://www.mistersf.com/literary/litlipos.htm
Literary San Francisco: Li Po's Unmistakable with its cave like entrance at 916 Grant, Li Po's is a Chinatown literary bar named for the erudite Chinese poet Li Po (701-762). Li Po's work celebrates natural beauty, love, friendship, solitude, and drink. He is one of the great poets of the Tang Dynasty, China's Golden Age of poetry. mistersf.com home

18. Li Po
li po. li po (pronounced as li bô, also known as Li Bai, li bye, or Li T'aipo,li tye bô) was born in what is now Sichuan province in the T'ang Dynasty.
http://poetry.about.com/library/weekly/bllipo.htm
zfp=-1 About Homework Help Poetry Search in this topic on About on the Web in Products Web Hosting
Poetry
with
Your Guide to one of hundreds of sites Home Articles Forums ... Help zmhp('style="color:#fff"') Subjects ESSENTIALS Poetry Currents -from our correspondents About Poetry Museletters Poets in the News ... All articles on this topic Stay up-to-date!
Subscribe to our newsletter.
Advertising Free Credit Report
Free Psychics

Advertisement
Li Po Related Resources Our library of Classical poets
Elsewhere on the Web Li Po poems in English at China the Beautiful
Li Po
at Asian Topics
Drinking Alone Under the Moon

Li “Wiseguy” Po, the maestro himself, author of 100,000 poems, all of them better than anything you’ll ever write. Li Po (pronounced as li bô , also known as Li Bai, li bye , or Li T'ai-po, li tye bô ) was born in what is now Sichuan province in the T'ang Dynasty. He was a nobody in a class-bound Confucian society. He lived the wild mad poet’s life when poets had real jobs connected with courts and businesses you could not be fired! So, he was banished in 744.

19. Poetry Today Online : Classic Poets: LI PO
li po (701762) A major Chinese poet in the T in the Milky Way. LiPo(AD 701-762) Translated by Rewi Alley Confessional There was
http://www.poetrytodayonline.com/DECcp.html
December 1998 LI PO
A major Chinese poet in the T'ang Dynasty, Li Po was a romantic who wrote about the joys of nature, love, friendship, solitude, and wine. While gaining a reputation as a poet, he tried in vain to become an official at court.
Li Po was born in 701 in what is now the province of Sichuan (Szechwan). He began to live as a wanderer when he was 19. After a few years he married and settled down temporarily with his wife's family near Hankou, now a part of Wuhan. Attempts to use his poetry to gain an official position failed and, in 734, he began to wander again. In 742 he arrived at the capital city, the present-day Xi'an, and lived for a time among the other poets at court without ever getting an official appointment. In 744 he left the city and, during another period of wandering, steeped himself in the Taoist religion. In 757 Li Po joined an expedition, led by one of the emperor's sons, to put down a rebellion in southern China. Accused of trying to set up an autonomous kingdom, the prince was arrested and executed. Li Po was jailed for a time and released. He died in 762 in the province of Anhui (Anhwei).
She Spins Silk
by Li Po (701-762)
Far up river in Szechuan

20. Poetry Archives @ EMule.com
li po. (701762). Farewell to Secretary Shu-yun at the Hsieh Tiao Villain Hsuan-Chou Since yesterday had throw me and bolt,; A Mountain
http://www.emule.com/poetry/?page=overview&author=16

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 1     1-20 of 183    1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | Next 20

free hit counter