#cao zhi zijian
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Hey um Your Excellency? Please check on your sons they are Not Okay.
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This is entirely copied from my reblog of this post, but I just thought I'd put this in a post of my own for safekeeping on this hellsite or I'd literally never find the translation of Xingnv's Lament I did for this reblog ever again but. Anyway!
Whenever I think about the fact that like, people claim historical people grieved less about child and infant mortality I want to start biting because here's the translation of the Cao Zhi's poem on losing a daughter (yes the Cao Zhi of the infamous bean poem/Seven Step Quatrain fame) written sometime in the 200s AD: 行女哀辞
序:行女生于季秋,而终于首夏。三年之中,二子频丧。 伊上帝之降命,何修短之难哉;或华发以终年,或怀妊而逢灾。 感前哀之未阕,复新殃之重来!方朝华而晚敷,比晨露而先晞。 感逝者之不���,情忽忽而失度。天盖高而无阶,怀此恨其谁诉!
Xingnv's Lament
Preface: My youngest daughter, Xingnv, was born in late autumn and died in early summer of the following year. In just three years, two beloved daughters died one after another. The heavens grant precious life to people, yet why is the length of that life so hard to guess Some people are fortunate to live to old age, others die young in the womb I have yet to finish grieving for Jinhu*, yet I have to see Xingnv** buried in dust This poor child falls like the hibiscus, life drying like the morning dew I thought of that young life that could never return, and lose my normal composure Resenting that the heavens have no stairs for me to climb, to pour out the sorrows of my heart
*Jinhu is the first child that he mentioned
**Xingnv is the daughter he dedicated this poem to
Like! DESPITE what people will tell you people often grieved their children, yes, even daughters which, historical fiction SO often say that fathers hated having Girl Children or whatever. We only know Cao Jinhu and Cao Xingnv's names because their father wrote them down. And grieved their absence.
"Resenting that the heavens have no stairs for me to climb" is SO bleak and so utterly fucking devastating.
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Whenever I think about the fact that like, people claim historical people grieved less about child and infant mortality I want to start biting because here's the translation of the Cao Zhi's poem on losing a daughter (yes the Cao Zhi of the infamous bean poem/Seven Step Quatrain) fame written sometime in the 200s AD: 行女哀辞
序:行女生于季秋,而终于首夏。三年之中,二子频丧。 伊上帝之降命,何修短之难哉;或华发以终年,或怀妊而逢灾。 感前哀之未阕,复新殃之重来!方朝华而晚敷,比晨露而先晞。 感逝者之不追,情忽忽而失度。天盖高而无阶⑾,怀此恨其谁诉!
Xingnv's Lament
Preface: My youngest daughter, Xingnv, was born in late autumn and died in early summer of the following year. In just three years, two beloved daughters died one after another. The heavens grant precious life to people, yet why is the length of that life so hard to guess Some people are fortunate to live to old age, others die young in the womb I have yet to finish grieving for Jinhu*, yet I have to see Xingnv** buried in dust this poor child falls like the hibiscus, life drying like the morning dew I thought of that young life that could never return, and lose my normal composure Resenting that the heavens have no stairs for me to climb, to pour out the sorrows of my heart
*Jinhu is the first child that he mentioned
**Xingnv is the daughter he dedicated this poem to
Like! DESPITE what people will tell you people often grieved their children, yes, even daughters which, historical fiction SO often say that fathers hated having Girl Children or whatever. We only know Cao Jinhu and Cao Xingnv's names because their father wrote them down. And grieved their absence.
"Resenting that the heavens have no stairs for me to climb" is SO bleak and so utterly fucking devastating.
i have to carefully avoid thinking too hard about any time period before like the 1900s because i start thinking about all the dead babies and i fucking lose it
like!!!! i trully cannot countenance any argument that the past was better when nearly HALF of all young children died.
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cao zhi (courtesy name zijian) was a prince of the state of cao wei, the third son of cao cao, and an accomplished poet in his time. despite his literary talent, as a prince, he was described as an impetuous man with little self-discipline, as well as a chronic drunkard.
#this dude was a brilliant poet but a political failure and ended up exiled and disgraced and died at 41 and his bones were then lost#me if i were a cocky young prince in his father's court vying for succession in a power struggle with his brother ^^^^#the8#xu minghao#minghao#seventeen#97.gifs
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In the second year of Jiaping (409), the first month, Tufa Nutan appointed his son Tufa Mingdegui as General of the Household Gentlemen of the South and acting Administrator of Changsong. This Tufa Mingdegui was talented, bright, intelligent, and perceptive, and Tufa Nutan greatly favored him. Although Tufa Mingdegui was a mere twelve years old, Tufa Nutan ordered him to compose a rhapsody called Rhapsody to Gaochang Hall. No sooner had Tufa Mingdegui picked up his brush than he was finished writing; the shadows had not even moved. Tufa Nutan was overjoyed when he read it, comparing Tufa Mingdegui to Cao Zijian (Cao Zhi).
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Cao Zhi getting name dropped in the Taiheiki again. Good on him.
(Note: Tzu-Chien is Zijian, Cao Zhi’s style name.)
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xu minghao on dancing millennium, playing the role of cao zhi (曹植; 192 – 232), courtesy name zijian (子建), a prince of the state of cao wei and third son of cao cao. he was an accomplished poet in his time. his style of poetry later became known as the jian’an style.
#anyways idk i'm really just making gifs to procrastinate on studying#seventeen#the8#minghao#97.gifs#how do ppl get their gifs to look so crisp. like. after reducing to 540 px and then sharpening after i'm still struggling.#love a pretty boy wearing a pretty guan with pretty hands playing guqin
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