No one should be
surprised
By my humble home
Nor feel envious
of
The handiwork
So unadorned
There’s a simple
reason for
Living without
surplus
Once you start
writing
You feel unconcerned
Green bamboo leaves
Make a fine sleeping
mat
Simple black
muslin
Makes a good
washcloth
Everything else
is
Just fine as it
is
Enough of a
tribute
To my bodily
needs
无长物
白居易
莫讶家居窄 无嫌活计贫
只缘无长物 始得作闲人
青竹单床簟 乌纱独幅巾
其馀皆称是 亦足奉吾身
We tend think of
the struggling artist as a uniquely modern character, pursuing his or her
creative vision notwithstanding the indifference of bourgeois norms – This has been an important part of the
identity and myth of the modern artist ever since the advent of the industrial
era – equally true for the painters and poets whether they were sharing their day
old crusty loaf in a cold Parisian garret or in a dingy walk-up on the Lower
East Side.
But really
there’s nothing unique to modernity in this story. That’s part of what I find beautiful in this
poem written by Bai Juyi in the first
half of the 9th century, which I translated this morning. Apparently artists have been willing and content to live
on the edge for quite a long time. This was just as true during the Tang Dynasty, when poetry was exalted as a form of artistic expression, as it is today, when it is more or less relegated to the margins. Perhaps we should consider it as approaching a universal truth -- once you start writing poetry it's much easier to be content with a crust of bread and glass of cheap red wine.
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