Guest poem submitted by Lisa:
(Poem #1503) Shijo The rise and fall of nations are myriad; Taebang Fortress is covered with autumn grass. To the herdsman's pipes I'll leave my ignorance of the past and I'll drink a cup to this great age of peace. |
This poem appeared today in the Korean Herald, in their "A Poem for Breakfast" feature. I was struck by the first line, pointing to the ephemeral nature of even great nations, as they rise, fall, and are eventually become covered over with grass. In the midst of daily bad news from all corners of the world, much of it caused by nations attempting to create some sort of permanence for themselves and their ideologies, a sentiment such as this strikes me as, bizarrely, hopeful. Nations come and go, always. I think I'll join Chong Chol in leaving my ignorance and drinking a cup -- though I wonder if the age he lived in was really the great age of peace! The poem appeared here: http://www.koreaherald.co.kr/SITE/data/html_dir/2004/04/15/asp The Korean Herald had this to say about the poem: Chong Chol, the great poet-bureaucrat of the mid-Joseon period, treats one of the great themes of literature, the ephemeral nature of human existence. His stance is typically Korean. He says, concentrate on how good things are now and forget the turbulence of the past! Taebang Fortress is today's Namwon in North Jeolla Province, Chunhyang's town. More information about the Joseon period can be found here: [broken link] http://www.korea.net/learnaboutkorea/history/earlyjoseon.html [broken link] http://www.korea.net/learnaboutkorea/history/latejoseon.html More information on the Taebang Fortress (today the Namwon Castle) can be found here: [broken link] http://namwon.jeonbuk.kr/eng/sub/usan/nam.htm --Lisa
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