Replying To Subprefect Zhang
Wang Wei
Old age think good quiet Everything not concern heart Self attend without great plan Empty know return old forest Pine wind blow undo belt Hill moon light pluck qin Gentleman ask end open reason Fisherman song enter riverbank deep Now in old age, I know the value of silence, The world's affairs no longer stir my heart. Turning to myself, I have no greater plan, All I can do is return to the forest of old. Wind from the pine trees blows my sash undone, The moon shines through the hills; I pluck the qin. You ask me why the world must rise and fall, Fishermen sing on the steep banks of the river.
Next 10 Poems
- Wang Wei : Seeing Off Yuan The Second On A Mission To Anxi
- Wang Wei : Sometimes I'd Walk
- Wang Wei : Song Of An Old General
- Wang Wei : South Hill
- Wang Wei : Stopping At Incense Storing Temple
- Wang Wei : Temple Tree Path
- Wang Wei : The Beautiful Xi Shi
- Wang Wei : The Cornel Grove
- Wang Wei : Thinking Of My Brothers In Shantung On The Ninth Day Of The Ninth Month
- Wang Wei : To Qiwu Qian Bound Home After Failing An Examination.
Previous 10 Poems
- Wang Wei : Remembrance
- Wang Wei : Random Poem
- Wang Wei : Peach Blossom Journey
- Wang Wei : My Retreat At Mount Zhongnan
- Wang Wei : Mount Zhongnan
- Wang Wei : Mengcheng Col
- Wang Wei : Looking Down In A Spring-rain
- Wang Wei : Lily Magnolia Enclosure
- Wang Wei : Lament For Meng Hao-jan
- Wang Wei : Jinzhu Ridge