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- "Yu Fu" or "The Fisherman" (traditional Chinese: 漁父; simplified Chinese: 渔父; pinyin: yú fù; "fisherman") is a short work anthologized in the Chu Ci (楚辭 Songs of Chu, sometimes called The Songs of the South. Traditionally attributed to Qu Yuan, there is little likelihood that he is the actual author (Hawkes 2011 [1985]: 203). Rather, "Yu fu" is a biographical or pseudobiographical account of an incident in poet and scholar Qu Yuan's life. It is mostly in prose, but with a short, incidental verse known as "the fisherman's song". This song, and the accompanying prose description of Qu Yuan's encounter with a fisherman during his exile are well known in Classical Chinese literature. Furthermore, "Yu fu" represents a common motif: the story of the encounter between a scholar and a fisherman also appears in the Zhuangzi, chapter 31, as an encounter between Confucius and a fisherman. There are a number of other Daoist parables of a similar nature; and, the fisherman's song itself appears in identical form in the Mencius, but there put into the mouth of a child, instead of an old fisherman. (Hawks 2011 [1985]: 204 and 207) (en)
- 《漁父》是收录在或称《南方歌》的《楚辞》中的一部短作品,传统上被认为是屈原所作,但近人胡適、陸侃如、游國恩等則主張為後人所作,認為當中「屈原既放」之開題語證明《漁父》為旁人之記載。 文章中,屈原代表一個激進派儒家士大夫的形象,與持道家理念的“渔父”展開激烈的論辯,《漁父》是屈原生命中一场意外的传记或伪传记报告,主体为散文,但也含有一首短诗《漁父歌》,在中国古典文学中广为流传。 此外,“渔父”代表一个共同的主题,例如《庄子》第31章学者孔子与渔父的相遇,也有很多类似的道教比喻。《漁父歌》本身也在《孟子》中原样出现,但是以儿童而非老渔父之口说出。 (zh)
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- 《漁父》是收录在或称《南方歌》的《楚辞》中的一部短作品,传统上被认为是屈原所作,但近人胡適、陸侃如、游國恩等則主張為後人所作,認為當中「屈原既放」之開題語證明《漁父》為旁人之記載。 文章中,屈原代表一個激進派儒家士大夫的形象,與持道家理念的“渔父”展開激烈的論辯,《漁父》是屈原生命中一场意外的传记或伪传记报告,主体为散文,但也含有一首短诗《漁父歌》,在中国古典文学中广为流传。 此外,“渔父”代表一个共同的主题,例如《庄子》第31章学者孔子与渔父的相遇,也有很多类似的道教比喻。《漁父歌》本身也在《孟子》中原样出现,但是以儿童而非老渔父之口说出。 (zh)
- "Yu Fu" or "The Fisherman" (traditional Chinese: 漁父; simplified Chinese: 渔父; pinyin: yú fù; "fisherman") is a short work anthologized in the Chu Ci (楚辭 Songs of Chu, sometimes called The Songs of the South. Traditionally attributed to Qu Yuan, there is little likelihood that he is the actual author (Hawkes 2011 [1985]: 203). Rather, "Yu fu" is a biographical or pseudobiographical account of an incident in poet and scholar Qu Yuan's life. It is mostly in prose, but with a short, incidental verse known as "the fisherman's song". This song, and the accompanying prose description of Qu Yuan's encounter with a fisherman during his exile are well known in Classical Chinese literature. Furthermore, "Yu fu" represents a common motif: the story of the encounter between a scholar and a fisherman als (en)
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