秦代 邶风 Bei Feng  秦代  
Bo Zhou
Lv Yi
Yan Yan
Ri Yue
Zhong Feng
Ji Gu
Kai Feng
Xiong Zhi
Pao You Ku Ye
Gu Feng
Shi Wei
Mao Qiu
Jian Xi
Quan Shui
Bei Men
Bei Feng
Jing Nv
Xin Tai
Er Zi Cheng Zhou
Multiple poems at a time
ancient style poetry

Quan Shui
泉水

   Bei Feng

How the water bubbles up from that spring,
And flows away to the Qi!
My heart is in Wei;
There is not a day I do not think of it.
Admirable are those, my cousins;
I will take counsel with them.


When I came forth, I lodged in Ji,
And we drank the cup of convoy at Ni.
When a young lady goes [to be married],
She leaves her parents and brothers;
[But] I would ask for my aunts,
And then for my elder sister.


I will go forth and lodge in Gan,
And we drink the cup of convoy at Yan.
I will grease the axle and fix the pin,
And the returning chariot will proceed.
Quickly shall we arrive in Wei; --
But would not this be wrong?


I think of the Feiquan,
I am ever sighing about it.
I think of Xu and Cao,
Long, long, my heart dwells with them.
Let me drive forth and travel there,
To dissipate my sorrow.

    Translator: James Legge
  

【Collections】诗经

【Source】 The English translation text was taken from The Chinese Classics, vol. 4 by James Legge (1898) and checked against a reprinted edition by Wen Zhi Zhe chu pan she (Taiwan, 1971). Transliteration of Chinese names in the English translation were converted to


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