秦代 秦风 Qin Feng  秦代  
CHE LIN
SI TIE
XIAO RONG
JIAN JIA
ZHONG NAN
HUANG NIAO
CHEN FENG
WU YI
WEI YANG
QUAN YU
Multiple poems at a time
the poem each line of which consists of four words

CHEN FENG
晨风

   Qin Feng

Swift flies the falcon,
To the thick-wooded forest in the north.
While I do not see my husband,
My heart cannot forget its grief.
How is it, how is it,
That he forgets me so very much?


On the mountain are the bushy oaks;
In the low wet grounds are six elms.
While I do not see my husband,
My sad heart has no joy.
How is it, how is it,
That he forgets me so very much?


On the mountain are the bushy sparrow-plums;
In the low wet grounds are the high, wild pear trees.
While I do not see my husband,
My heart is as if intoxicated with grief.
How is it, how is it,
That he forgets me so very much?

    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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