If
there is one undisputed genius of Chinese poetry it is Du Fu. The Taoist Li Bai
was more popular, the Buddhist Wang Wei was sublimely simple and more intimate
with nature, but the Confucian Du Fu had extraordinary thematic range and was a
master and innovator of all the verse forms of his time. In his life he never
achieved fame as a poet and thought himself a failure in his worldly career.
Perhaps only a third of his poems survive due to his long obscurity; his poems
appear in no anthology earlier than one dated one hundred thirty years after his
death, and it wasn't until the 11th century that he was recognized as a
preeminent poet. His highly allusive, symbolic complexity and resonant ambiguity
is at times less accessible than the immediacy and bravado of Li Bai. Most of
what we know of his life is recorded in his poems, but there are dangers to
reading his poems as history and autobiography. Du Fu is sometimes called the
poet of history because his poems record the turbulent times of the decline of
the Tang dynasty and constitute in part a Confucian societal critique of the
suffering of the poor and the corruption of officials. He also records his own
sufferings, exile, falls from grace, the death of his son by starvation; but
some critics have suggested that the poems on these themes are exaggerated in
the service of self-dramatization.
Du Fu was born
to a prominent but declining family of scholar-officials, perhaps from modern
day Henan province, though he referred to himself as a native of Duling, the
ancestral home of the Du clan. In the Six Dynasties period his ancestors were in
the service of the southern courts; his grandfather Du Shenyan, was an important
poet of the early Tang dynasty, and a more remote ancestor, Du Yu (222-84), was
a famed Confucianist and military man. In spite of family connections, however,
Du Fu had difficulty achieving patronage and governmental postings, and twice
failed the Imperial Examinations, in 735 and 747. He was a restless traveler,
and the poems of this early period show him to be a young man given to revelry,
military and hunting arts, painting and music. In 744 he met Li Bai, and this
formed the basis for one of the world's most famed literary friendships; the two
poets devote a number of poems to each other. In 751 Du Fu passed a special
examination that he finagled through submitting rhyme-prose works directly to
the emperor, but it wasn't until 755 that he was offered a postCa rather
humiliating posting in the provincesCwhich he rejected, accepting instead the
patronage of the heir apparent. In the winter of that year, however, the An
Lushan Rebellion broke out, and the emperor fled to Sichuan, abdicated, and the
heir apparent became the new emperor in Gansu province. Meanwhile, the rebels
seized the capital, and Du Fu, attempting to join the new emperor in the distant
northwest, was captured by the rebels. He was detained for a year, but managed
to escape, and after traveling in disguise through the occupied territory,
joined the emperor's court in the position of Reminder. He was arrested soon
after four his outspokenness in defending a friend, a general who had failed to
win a battle, but was pardoned and exiled to a low posting in Huazhou. He quit
his job there, and moved to Chengdu, where he and his family depended upon the
kindness of friends and relatives, and moved again and again to avoid banditry
and rebellions. In spite of this instability, his poems show a serenity in this
period, particularly those from 760-762, when he lived in a Athatched hut
provided by a patron and friend named Yan Yu, who hired him in the years that
followed as a military adviser. After Yan's death in 765, Du Fu left Chengdu,
traveling down the Yangtze River, finding patrons and dreaming of a return to
Changan, but being prevented by invasions from Tibet. He spent his final three
years traveling on a boat, detained in sickness, and finally winding down to his
death as he journeyed down the Yangtze, apparently accepting the withering away
of his health and life.
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