(after Li Bai)
Ten thousand September winds were blowing.
Ten thousand slivers of moon
peered through ten thousand windows of Chang-an,
where ten thousand women were pounding out silk
so every Chang-an household
could send warm clothes to the front.
Ten thousand September winds froze us at Yuguan Pass,
ten thousand slivers of moon
shone their feeble light
into ten thousand foxholes,
silvering the living and the dead like early frost, although
the living and the dead alike
were dressed warmly, anyway.
All that month I prayed I would meet my enemy soon,
so that one of us, at least,
could go home to see his wife again.
~
A prompt from NaPoWriMo.net (“Today I challenge you to write a poem in which you explore what you think is the cruelest month, and why”) jibed nicely and prompted me to finish my version of this poem from Li Po:
長安一片月
萬戶擣衣聲
秋風吹不盡
總是玉關情
何日平胡虜
良人罷遠征
Chang-an + one + slice/sheet + month/moon
10,000 + household + pound + clothing + sound
autumn + wind + blow + never to be + exhausted
(total + yes) | always + (jade) | (off love) (turn off situation)
what + day + level | (ripening) + Hu + prisoner
(good + man) | beloved + stop + (far + levy) | expedition
If you prefer a translation… there are any number out there. Here is a representative one:
Chang-an — one slip of moon;
in ten thousand houses, the sound of fulling mallets.
Autumn winds keep on blowing,
all things make me think of Jade Pass!
When will they put down the barbarians
and my good man come home from his far campaign?
Image (because great poetry is anachronistic): Chinese soldiers in fox holes, (ca. 1942), from the U.S. Office of War Information, via U.S. Library of Congress (https://www.loc.gov/item/98517523/). This photograph, as a U.S. government work, is unprotected by copyright.
Oh, clever! To combine the prompt with the featured poet. You probably noticed I’m a fan of history, your take on the prompt came as a nice surprise. You’ve caught the cruelty quite well I believe.
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Eh, maybe not the featured poet? I’ve been reading more on your blog. I still think it’s clever 🙂
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Thank you for your kind words. I wish I were so clever as to have thought of riffing off the featured poet in executing the prompt… but now you’ve suggested it, I will gleefully steal the idea!
Maybe tonight…
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I will if you will.
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