Su Shi

Chinese author
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Also known as: Dongpo Jushi, Su Dongpo, Su Shih, Su Tung-p’o, Su Zizhan
Quick Facts
Wade-Giles romanization:
Su Shih
Courtesy name (zi):
Zizhan
Literary name (hao):
Dongpo Jushi
Also called:
Su Dongpo
Born:
January 8, 1037, Meishan [now in Sichuan province], China
Died:
August 24, 1101, Changzhou, Jiangsu province (aged 64)
Also Known As:
Su Dongpo
Dongpo Jushi
Su Tung-p’o
Su Zizhan
Su Shih

Su Shi (born January 8, 1037, Meishan [now in Sichuan province], China—died August 24, 1101, Changzhou, Jiangsu province) was one of China’s greatest poets and essayists, who was also an accomplished calligrapher and a public official.

A member of a literary family, the young Su Shi performed brilliantly in his official examinations and was rewarded with the first of the many official positions he occupied during his long and distinguished career. While Su was popular with the people of the various provinces in which he industriously served, he sometimes encountered criticism from the frequently changing heads of state. Wang Anshi, prime minister under the Song emperor Shenzong and an accomplished poet himself, banished Su to Huangzhou, Hubei province, in 1079, because of Su’s opposition to some of Wang’s radical reform measures. Despite his five-year banishment, Su remained friendly toward Wang, later exchanging poems with him. He demonstrated this same optimism and lack of bitterness when he was banished by other forces to Hainan Island in 1094. Shortly before his death he was allowed to return to the mainland and was restored to favour and office.

Su was a master of nearly all literary forms, including shi (regulated verse), the ci song form, fu (prose poetry), and essays, as well as calligraphy and painting. Emphasizing spontaneity and expressiveness, he made significant efforts to loosen poetic conventions on form and content, especially in ci, and became known as the founder of the haofang (“heroic abandon”) school of writing. The optimism Su demonstrated in his private and political life can be seen also in his poems, many of which vividly describe his own experiences.

4:043 Dickinson, Emily: A Life of Letters, This is my letter to the world/That never wrote to me; I'll tell you how the Sun Rose/A Ribbon at a time; Hope is the thing with feathers/That perches in the soul
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