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Song Yu (; 298–263 BC) was a from the late Warring States period, and is known as the traditional author of a number of poems in the . Among the Verses of Chu poems usually attributed to Song Yu are those in the section. Also credited to Song Yu, somewhat improbably, are several fu collected in the 6th century literary anthology .


Biography
Biographic information about Song Yu tends to be anecdotal, rather than truly historical, and little reliable information about Song's life exists. Historical accounts agree that Song was from the state of Chu, and was born in the city of Yan 鄢 (modern Yicheng, ), and lived during the reign of King Xiang of Chu (r. 298–263 BC).


Works
According to the section covering literature and art in the Book of Han, Song wrote 16 works, but only 14 of them have been handed down, such as and Dengtuzi Haose Fu (登徒子好色赋). However, it is uncertain if, with the exception of Jiu Bian, these works were actually written by Song. Wang Yi the noted Chu Ci anthologist and commentator also attributes the " " (Summons of the Soul) to Song Yu. As a writer of cifu, Song was an accomplished successor to with his own original style. In the fu poems attributed to Song Yu in the literary anthology compiled by (501–531), the poems appear in the context of a purported dialogue between Song Yu and King Xiang of Chu, in which the King requests a fu on a certain subject. However, this is likely to be a literary device deployed by a later author, rather than an authentic historical record of a real event. Song's name has long been put together with Qu Yuan's as "Qu-Song". Qu Yuan is known for writing poems with a strong personal voice.

Song Yu's main contribution to Classical Chinese poetry can be considered to be the development of the theme of nature together with an implicit sense of inherent . Apart from proving a rich source of reference points for Chinese poets in centuries to come, many Chinese idioms that are still widely used today can be traced back to his poems.


See also
  • List of Chu Ci contents
  • Liu Xiang (scholar)


Notes

Sources


Further reading

External links
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