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Yao Shouzhong Biography | Poet

Photo of Yao Shouzhong

The Chinese poet Yao Shouzhong is thought to have been from the city of Luoyang in present Henan. He dates are unclear. However, he seems to have been the nephew of the writer and official Yao Sui who lived from 1238 to 1313. Yao Shouzhong would then have lived in the early 14th century. Likewise, this Yao Sui was himself the nephew of the celebrated official and scholar Yao Shu (1203–1280). The greater family had its origins in the Manchurian province of Liaoning and later moved to Luoyang. Yao Shouzhong appears to have been a local official functionary in Pingjiang in Hunan. The Lu Guibu notes only that Yao was a literary talent from the previous generation. "The Ox’s Grievance" (Niu Suyuan ) is the only surviving literary work of the writer, although titles of the three of his plays have survived. Tao’s Sanqu suite, "The Ox’s Grievance" (Niu Suyuan ), is a classic of the genre and is one of the great imaginative poems in the genre of Chinese Sanqu poetry and Chinese literature as a whole. Although it has been suggested that "The Ox's Grievance" is a social satire, more likely it was intended as a literary burlesque or parody.


Yao Shouzhong: Poems | Best Poems | Short Poems | Quotes




Book: Shattered Sighs