New Perspectives on Contemporary Chinese Poetry

(Chris Devlin) #1
x Foreword

elegies, and I wonder if the dead were to talk would they urge the
American poet to go on with claiming the land. The image for me is
much like the rivulet in Boston’s Fenway Park, an emblem of the
marshland this whole area was before landfills and construction.
Often a flock of Canada geese add a feathery component to spring and
autumn blossoming and to deciduous change, and one can forget for a
while the artery of muddy water coursing through the park where mud
persists like the heart’s slippery flesh. The whole image can be likened
to the ancient Chinese character for poetry, the soldier over the heart,
which may say all there is to say about poetry: that it is the struggle to
make artistic sense of life’s complexities, taking the soldier now as the
sublime.
There is something in the river’s own heart that is the heart inside
the heart, which longs to transcend its own self, to acquire the ability
to fly.
Yu Guangzhong has written that the poet can describe the sage’s
experience but cannot be the sage. If the poet becomes the sage, he
must shed himself of his poetic effect in writing, going beyond the
bone to the marrow inside, which is not the sludge but the electric soil
that feeds the light of dancing with the moon. The image here is from
Li Bo.
This dance with the moon is part of the experience of deeper medi-
tation, where one acquires the strength of mind known in Chinese as
ding li.



In deeper states of meditation that come after some years of
disciplined practice, relaxation becomes so deep that the calmness of
the mind will go undisturbed in the midst of various kinds of turmoil
and chaos. This stillness is spoken of in Daoist and Buddhist texts.
While all is whirling about you, you are rooted where you are, watch-
ing all else go by, unmoved but moving on the inside according to the
rhythms established by several years of concentrated thought.
Alongside this deep relaxation comes a clarity that is also quite sparse.
Daoist and Buddhist meditation methods produce this state after a
while, and in the stage known as Samadhi it is more of a constant state
of awareness. The mind is cleaned daily so as to approach this clarity.
In the blues, emotions are still too strong to allow this stillness as tran-
scendence in the blues is more a surrender to struggle—an acceptance
of it as a quality of life. In that way Yeat’s shop may be seen as
something of a blues poetic.

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