t He m at iC C on t e n t s xv
2.6.10 A personal account of travel in Yuan Mei’s “Traveling in the
Mountains: Miscellaneous Poem” 360
2.7 Landscape
2.7.1 A Yijing-ba sed structure in Xie Lingyun’s landscape poems 131–
2.7.2 Verisimilitude and other features of Xie Lingyun’s landscape
poems 132
2.7.3 Landscape details in the poetry of Xie Tiao and Xiao^
Gang 142–143, 145–
2.7.4 Mountains and rivers in Wang Zhihuan’s “Climbing^
Crane Tower” 206
2.7.5 Landscape as enlightenment in Wang Wei’s jueju^ poems 207–
2.7.6 Landscape as an analogue of emotion in Li Bai’s “Quiet
Night Thoughts” 210
2.7.7 “Climbing high” and viewing the landscape 230–231, 236
2.7.8 Landscape and the celestial voyage in Li Bai’s “A Lu
Mountain Tune” 232–
2.7.9 Nature and social critique in Bai Juyi’s poems 238–
2.7.10 The fusion of feeling and scene in early ci^ poetry 252, 255, 258
2.7.11 Imagery of the frontier in Li Mengyang’s “Autumn Gaze” 355–
2.7.12 Nature in everyday life 360, 374–
2.7.13 Yan Liu’s imitation of Wang Wei’s nature poetry 374–
2.8 Farming and Reclusion
2.8.1 Tao Qian’s personal accounts of rural life 121–
2.8.2 Xie Lingyun’s meditations on withdrawal and service 134–
2.8.3 Farmstead poems by Song poets 320–
2.8.4 Joys of a fisherman and a woodcutter in Qiao Ji’s “Idle
Chats of the Woodcutter and the Fisherman” 338–
2.8.5 A recluse’s witty ridicule of Confucian honors and titles
in Qiao Ji’s “Of Myself ” 340–
2.9 Imagined Journey to the Celestial World
2.9.1 In shamanistic rituals 37–40, 45, 49, 52
2.9.2 Shamanistic flight of the daimon 37–40, 45, 49, 52
2.9.3 The world of the Daoist immortals in Han yuefu^95 –
2.9.4 The celestial journey in Late Tang poetry 188–
2.9.5 Motifs of immortals in Late Tang poetry 188–
2.9.6 Longing for the goddess of the moon in Li Shangyin’s
“Chang’e” 219
2.9.7 Blended with landscape depiction in Li Bai’s poetry 235
2.9.8 Reflections on Daoist transcendence 235–
2.9.9 Su Shi speaking in the voice of an immortal 269–
2.10 The Depiction of Things
2.10.1 In shamanistic flight 38–39, 40–41, 48, 52