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"Seven Admonishments" () is one of the 17 major sections of the ancient Chinese poetry collection ''Chu ci'', also known as ''The Songs of the South'' or ''The Songs of Chu''. The "Seven Admonishments" consists of seven poetic verses, plus a ''luan''. The ''Seven Admonishments'' are written in the persona of Qu Yuan, but the actual poet or poets who authored these pieces is unknown; but, Wang Yi supposes them to have been written by Dongfang Shuo, a supposition which David Hawkes rejects, on various grounds. (Hawkes, 2011 (): 245-246) In terms of poetic quality, Hawkes finds the ''Qi jian'' poems to be "extremely derivative" of the other ''Chu ci'' pieces, and he further describes them as "a long, almost unrelieved litany of complaint which progresses by mere accumulation and ends only when the poet, reader and metaphor are all three exhausted.". (Hawkes, 2011 (): 246) ==See also== *Chu ci *List of Chuci contents *Liu Xiang (scholar) *Qu Yuan *Wangliang *Wang Yi (librarian) 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Seven Remonstrances」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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