T'ao Yüan-ming
T'ao Yüan-ming or T'ao Ch'ien, 365–427, Chinese poet. After several bitter experiences in government employment, he became a gentleman farmer. His poems, composed in simple diction at a time when ornateness was the fashion, present a mocking self-portrait of an inept and destitute scholar struggling to lead the bucolic life of a peasant they praise Confucian ideals, explore Taoist and Buddhist concepts, and express contentment in reading, music, and wine.
See studies by J. R. Hightower (1970) and A. R. Davis (2 vol., 1984).
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2012, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
See more Encyclopedia articles on: Asian Literature: Biographies
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