cover image Du Fu: A Life in Poetry

Du Fu: A Life in Poetry

Fu Du, , trans. from the Chinese by David Young. . Knopf, $17.95 (226pp) ISBN 978-0-375-71160-2

Not a biography, but instead a very coherent book of free translations, this new volume translated by Young (Black Lab ) gives the sense of a life as lived, a life that belongs at once to Du Fu (712–770, also called Tu Fu) and to any sympathetic reader who has experienced beauty in nature, disillusion in politics, or love and trouble at home. These 168 poems, along with clear footnotes, also create a sense of the poet’s own times. Du Fu began his poetic career as a bachelor writing beautiful seasonal poetry, a close friend of the great, and slightly older, poet Li Bai (Li Po). “Autumn again and you and I/ are thistledown in the wind,” he told his friend in one early poem. But Du Fu married and began a family, and then, seeking noble patrons, had to travel through war zones. He wrote, in consequence, poems about conscription, battle, poverty and loneliness: “on my face new tears/ are running down familiar tracks.” Search for secure employment later on brought him to far-flung provincial towns, where he produced his most tranquil verse: “here comes some tea and sugarcane juice/ brought down from the house.” (Nov.)