Ye Shaoweng
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Ye Shaoweng (Chinese: 葉紹翁; Wade–Giles: Yeh Shao-weng; fl. 1200–1250) was a Southern Song dynasty Chinese poet from Longquan, in modern Lishui, Zhejiang province.[1] He belonged to the Jianghu (Rivers and Lakes) School of poets, known for its unadorned style of poetry.[1] He was an academician serving in the imperial archives in the capital Hangzhou,[1] and authored a history on the reigns of the first four emperors of the Southern Song entitled Sicao Jianwen Lu (四朝見聞錄), covering the period of 1127–1224. He was a friend of the Neo-Confucian scholar Zhen Dexiu.[2] Little else is known about his life.[1]
Ye Shaoweng's most famous poem is Youyuan Buzhi (Visiting a Private Garden without Success):
- 遊園不值 Visiting a Private Garden without Success
- 應憐屐齒印蒼苔 It must be because he hates clogs on his moss
- 十扣柴扉久不開 I knock ten times still his gate stayed closed
- 春色滿園關不住 but spring can't be kept locked in a garden
- 一支紅杏出牆來 a branch of red blossoms reached past the wall[1]
The last couplet is often reused in later works, its meaning recast as a sexual innuendo.[3] The African-American author Richard Wright wrote two haikus which bear close resemblance to Ye's poem.[4]
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