EILEEN TABIOS Engages
DOUBLED RADIANCE:POETRY & PROSE OF LI QINGZHAO, Translated by Karen An-Hwei Lee
(Singing Bone Press,
Columbia, SC, 2018)
Li Qingzhao may be the most important woman poet in Chinese
literary history, according to (blurber) Marilyn Chin: “Her stature is
indisputable, and she deserves ample praise and recognition and to be in the
same tier as that of the more famous male poets of the Tang and Song dynasties,
which includes the likes of Li Bai, Wang Wei and Du Fu.” Chin’s praise raises a
high standard … but she’s right. The poems in
DOUBLED RADIANCE, translated with
much sensitivity by Karen An-Hwe Lee, reach across time to move the reader with
their grace, luminosity, clear imagery, and a consistent atmosphere in which
the reader—during the time spent reading a poem—is easily suspended. In short,
the poems are timeless despite the specificities that locate the poems' narratives. For instance
Or this:
No doubt much of the pleasure the poems offer result from
the clear presentation of the personal, all the more effective when the poems
move towards more general elements that become doorways through which the
reader enters to inhabit the poems: “a gold bracelet” moves towards “ecstasy /
lasting a thousand years,” or “a drawn vermilion canopy hides its red tassles” moves
to “the last days of spring,” or, in this poem below, “hair silvering at the
temples” moves to “know[ing] the sight of plum flowers will soon be rare”:
The poems speak eloquently on their own behalf. But
befitting what seems to me to be a *recovery*
aspect of the project—that is, to introduce and/or widen the readership for a
poet who’s not received as much acclaim as she deserves—the book fortunately includes
an elucidating Epilogue as well as Afterword—Li Qingzhao obviously was
prescient as regards the fragility of her poetic legacy. With an empathetic translator in Karen
An-Hwei Lee, DOUBLED RADIANCE allows her legacy to live on a stronger footing.
Here’s another evocative poem which surely, Dear Reader, you will find moving:
*****
Eileen Tabios is the editor of Galatea Resurrects (GR). She loves books and has released over 50 collections of poetry, fiction, essays, and experimental biographies from publishers in nine countries and cyberspace. Her 2018 poetry collections include HIRAETH: Tercets From the Last Archipelago, MURDER DEATH RESURRECTION: A Poetry Generator, TANKA: Vol. 1, and ONE TWO THREE: Selected Hay(na)ku Poems which is a bilingual English-Spanish edition with translator Rebeka Lembo. She is the inventor of the poetry form “hay(na)ku” which will be the focus of 15-year anniversary celebrations at the San Francisco and Saint Helena Public Libraries in 2018. While she doesn't usually let her books be reviewed by GR since she's its editor, exceptions are made for projects that involve other poets; in this issue, her COMPREHENDING MORTALITY collaboration with John Bloomberg-Rissman is reviewed HERE. Elsewhere, her LOVE IN A TIME OF BELLIGERENCE was reviewed in Contemporary Literary Review India. More information about her works is available at http://eileenrtabios.com.