Li ching chao biography of albert
Albert R. Tu Fu. New York.,.
Summary: "I Ching" and "Yi", in China is an influential classic by, but can still suspect that the classical origin of the chapter, "Book of Changes".!
Li Qingzhao (1083–c. 1151)
China's greatest female poet, who lived during the Song dynasty and specialized in lyric ci (tz'u) verse, and who was praised for the originality of her poetic imagery, her emotional language, and the harmony of her verse. Name variations: Li Ch'ing-chao; Li Ch'ing Chao; Li Chiang-chao; Li Qing Zhao.
Born Li Qingzhao in 1083; died around 1151; daughter of Li Gefei also seen as Li Ke-fei or Li Ko-fei (a scholar and minister at court) and a mother who was a poet (name unknown); educated at home; married Zhao Mingcheng (Chao Ming-ch'eng, a famous epigraphist who specialized in deciphering old inscriptions), around 1101 (died 1129); possibly married Zhang Ruzhou, in 1132 (divorced after 100 days); produced a body of work including six volumes of poetry and seven volumes of essays, most of which have been lost.
The sky, the waves of clouds, the morning mist blended in one.The Milky Way was shimmering, a thousand sails were dancing.
Methinks I was borne