Bao Zhao
Bao Zhao was a Chinese poet, writer, and official during the Liu Song dynasty known for his shi poetry, fu rhapsodies, and parallel prose. Bao's best known surviving work is his "Fu on the Ruined City", a long fu rhapsody on the ruined city of Guangling.
Life and career
Bao Zhao, courtesy name Mingyuan, was born around AD414. He was probably born in the town of Jingkou, though some sources say he was born in Shangdang or Xuzhou. Bao's younger sister Bao Linghui was also a poet, and seven of her poems have survived.Little is known of Bao's early life. He was born into a scholar-class family whose fortunes had declined. He was probably a farmer as a young man before beginning his career as an official on the staffs of local princes of the Liu Song dynasty. Beginning in about 438, Bao served as an attendant gentleman to Liu Yiqing, the prince of Linchuan. In the early 440s, Liu served as governor of Jiangzhou, and Bao writes that he traveled around the area of modern Jiujiang, writing poems on the mountain scenery around Mount Lu.
After Liu Yiqing's death in 444, Bao briefly returned home to Jingkou. Then, in 445, he joined the staff of Liu Jun, another Liu Song prince, who was serving as governor of Yangzhou. Bao spent several years in Liu Jun's service and accompanied him on his campaign to retaliate against the Xianbei-ruled Northern Wei dynasty, which had invaded southern China in January 451. Bao left Liu Jun's staff about 452, spending the next 12 years serving in various local governmental positions, as well as a stint in the imperial capital Jiankang as a professor at the Imperial Academy.
In 464, Bao joined the staff of the seven-year-old prince Liu Zixu, who nominally served as governor of Jingzhou. In early 466, another Liu Song prince rebelled and declared himself Emperor, and Liu Zixu soon joined the rebellion, probably encouraged by his adult advisors. The rebellion was put down in the following months, and in September 466 imperial forces retook Jingzhou. Because the rebellion was organized by the prince's aides and administrators, and not the young prince himself, Bao was unable to escape punishment for his involvement. The nine-year-old Liu Zixu was forced to commit suicide, and all of his staff members, including the approximately 52-year-old Bao, were executed.
Works
About 200 of Bao Zhao's poems survive. His works were initially gathered into a collection several decades after his death, but this collection seems to have been lost during the Tang dynasty. Eleven of Bao's poems are preserved in the early medieval anthology Selections of Refined Literature.Bao's most famous piece is his "Fu on the Ruined City", a moving fu rhapsody on the former capital, Guangling, which had been razed to the ground in the Northern Wei invasion of January 451. It gives an account of the ruined capital, contrasted with its former grandiosity, in a nostalgic and longing fashion that is common in Liu Song-era poetry. Another of Bao's surviving fu rhapsodies is "Fu on the Dancing Cranes", which describes a troupe of trained performing cranes.
Bao also composed shi poetry, and is best known for his use of the yuefu lyrical song genre. Bao is the first Chinese poet known to have composed shi poetry in the seven-syllable line format where, instead of the traditional AAAA rhyme scheme in which each line in a stanza rhymed, a more mixed rhyme scheme of ABCB was used.
Works cited
Category:466 deaths
Category:Liu Song poets
Category:Executed Chinese people
Category:5th-century executions
Category:5th-century Chinese poets
Category:Poets from Shandong