The Book of Songs is the first collection
of poems in China. It recorded a total of 305 poems created over a period of 500
years or so, from early Western Zhou Dynasty (11th century BC - 771 BC) to the middle
of the Spring and Autumn Period. It was said that specific officials were appointed
with a sole role of collecting poems among the mass. There was also a rule requiring
officials to compose poems and present them to the emperor at that time. The anthology
came out after further compilation. According to the story, all the poems in the
Book of Songs were lyrics of the ancient days.
At the very begining, The Book of Songs was known as poems or Three Hundred
Poems. The great thinker Confucius used it as a textbook to teach his disciples.
It was named as The Book of Songs after Han Dynasty.
The Book of Songs is rich in contents. Many of its works depicted the genuine
landscape picture of society at that period. Among them many stories were devoted
to love and marriage between young people. Besides, some poems portrayed the hard
life of social underclass, some reflected the general public's resistance to oppression,
and aspiration for freedom and happiness. others denounced the war and the sufferings
caused by. The poems in The Book of Songs mainly consist of four-character
verses. They are original in wording in style, and pleasant to read. For instance.
There she is gathering vine
A day without seeing her
Is like three autumns
...
This poem entitled Gatering Vine expresses a young man's pinning for his
love. The tenor is that she has gone to gather vine and was un-seen for one day
which is like three years for that moment. The popular idiom "One day without seeing
is like three autumns" originated from this poem.
The Book of Songs was not only a valuable resource for studying ancient Zhou
society, but also the root for Chinese poetry. It has a great impact upon the development
of poetry in later time, in terms of both its ideological and artistic achievements.
Previous Next