Musical Settings (I): Introduction

This entry is part 23 of 35 in the series Chinese Art Song

The earliest known composition in the style of Western art song was “Da Jiang Dong Qu 大江東去” (“The Great River Flows Eastwards”) by Qing Zhǔ 青主, published in 1920. Hundreds of works by other composers would appear in the following decades. It is impossible to understand the essences of these works without exploring the development of Western music education in China at the turn of the twentieth century.

__School Songs

As early as the beginning of the seventeenth century, Western European music and instruments were introduced to the imperial courts of China by the Jesuits. Great efforts were made by the missionaries to integrate Chinese and Western music making.[1] Nonetheless, either as court entertainments—more as curiosities than art, or as religious service music, their contributions reached only a very small audience.

Kang Youwei 康有為, the mastermind of the Hundred Day’s Reform, proposed to Emperor Guangxu 光緒to establish educational institutions modeled after European and Japanese systems in May of 1898. Music and singing were to be part of the curriculum. After the collapse of the reform movement, Kang and his fellow reformer Liang Qichao 梁啟超 fled to Japan and continued to advocate for their causes

Liang believed that school songs in Western style played a crucial role in the rapid economic and cultural developments in Japan after the Meiji Restoration. Music Education became a frequent subject in New Citizen 新民叢報, a biweekly journal founded by Liang in 1902. He famously said, “. . .Therefore, if [we] wish to transform the characters of [our] citizens, poetry, songs, and music should be one of the crucial components of moral education. Anyone with some senses should be able to appreciate this.”[2]

Under Liang’s influence, a group of reform-minded students, led by Shen Xingong 沈心工,[3] organized a music forum “音樂講習會” in Tokyo in 1903.[4] They invited Japanese musician Suzuki Yonejiro 鈴木米次郎to instruct them[5]; strategized music education in China; and began creating “school songs.”

Zhen Zhimin 曾志忞, an active member of the forum, published “Summary of Music Theory 樂理大意,” and “Singing and Its Teaching Methods 唱歌及教授法” in Jiangsu 江蘇 magazine. [6] He also presented six songs using both staff notation and numbered musical notation—a simplified notation which became popular in China and many other regions of Asia.[7]

Most of the school songs were based on existing tunes of Western or Japanese origins. In vernacular Chinese, the lyrics were mostly meant for moral building. Shen Xingong’s first work “Gymnastics/Military Exercises 體操/軍操,” known nowadays by its initial line “Nan-r Di Yi Zhi Qi Gao 男兒第一志氣高” (“Young men, foremost, must have high aspirations”), was based on the tune “Hand Battle” by Suzuki Yonejiro.

The most popular school song “Farewell 送別” by Li Shutong 李叔同 was a rework of “Dreaming of Home and Mother” by Bostonian composer and music publisher John Pond Ordway. Touched by this Civil War era song, fitted with Japanese texts, Li translated the Japanese lyrics into Chinese. Later, he created new Chinese verses in commemoration of the departure of his friend Xu Huanyuan 許幻園.[8]

Many of these early school songs remain parts of music curriculum in China and Taiwan. The majority of public are not aware of their Western and/or Japanese origins. Their vernacular texts helped promoting social causes and shaping characters of generations of young students.

Shen Xingong returned to China in 1903 and began developing music educational programs. In the following year, Zhen Zhimin formalized the ‘music forum” into “Yàyǎ Music Association 亞雅音樂會,” publishing essays and songs, offering music instructions and organizing performances. As soon as he returned to China in 1906, Zhen took on the tasks of establishing summer camps and music schools. Both men were instrumental in introducing Western music to China in the early twentieth century. Nonetheless, neither had comprehensive training. Their knowledge and skills came indirectly from Japanese sources.

__Influences from Germany and America

In the following decades, sponsored by various governmental programs, increasing number of students pursued higher education in Germany and the United States. Some of them studied music under the tutelage of Western masters and became the driving force behind the creation and development of Chinese art songs.

Xiao Youmei 蕭友梅 (1884-1940) was born into a literary family and received modern education in his youth. He first studied in Japan from 1901 to 1909, majoring in education with electives in piano and voice. Influenced by Sun Yat-sen, a family friend, he joined Tongmenghui 同盟會 in 1906, supporting revolutionary movement. He became Sun’s right-hand man after the establishment of the new Republic in 1911.

When warlord Yuan Shikai took control of the government in 1912, Xiao left for Germany. Sponsored by Sun and Cai Yuanpei 蔡元培, he studied music at Universität Leipzig and Königliches Konservatorium der Musik zu Leipzig. Among his mentors was Hugo Riemann, one of the leading figures in music theory and musicology at the time. He completed his Ph.D. in music in 1919 and continued his research in Berlin.

Throughout the 1920s, Xiao devoted his time and energy in establishing higher music education institutions in China. His efforts were hindered by bureaucracy repeatedly. Eventually, with the support of Cai Yuanpei, Xiao founded the National College of Music in Shanghai on November 27, 1927. After being renamed and reorganized multiple times, it became the Shanghai Conservatory of Music, one of the most sought-after performing-arts institute in China, in 1956.

Xiao’s First Collection of Modern Music 今樂初集 (1922) and First Collection of New Songs 新歌初集 (1923), were the earliest collective musical works by an individual composer in China. As an educator, he inspired a generation of musicians, most notably Lin Shengxi 林聲翕, one of the leading song composers.

Qing Zhǔ (1893-1959), birth-name Liao Shang-guo 廖尚果, went to Germany in 1912 after graduating from the affiliated middle school of Whampoa (Huangpu) Military Academy 黃埔陸軍小學堂. While studying law at Freie Universität Berlin, he also delved into music theory and composition. He learned to play the piano, violin, and flute. In 1920, the year that he received his Doctorate in law, he set the epic poem “The Great River Flows Eastwards” by Su Shi to music.[9]

Liao took on several administrative and military positions after returning to China. In 1927, he engaged in the failed communist uprising in Guangzhou. Wanted by the Nationalist government, he escaped to Shanghai; changed his name; and began focusing on musical works. He opened a music publishing house in 1928 and edited several musical journals.[10] His composition and essays of this period contributed greatly to the appreciation of Western music in China. Unfortunately, in the last decades of his life, Liao became less involved in musical activities.

As a recipient of the Boxer Indemnity Scholarship, Liao’s contemporary Zhao Yuanren 趙元任 (1892-1982) attended Cornell University from 1910 to 1914, studying mathematics and physics. He then earned a Ph.D. in philosophy from Harvard University in 1918. A person of wide range of interests, Zhao developed his musical knowledge and skills while abroad. Fluent in German and French, he fully appreciated the intricacies of Lieder and melodies. An advocate of vernacular literature and the standardized national language, Zhao set several modern poems to music.

In the introduction of his New Poetry Songbook 新詩歌集 of 1928, Zhao not only explained the differences between Chinese and Western musical traditions but also pointed out the “insufficiencies” of Chinese music. He proposed combining the linguistic characters of Chinese language with harmonic components of the Western practice to create a modern Chinese sound. He maintained the same persuasions in the reprint of the collection thirty years later.

Huang Tzu 黃自 (1904-1938) developed interest in music in his youth. He was introduced to Western music at Tsinghua College (today’s Tsinghua University). In 1924, as a Boxer Indemnity student, he studied psychology at the Oberlin College and began formal musical training at the affiliated conservatory. He then went to Yale University in 1928 to study music theory and composition.

While in Yale, Huang wrote the symphonic overture In Memoriam (1929) to commemorate the one-year anniversary of the death of his first love Hu Yongfu 胡永馥. It was the first large scale orchestra work by a Chinese composer.[11] The work was performed by Yale student orchestra and New Haven Symphony orchestra on May 31, 1929, conducted by David Stanley Smith, Huang’s mentor.

Huang returned to China after graduation and taught at the National College of Music. He founded the Shanghai Orchestra, the first all-Chinese orchestra, in 1935. In addition to art songs based on both traditional and new poems, Huang also wrote a cantata Chang Hen Ge 長恨歌 (“The Song of Everlasting Regret”), set to the long poem by Bai Juyi 白居易 (772-846) of the Tang Dynasty. His compositional career was cut short by his untimely death of typhoid fever in 1938. His guidance, however, was behind the song compositions of He Luting 賀綠汀, Liu Xue’an 劉雪庵, Jiang Dingxian 江定仙, Chen Tianhe 陳田鶴, and Lin Shengxi 林聲翕.

__Finding the Chinese Sounds

The birth of Chinese art songs took place at the height of the new cultural movement. An entire generation of students, hungry for information and knowledge of the Western world, thrust forward by denying the value of thousands of years of tradition. Among the song composers, Qing Zhu was the strongest proponent of abandoning traditional music. Believing that “music was without boarder,” he suggested that “if a Chinese person could write pleasant so-called Western music, then, that would be [our] national music.”[12] Zhao Yuanren, while supporting the idea of Western music equaled world music, could not ignore the linguistic differences between Western and Chinese languages. He admitted the gradual returning to traditional sounds in his later works.

Early in the twentieth century, Western composers already began to walk away from traditions. In the 1920s, expressionistic composers, Arnold Schoenberg (1874-1951), Anton Webern (1883-1945) and Alban Berg (1885-1935), pushed the movement to a new height with the application of serial twelve-tone. Stravinsky, with The Rite of Spring (1913) in the rear mirror, had turned into neoclassicism.

The first generation of Chinese art song composers, living and studying in Germany and the U.S., must have been familiar with the creations of the modern composers. Yet, they brought the traditional tonal sound and the classic structure back to Chinese. Huang Tsu believed that “[new] Chinese music” just took its first steps. Jumping into modern music, would have made the students, scholars and music lover feeling disoriented.[13]

__Wars and Political Divide

After the end of the Qing Dynasty, Yuan Shikai became the first President of the Republic in 1912 and then declared himself Emperor of China on December 12, 1915. In less than six months, he died of uremia. The nation fell into the hands of warlords. Continuous civil wars ensued. Although the Nationalist party, led by Chiang Kai-Shek, was able to establish a centralized government in Nanjing in 1928, the lingering power of regional cliques as well as the increasing conflicts between the Nationalist and the Communist destabilized the nation.

Since the late Qing Dynasty, Japan, with its newly found military power, had been a threat to Northeastern China. In 1931, after the Mukden Incident,[14] Japan invaded Manchuria and established a puppet state, the Manchukuo. On July 7, 1937, after the Lugou (Marco Polo) Bridge Incident,[15] a full-blown war broke out between the Republic of China and the Empire of Japan. Unified behind the common enemy, passions were extremely high among all people, especially the younger generation.

Songs of this period were mostly patriotic in nature, with newly written vernacular lyrics. Poets and musicians, displaced by war, often delivered their nostalgic sentiment through new compositions. Intended to be sung by the general public, these songs were often tuneful but uncomplicated.

The victory in the Sino-Japanese War, which eventually became part of the Second World War, did not bring peace and stability to the nation. Instead, conflicts between the Nationalists and the Communists escalated. The latter took control of the mainland as the former retreated to the island of Taiwan. For over three decades, the political divide created a cultural chasm.

Left-leaning composers such as Xian Xinghai 冼星海 and He Luting were blacklisted in Taiwan. Their works banned. During the Cultural Revolution, Xiao Youmei, Huang Tzu and Huang’s student Liu Shue’an were heavily criticized for their westernized thinking and their associations with the Nationalists. Their works condemned.

China began opening its door in the 1980. Martial law was lifted in Taiwan in 1987. The birth of Internet also helped to link the artistic minds on the two sides of the Taiwanese Straight. The cultural reconnections are an ongoing project.

The creativities of Chinese composers never ceased. Works by later composers, better trained and equipped than their predecessors, are more sophisticated. Songs of noticeable composers often were orchestrated for large-scale performances. Yet, lacking the momentum of an entire movement such as the May Fourth behind them, their efforts seemed sporadic and less significant.

The task of searching for a modern “Chinese” sound goes on.


[1] Joyce. Lindorff, “Missionaries, Keyboards and Musical Exchange in the Ming and Qing Courts.” Early Music 32, no. 3 (2004): 403–14. https://www.jstor.org/stable/3519339,
Jean_Joseph_Marie_Amiot_Wiki,
Conversations about Jean Joseph Marie Amiot, Divertissements chinois 1_YouTube.com,
Conversations about Jean Joseph Marie Amiot, Divertissements chinois 2, YouTube.com.
[2]《飲冰室詩話》: 「蓋欲改造國民之品質,則詩歌音樂為精神教育之一要件,此稍有識者所能知也。」
[3] 沈心工_Wiki
[4] Other active members of the forum included: Zhen Zhimin 曾志忞, Xin Han 辛漢, Li Shutong 李叔同.
[5] “Yonejiro Suzuki’s Influence on Music Education of Chinese Students,” Gao Jing 高婙, Keiko University 2005
[6] 曾志忞_Wiki
[7] Numbered_musical_notation_Wiki
[8] Hong_Yi_Wiki. Songbie_Wiki, Farewell_Wiltener Sängerknaben_Wiki
[9]A manuscript of the work is preserved at Shanghai Conservatory today.
[10]Invited by Xiao Youmei, Liao edited school journals of the National Music College: 《音》 (Sound, 1928- , monthly) and 《樂藝》 (Musical Arts, 1930- , quarterly).
[11]A manuscript of In Memoriam is preserved at Shanghai Conservatory today.
[12] “中國人如果會做出 很好聽的所謂西樂, 那麼,這就是國樂.” 《我亦來談談所謂國樂的問題》(“Let Me Also Talk about the Issues of So-Called National Music’), 《音》, 17, September 1930.
[13] 黃自認為中國音樂仍處於學步階段,若立刻飛躍到新音樂,必然導致學生、學者、欣賞者的「迷失」。
[14]Commonly known as the September-18 Incident. Japanese_invasion_of_Manchuria_Wiki
[15]Marco_Polo_Bridge_Incident_Wiki

Chinese Poetry (XVII): Chance Encounter 偶然

This entry is part 22 of 35 in the series Chinese Art Song

Chance Encounter 偶然
Xu Zhimo 徐志摩

我是天空裡的一片雲
I am a cloud in the sky,
偶然投影在你的波心
By chance reflecting on your rippling heart.[1]
你不必訝異
You need not be surprised,
更無需歡心
Nor should you be overjoyed.
在轉瞬間消滅了蹤影.
In the blink of an eye, I could dissipate without a trace.

你我相逢在黑夜的海上,
You and I met each other in the darkness of the night sea.
你有你的,我有我的,方向;
You had yours; I had mine; directions
你記得也好,
It is fine, should you remember. . .
最好你忘掉,
Better that you forget:
在這交會時互放的光亮!
The radiance we projected upon each other during our encounter.

__ Xu Zhimo 徐志摩

Xu Zhimo was born in 1897 into a family of exceptional wealth. His father Xu Shenru 徐申如 was a tycoon, owning businesses in fermentation, silk, textile, electricity, and banking in Zhejiang and Shanghai. In his youth, in addition to literature, he also showed interests in a wide range of subjects. In 1916, he entered the law school at Peiyan University, which merged with Peking University in the following year.

In 1918, Xu left for the United States. He attended Clark University studying economics, business management, political science, and sociology. After graduating with honor, he entered Columbia University for a master’s degree in political science. Instead of matriculating into the Ph.D. program, he left for England in 1920, hoping to study with Bertrand Russell at Trinity College. The latter, after the anti-war controversy, had resigned from Trinity and left for Russia.

The inopportuneness might have been life-changing for Xu. At the encouragement of Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson, he enrolled at King’s College as a “special student.” While there, he befriended Roger Fry, a member of the Bloomsbury Group, as well as other intellectuals close to the group.[2] Under their influence, he became fascinated with Romantic poetry, especially works of Shelley and Byron. Eventually, he deviated from studying economics and focused, instead, in literature and writing.

In the Preface to his third poetic collection Fierce Tiger (1931) the poet wrote:[3]

Speaking of me writing poetry, there was nothing more unexpected! I traced my ancestry: Since the Yongle Era [1403-1425], there was not a single line of worth-reading verse from our family. Before turning twenty-four, I was far less interested in poetry than in the theory of relativity or the Social Contract. My father sent me to study abroad, hoping that I would enter the “financial world” later. My own utmost ambition was to become the Hamilton of China![4] Before I was twenty-four, poetry, no matter old or new, had nothing to do with me. . .. Exactly ten years ago, I was swept by a peculiar wind, or might be shone upon by some strange moonlight. Henceforward, my thoughts trended towards lines of descriptions. A profound depression took over my being; this depression, I believed, eventually altered my disposition over time.

The wind and moon of Cambridge not only changed the trajectory of Xu’s career but also the paths of his personal life. In 1915, Xu Zhimo married 15-year-old Zhang Youyi 張幼儀. Although they both received modern education, they seemed not to object to the arranged marriage at first. When Xu arrived at Cambridge, feeling despondent, he asked for his parents’ permission for Zhang to join him there. For a while, they lived quietly in the village of Sawston.

Through his mentor Liang Qichao 梁啟超, Xu met politician and diplomat Lin Changmin 林長民 in London. He soon fell passionately in love with Lin’s daughter Huiyin 徽因. His writing—diary, poetry, and correspondences—of this period reflected his internal turmoil. He asked Zhang, pregnant with their second child, for a divorce.

Zhang Youyi went to Berlin to be with her brother and gave birth to a son in 1922. After studying in Germany, she returned to China, taking care of her in-laws as well as managing the family business.

Lin Huiyin returned to China with her father. She remained friends with Xu. When Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore visited China in 1924, Lin assisted Xu with interpretation work. She later married Liang Qichao’s son, Sicheng 梁思成. Both she and her husband became leading figures in modern Chinese architecture.

In October 1922, Xu Zhimo returned to China and quickly established himself as an influential member of the literary circle. In 1923, he joined the faculty of English at Peking University and formed the Crescent Moon Society 新月社with leading authors of the vernacular literature such as Hu Shi, Liang Shih-Chu 梁實秋 and Wen Yiduo 聞一多 to name a few. His editorial works at the Literary Supplement of Peking Morning News (晨報副刊 Chenbao fukan) and The Crescent Moon Monthly contributed greatly to the advancement of intellectual development in the 1920s.

Xu met Lu Xiaoman 陸小曼, an artist and socialite, in 1924. She was, at the time, married to Wang Geng 王賡, a Princeton and West Point graduate with a promising military career. Wang, due to his busy work schedule, asked Xu to keep his wife company. Soon after, Xu and Lu became amorously involved. Their affair, passionate and public, was shunned by their families and friends. Nevertheless, Lu divorced her husband in 1925 and married Xu in the following year. Xu’s parents cut off their financial support and never accepted Lu as part of the family.

__The Crescent Moon Society

The literary society Crescent Moon was named after a poetic collection, translated by Tagore. Members of the club were enthusiasts of vernacular poetry. However, they sought to stylize new poetry with prosodic structures fitting to the expression of words.

Wen Yiduo in his essay “Form in Poetry” 詩的格律 explained that poetic structure was inseparable from its visual and musical/rhythmic effects.[5] While the old forms were fixed patterns, the new forms should be adjusted to fit the characters and expressions of the individual poem.

In an article, published in the first issue of The Crescent Moon Monthly (March 10, 1928), Xu Zhimo recalled his visit with Thomas Hardy at Max Gate. The latter compared rhymes to ripples caused by a rock thrown into the water—unavoidable, and lyric poems as diamonds—indestructible and shinning brilliantly regardless of their sizes. Xu used the word “organic” to describe Hardy’s work. And, the latter said, “Yes, Organic; yes, Organic: A poem ought to be a living thing.”

Members of the Crescent Moon fought against the politicizing of literature, especially efforts by the left-leaning writers. They believed that human right and freedom of expression should be the guiding principles of literary creation. The society as well as the Monthly ceased to operate in 1933.

__Chance Encounter

One of Xu Zhimo’s most beloved works, “Chance Encounter” first appeared in the supplemental section of Peking Morning News on May 27, 1926.[6] It was later included in Act two of the play《卞崑岡》 (Bian Kungang), co-written by Xu and Lu Xiaoman,[7] Perceived by most readers as a love poem, in Bian Kungang, the poem was sung by a blind man—a Greek-chorus-like character, to a dying eight-year-old child.[8] As beautiful as the verses might be, they seemed out of place as the drama unfolded.

The poem is of two stanzas, each with two couplets plus a fifth concluding line. The word-grouping in each couplet also bears certain uniformity—clearly influenced by Wen Yiduo’s prosodic approach.[9]

我是/ 天空裡的/ 一片雲
偶然/ 投影在/ 你的波心
你不必/ 訝異
也無需/ 歡心
在轉瞬間/ 消滅了/ 蹤影.

你我相逢/ 在黑夜的/ 海上,
你有你的/ 我有我的/ 方向;
你記得/ 也好,
最好/ 你忘掉,
在這/ 交會時/ 互放的光亮!

In the first stanza, lines 1, 2 and 4 rhyme on the /n/ sound: 雲 (ㄩㄣˊ, yún) and 心 (ㄒㄧㄣ, xīn). In the second one, lines 1, 2, and 5 share the same rhyme /ɑŋ/: 上 (ㄕㄤˋ, shàng), 向 (ㄒㄧㄤˋ, xiàng), and 亮 (ㄌㄧㄤˋ, liàng); lines 3 and 4 rhyme on /ɑʊ̯/: 好 (ㄏㄠˇ, hǎo) and 掉 (ㄉㄧㄠˋ, diào).

Structurally, this poem demonstrates Xu’s effort to be more “disciplined.” In terms of sentiments, it reflects a non-traditional, casual attitude towards relationships. The images of bright lights in the darkness of the night sea–striking. The reflections of a cloud over rippling water—fugitive.

The term 光亮 guang liang can be translated simply as “light.” To Xu Zhimo, however, this “light” seemed to have a deeper and more personal meaning as shown in his letter to Lu Xiaoman on March 3, 1925:[10]

. . . 我如其憑愛的恩惠還能從我性靈裡放射出一絲一縷的光亮,這光亮全是你的, . . .
. . . If, by the graces of love, I can still release a thread of light from my soul, this light is all yours. . ..

. . .我站在你的正對面,我的淚絲的光芒與你的淚絲的光芒針對的交換著,你的靈性漸漸的化入了我的,我也與你一樣覺悟了一個新來的影響,在我的人格中四布的貫徹。. . .
I stand right in front of you. The brilliance of my stringing tears and the brilliance of your tears exchange conversely. Your spirit gradually melts into mine. I, like you, also realize that a new influence is spreading all over my being.

一個靈魂有時可以到最黑暗的地獄裡去游行,但一點神靈的光亮却永遠在靈魂本身的中心點著——况且你不是確信你已今找着了你的真歸宿,真想望,實現了你的夢?
Sometimes, a soul can venture into the darkest inferno. But a small light in the center of the soul will, nevertheless, shine eternally. Besides, wasn’t it that you have found your true destiny, true desire, and have realized your dream?

__Epilogue

A prolific writer, Xu Zhimo produced poetic collections, translations, and essays. His handling of words was unique and imaginative. Yet, like any sensitive artist, he never stopped questioning about life and about his work:[11]

. . . the capriciousness of life is inconceivable! We are all genuine creatures manipulated by [life]. . . I also wondered often whether these poetic-writing days were undeserving luxury that some divine powers, pitying my foolishness, lent to me temporarily. I hope that, pitying a person, they pity him through and through.

After marrying Lu Xiaoman, he took on multiple teaching and editorial works to support her lavish lifestyle and, later, opioid addiction. Oppressed by reality, he became uninspired:[12]

This year, within six months, I shuttled between Shanghai and Beijing eight times; lost my mother; [and] there were many other troublesome things. I was extremely exhausted. However, non-stop motions as well as the scenery of Beijing inadvertently stirred up my dormant soul. Lifting my head, surprisingly, I saw the sky. My eyes opened, and my heart began to be beating along. Green and purple of new leaves; lights and shadows of the toiling masses; figures of sadness and happiness; all the motions [and] all the stillness unfolded in front of my eyes again. The world full of sound, color and emotion existed for me again. This, seemingly, was to deliver one who once had a simple faith from drowning into dispirited doubts. The divinity hidden behind the veil is vivacious again: displaying its omnipotence and scrupulousness, instructing him to see the right path and never to deviate from it again. I hope that this will be a real chance of regeneration. . .

He had a wish for the readers:[13]

. . . These and many more—I know; I know them all: . . . I don’t have anything else to say. I only wish that you would remember that there was a kind of bird, predestined to sing until coughing up blood. It alone knew the other-worldly joy in its song. And there was the keenness of sadness and hurt that it alone knew. A poet is also like a silly bird. He pushes his tender heart tightly against the thrones of climbing roses, continues singing the radiances of the sun and the moon and the hopes of mankind. He will not stop until the blood from his heart turns the white flower crimson red. His suffering and happiness are intermingled. . ..

On November 19, 1931, a few months after the publication of Fierce Tiger, Xu Zhimo died in a plane crash, enroute to a lecture co-presented by Lin Huiyin and her husband in Beijing.


[1] The term “波心” can simply mean the center of a body of water. Here, it seems to make more sense treating the word 波 (bō, wave) as a verb. 心 (xin) means heart.
[2] Other than Dickinson and Fry, Xu was associated with John Middleton Murry and his wife, Katherine Mansfield. He translated eight of Mansfield’s short stories into Chinese: 《曼殊斐爾小說集》.
[3] Preface to Fierce Tiger (1931). 《猛虎集》序: . . . 說到我自己的寫詩,那是再沒有更意外的事了。我查過我的家譜,從永樂以來我們家里沒有寫過一行可供傳誦的詩句。在二十四歲以前我對于詩的興味遠不如對于相對論或民約論的興味。我父親送我出洋留學是要我將來進 “金融界” 的,我自己最高的野心是想做一個中國的Hamilton!在二十四歲以前,詩,不論新舊,于我是完全沒有相干。. . . 整十年前我吹著了一陣奇異的風,也許照著了什么奇異的月色,從此起我的思想就傾向于分行的抒寫。一份深刻的憂郁占定了我;這憂郁,我信,竟于漸漸的潛化了我的氣質。
[4] Alexander Hamilton.
[5] Literary Supplement of Peking Morning News 晨報副刊, May 13, 1926.
McClellan, T. M. “Wen Yiduo’s Sishui Metre: Themes, Variations and a Classic Variation.” Chinese Literature: Essays, Articles, Reviews (CLEAR) 21 (1999): 151–67.
[6] On April 1, 1926, members of the Crescent Moon Society initiated a weekly poetic segment “Shi juan 詩鐫,” meaning “poetic engraving,” in the supplemental section of the Morning News published every Thursday. “Chance Encounter” was included in the 9th volume.
[7]Bian Kungan was printed in The Crescent Moon Monthly in April 1928.
[8] Xu admired the works of Gabriele D’Annunzio and had translated his tragic drama La città morta (The Dead City). Elements of D’Annunzio’s play seemed to have been the inspirations for Bian Kungang. In The Dead City, Alessandro, the protagonist, and his best friend Leonardo, an archeologist, were in an exploration in Argolide. Bian Kungang in Xu’s play was a sculptor, restoring statues at the Yungang Grottos 雲岡山石窟. Anna, Alessandro’s wife, was blinded in a childhood incidence. James Nikopoulos in “The Spirit of the Chorus in D’Annunzio’s La città morta” gave detailed analysis of Anna’s character.
[9] Xu mentioned Wen’s influence on his writing “technique” in the Preface to Fierce Tiger.
[10]Xu Zhimo Quanji 徐志摩全集 [The complete works of Xu Zhimo], ed. By Han Shishan 韓石山, Tianjin ren min chu ban she, Tianjin city, 2005, vol. 6—Letters, 95-96
[11]Preface to Fierce Tiger, “. . . 生命的把戲是不可思議的!我們都是受支配的善良的生靈. . . 我也時常疑慮到我這些寫詩的日子也是什么神道因為憐憫我的愚蠢暫時借給我享用的非分的奢侈。我希望他們可憐一個人可憐到底!”
[12] Serious conflicts arose between Xu and his father during his mother’s final days and after her death.
Ibid., “今年在六個月內在上海與北京間來回奔波了八次,遭了母喪,又有別的不少煩心的事,人是疲乏極了的,但繼續的行動與北京的風光卻又在無意中搖活了我久蟄的性靈。抬起頭居然又見到天了。眼睛睜開了心也跟著開始了跳動。嫩芽的青紫,勞苦社會的光與影,悲歡的圖案,一切的動,一切的靜,重復在我的眼前展開,有聲色與有情感的世界重復為我存在;這仿佛是為了要挽救一個曾經有單純信仰的流入懷疑的頹廢,那在帷幕中隱藏著的神通又在那里栩栩的生動:顯示它的博大與精微,要他認清方向,再別錯走了路。我希望這是我的一個真的復活的機會。”
[13] Ibid., “. . .還有別的很多,我知道,我全知道;. . . 我再沒有別的話說,我只要你們記得有一種天教歌唱的鳥不到嘔血不住口,它的歌里有它獨自知道的別一個世界的愉快,也有它獨自知道的悲哀與傷痛的鮮明;詩人也是一種癡鳥,他把他的柔軟的心窩緊抵著薔薇的花刺,口里不住的唱著星月的光輝與人類的希望非到他的心血滴出來把白花染成大紅他不住口。他的痛苦與快樂是渾成的一片。