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Classic of Poetry

From Wikisource
English-language translations of
詩經 (Classic of Poetry)
Various, traditionally credited to the Duke of Zhou with later editing by Confucius

Shi Jing (traditional Chinese: 詩經; simplified Chinese: 诗经; pinyin: Shī Jīng; Wade-Giles: Shih Ching), translated variously as the Classic of Poetry, the Book of Songs or the Book of Odes, is the earliest existing collection of Chinese poems. It comprises 305 poems, some possibly written as early as 1000 BC. The Confucian tradition holds that the collection, one of the Wu Jing, or Five Classics, came to what we have today after the editing of Confucius. The poems are written in four-character lines. The airs are in the style of folk songs, although the extent to which they are real folk songs or literary imitations is debated. The odes deal with matters of court and historical subjects, while the hymns blend history, myth and religious material.

194977詩經 (Classic of Poetry) — Various, traditionally credited to the Duke of Zhou with later editing by Confucius

English-language translations of 詩經 include: