Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove
- Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove
-
▪ Chinese literary group
also called Seven Worthies of the Bamboo Grove , Pinyin romanization Zhulinqixian , Wade-Giles romanization Chu-lin ch'i-hsien
a group of Chinese scholars and poets of the mid-3rd century AD who banded together to escape from the hypocrisy and danger of the political world of government officialdom to a life of drinking wine and writing verse in the country. Their retreat was typical of the Daoist-oriented qingtan (“pure conversation”) movement that advocated freedom of individual expression and hedonistic escape from the corrupt court politics of the short-lived Wei dynasty (AD 220–265/266; Three Kingdoms period).
The group of friends gathered in a bamboo grove near the country estate of the writer and alchemist
Ji Kang in Shanyang (in the south of present-day Henan province). Ji's independent thinking and scorn for court custom led to his execution by the state, which was strongly protested by his several thousand followers; his execution testifies to the very real dangers that forced the Sages' retirement from palace life.
Most prominent among the Seven Sages was the free-thinking, eccentric, and highly skilled poet
Ruan Ji. Xiang Xiu wrote
Sijiufu (“Reminiscence”) and, with Guo Xiang (
Kuo Hsiang), a Neo-Daoist contemporary, the
Zhuangzizhu, a famous commentary on the works of the early Daoist philosopher
Zhuangzi. The other members of the group were the poet Liu Ling, the musician Ruan Xian, the devout Daoist Shan Dao, and Wang Rong (who was known mainly for his wealth).
The tensions that caused the forced retirement of the Seven Sages are revealed in their writings and those of other eremitic poets of the time. Their poems and essays frequently centre on the impossibility of palace life for the scholar (with criticisms of the court sometimes necessarily veiled in allegory) and the pleasures and hardships of country life. The retirement of the Seven Sages served as a model for that of later Chinese writers living in troubled times.
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Universalium.
2010.
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