Quatrain on a Spring Garden

Emperor Lizong Chinese

Song dynasty (960–1279)

Not on view

This verse, written during Lizong's maturity in a charming cursive script for the "noble consort" who inspired it, makes clear that life was not without its pleasures for the aging emperor:

Last year I saw a branch scented with a red fragrance;
Faintly, I imagined red corollas with little makeup.
Today, in the palace garden, such colors abound.
Perhaps, without knowing it, I prayed to the god of spring.

(Wen C. Fong, trans., in Beyond Representation: Chinese Painting and Calligraphy, 8th–14th Century [New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art,1992], p. 242)

Quatrain on a Spring Garden, Emperor Lizong (Chinese, 1205–64, r. 1224–64), Fan mounted as an album leaf; ink on silk, China

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