Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Conventions for Frequently Cited Works
- Introduction
- 1 Brushing Past Rainbows: Religion and Poetry in the Xu Mi Stele
- 2 Li Bo and Hu Ziyang: Companions of the Way
- 3 The Vicarious Angler: Gao Pian’s Daoist Poetry
- 4 Traces of the Way : The Poetry of “Divine Transcendence” in the Northern Song Anthology Literature’s Finest (Wen cui 文粹)
- 5 A Re-examination of the Second Juan of the Array of the Five Talismans of the Numinous Treasure 太上靈寶五符序
- 6 “True Forms” and “True Faces”: Daoist and Buddhist Discourse on Images
- 7 After the Apocalypse: The Evolving Ethos of the Celestial Master Daoists
- 8 Shangqing Scriptures as Performative Texts
- 9 My Back Pages: The Sūtra in Forty-Two Chapters Revisited
- 10 Taking Stock
- Epilogue: Traversing the Golden Porte—The Problem with Daoist Studies
- Index
3 - The Vicarious Angler: Gao Pian’s Daoist Poetry
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 February 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Conventions for Frequently Cited Works
- Introduction
- 1 Brushing Past Rainbows: Religion and Poetry in the Xu Mi Stele
- 2 Li Bo and Hu Ziyang: Companions of the Way
- 3 The Vicarious Angler: Gao Pian’s Daoist Poetry
- 4 Traces of the Way : The Poetry of “Divine Transcendence” in the Northern Song Anthology Literature’s Finest (Wen cui 文粹)
- 5 A Re-examination of the Second Juan of the Array of the Five Talismans of the Numinous Treasure 太上靈寶五符序
- 6 “True Forms” and “True Faces”: Daoist and Buddhist Discourse on Images
- 7 After the Apocalypse: The Evolving Ethos of the Celestial Master Daoists
- 8 Shangqing Scriptures as Performative Texts
- 9 My Back Pages: The Sūtra in Forty-Two Chapters Revisited
- 10 Taking Stock
- Epilogue: Traversing the Golden Porte—The Problem with Daoist Studies
- Index
Summary
Abstract
Verellen’s chapter examines the Daoist poems by late Tang dynasty general Gao Pian, who was also an alchemist, an engineer and architect of citadels, and a poet with a deep interest in Daoism, as well as in military cults and esoteric techniques. The ten poems analyzed in this essay were inspired by the Daoist rite of “Pacing the Void,” alchemical practice, and local cults. Several poems were dedicated to Daoist masters sought by the general. The Daoist poetry of Gao Pian reminds us of the complex and contested socio-cultural identities of Tang officials and military leaders.
Keywords: Gao Pian, Tang military history, Pacing the Void, inner alchemy
The trajectory of Gao Pian 高駢 (821–87) is a case history of the powerful and ambiguous role of military governors in late Tang politics. Its underexplored record also reveals one of the most intriguing personalities involved in shaping the turbulent events of ninth-century China. Gao began his military career on the northwestern frontier, where he recovered strategic territories for the Tang. From the gateway to Central Asia, he transferred to the empire’s southernmost border as protector general of Annan (North Vietnam), then successively governed Shandong, Sichuan, the middle and lower Yangzi regions, and finally Huainan, the Tang’s economic heartland centered on the financial and commercial hub of Yangzhou. Having won two wars against the kingdom of Nanzhao and scored major victories against the Tibetan Empire and the Tanguts, as commander-in-chief of the Joint Expeditionary Armies raised to suppress the Huang Chao 黃巢 rebellion (877–84), Gao Pian uncharacteristically allowed the insurgents to cross the Yangzi in 880, precipitating the fall of the capital, the emperor’s flight to Chengdu, and the government’s exile in 881–85.
The portrait that emerges from Gao’s writings and the testimony of contemporaries is no less fraught with complexity than the issue of his ultimate responsibility for the fall of the Tang. A man of many talents and wide-ranging curiosity, Gao was versed in alchemy and the esoteric arts of war, an accomplished engineer, architect of the medieval citadels of Hanoi and Chengdu, and, not least, a respected poet. Some twenty percent of his surviving poems can be labeled “Daoist.” Gao Pian’s Daoist poems project a self-image that is jarringly at odds with his public persona.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Religion and Poetry in Medieval ChinaThe Way and the Words, pp. 63 - 86Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2023