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Lu Lun (traditional Chinese: ē§ē¶ø; simplified Chinese: å¢ēŗ¶; pinyin: LĆŗ LĆŗn, 739ā799) was a Chinese poet of the Middle Tang dynasty, with six of his poems being included in the famous anthology Three Hundred Tang Poems, as well as being mentioned in one poem, by Sikong Shu, which was translated by Witter Bynner as "When Lu Lun My Cousin Comes For The Night". His courtesy name is Yun Yan (Chinese: å
čØ; pinyin: YĒn YĆ”n).
Biography
Lu Lun was born around 748. His ancestral home was Fanyang, now in modern southwest Beijing, China. He was born in what is now Yongji, Shanxi.
He was prevented from assuming his governmental appointment, following his receiving the Jinshi degree in the Imperial examination system, by the disorders associated with the An Shi Rebellion, which caused him to flee for refuge to Jiangxi.
He died around 799.
Poetry
As a poet, Lu Lun is known for continuing the Frontier fortress genre of Tang poetry (along with Li Yi), begun earlier by the "Borders and Frontier Fortress Poets Group" (č¾¹å”čÆę“¾), in which are included Gao Shi, Cen Can, Wang Changling, Wang Zhihuan, Cui Hao, and Li Qi. Indeed, out of the six lyrics of Lu's included in the Tang 300, four of them are variations written under the title of "Beyond the Border Tunes" (å”äøę²).
See also
Tang poetry
Classical Chinese poetry
Classical Chinese poetry genres
References
Cited works
Ueki, Hisayuki; Uno, Naoto; Matsubara, Akira (1999). "Shijin to Shi no ShÅgai (Ro Rin)". In Matsuura, Tomohisa (ed.). Kanshi no Jiten ę¼¢č©©ć®äŗå ø (in Japanese). Tokyo: TaishÅ«kan Shoten. pp. 108ā109. OCLC 41025662.
External links
Books of the Quan Tangshi that include collected poems of Lu Lun at the Chinese Text Project:
Book 276
Book 277
Book 278
Book 279
Book 280
Works by Lu Lun at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)