Mao's poems are frequently quoted in popular culture, literature and daily conversations. Some of his most well-known poems are "Snow" (1936.02),[1]: 132 "Changsha" (1925), "The Double Ninth" (1929.10), "Loushan Pass" (1935), "The Long March" (1935), "The PLA Captures Nanjing" (1949.04), "Reply to Li Shuyi" (1957.05.11), and "Ode to the Plum Blossom" (1961.12).
In the autumn cold alone I stand
As Northward the Xiang river flow;
Upon the tip of Orange Island.
Ten thousand hills in a crimson glow
By their serried woods deep-dyed,
Hundreds of barges row upon row
Over crystal clear waters they slide.
High in the Heavens, Eagles sweep and soar
In the limpid deep, fish glance and glide;
Milliards of creatures fight to be free,
Under the frosty skies, cold to the core.
Into the boundless void, I despair,
To this vast realm I implore upon thee,
The fate of this land is in whose care?
I was here with a throng of peers
Vivid yet those eventful months and years.
Schoolmates, young as we were,
At life's full blossoming, our destinies we fulfill;
Scholars we were, of spirit and will
Carefree with youthful vigour
We point to our rivers and hills,
Praise and denounce with our lettering skills,
We cared not for fortune nor fame!
Remember the time if you could,
How in the midstream torrent we stood
And thus the speeding boats we did tame?
The yellow crane has long since gone away,
All that here remains is Yellow Crane Tower.
The yellow crane once gone does not return,
White clouds drift slowly for a thousand years.
Vast and wide flow the nine streams through the realm headlong
Dark and dim from south to north tracks steam strong.
In the thick haze of the misty rain, the way ahead blurred and obscured
The Giant Tortoise and Mighty Serpent has the Great River stocked and secured.
The Yellow Crane has long taken flight, who knows to whither?
The Tower hath since stood alone for guests to come hither.
As I pour my wine to the raging torrent flow,
My blood wells with the waves as my heart gleam and glow!
Mao later discussed the historical context of this poem's writing: "At that time (1927), the Great Revolution failed, I was very depressed and didn't know what to do, so I wrote this poem".
This poem was written in the Jinggang Mountains,[8] where Mao organized a Red Army to fight KMT forces after 1927. Jinggang Mountains is a mountain area at the border of Jiangxi province and Hunan province. It is there Mao began to experiment his theory of guerrilla war. He was quoted as: "When we can beat the enemy, we fight. When we can't beat them, we run".
Below the hills, our flags and banners fly
Above the hilltops, our bugles and drums cry.
Our foe besiege us in their thousands, they advance at us headlong,
Steadfast like stone, we solidly stand strong
Impregnable are our defences, already we dread nought,
Now our wills unite, stubborn like our fort.
Upon Huangyang Jie, guns boom with thunderous might,
Word comes the enemy has fled into the night.
Huangyangjie[9] is the place where the Red Army beat the KMT army after a fierce battle.
In 1929, Mao's Red Army left Jinggang Mountains and marched eastward to the western part of Fujian province and built their base there.
Line 3-4:
The warlords are clashing anew --
Yet another Millet Dream.
In 1929 Chiang Kai-shek's KMT army began war with Feng Yuxiang and Yan Xishan's armies in north China. That's why Mao said "the warlords are clashing anew", and "Millet Dream" meant Jiang, Feng and Yan's ambitions were just dreams. And Mao thought he could take this opportunity to his advantage when most of KMT army went to fight elsewhere.
Double Ninth Festival, also called Chongyang,[15] is a Chinese holiday. By tradition on September 9 (Chinese Lunar Calendar) each year, Chinese people would climb to the peaks of nearby mountains, looking far away, thinking about their family members who are travelling in other places.In addition, during that day, people will drink wine made from chrysanthemum to pray for longevity. Therefore, in 1980s, Chinese government set that day as old people's day as well to call on people to respect the senior.
Title: Tingzhou[26] is a town in Longyan City, Fujian province, Changsha[4] is the capital of Hunan province. At that time the Red Army tried to take Changsha, but they failed. Fujian is at the east, Hunan is at west, so Mao's army marched westward.
Huang Gonglűe(黄公略) was a leader in the Red Army; he was killed a few years later in battle.
Against the First "Encirclement" Campaign (1931)[27]
During 1931-1934 Chiang Kai-shek's KMT government organized five so-called "Encirclement" campaigns on CPC's Jiangxi Soviet in Southeastern China. The first four all failed. Mao led the Red Army beating the first three campaigns, then he was relieved of leadership due to internal power struggles of the CPC. Zhou Enlai and Zhu De led the Red Army to beat the fourth campaign, but they failed the fifth time, and was forced to leave their base and began Long March.
Line 5: Zhang Huizan,[28] the KMT general who led the first "Encirclement" Campaign. He was killed after being captured by the Red Army.
Line 10: Buzhou Mountain,[29] a legendary mountain in Chinese forklore. It is said Buzhou Mountain was one of the four pillars supporting the sky. A giant called Gong Gong[30] quarreled with the gods. He was very angry and banged his head against Buzhou Mountain. Buzhou Mountain was broken, thus the sky tilted and water poured from heaven, causing a huge flood on earth. Here Mao expressed his appreciation for Gong Gong's rebellious spirit.
Against the Second "Encirclement" Campaign (1931)[31]
Dabodi is the site of a battle which actually took place at the beginning of 1929. The background: at that time, Mao's Red Army had left Jinggang Mountains to look for a new base. Red Army was beaten several time by the pursuing KMT army. They used up all ammunitions and were starved. Then on the New Year of 1929 they fought a desperate fight in the snow at Dabodi, using stones and bare hands, and beat their enemy. Mao revisited this place several years later and wrote this poem.
This poem is also known as "the Three Songs."[36] It is written as three poems with sixteen characters each. This poem was written sometime between 1934 and 1935 during the Long March.[37]
Mountain.
I whip my quick horse and don't dismount
and look back in wonder.
The sky is three feet away.
Mountain.
The sea collapses and the river boils.
Innumerable horses race
insanely into the peak of battle.
Mountain.
Peaks pierce the green sky, unblunted..
The sky would fall
but for the columns of mountains.
This poem was written toward the end of 1935 when the Long March was almost finished. In it Mao listed some places Red Army had travelled through. Five Ridges and Wumeng are both big mountains in southwestern China. Jinsha is actually another name for certain parts of Yangtze River. Dadu River is at the west part of Sichuan, here in a heroic fight, 22 volunteers carried out a suicide attack on the KMT garrison across the iron-chained Luding Bridge and saved the Red Army from being destroyed. The Min Mountains are a mountain range at the Sichuan-Gansu border area, is already close to the end of Long March's route. To get rid of the pursuing KMT army, the Red Army had to climb over its 13000-foot peak and many froze to death on it.
The Red Army fears not the Long March, hard and toil
Over ten thousand rivers, thousand hills, to our cause we're true and loyal.
Five peaks ever majestic, mere crests of a stream,
The Wumeng mountains, dark yet stately, we walk clay balls none too extreme.
The Jinsha torrents smite warm mists at cliffs, as sands glisten of gold
We cross the Dadu river upon iron chains, bone-chilling cold.
The exalted Minshan Mountain, thousand leagues of snow,
Yet our three armies cross it, faces of joy beam and glow!
Actually, the Long March was done by three CPC armies separately. One was Mao's 1st Red Army from Jiangxi Soviet, another was Zhang Guotao's 4th Red Army from Hubei soviet, the third one was He Long's 2nd Red Army from west part of Hubei. Here, Mao was glad all three Red Armies were together.
The Kunlun Mountains[42] are a mountain range on the upper reaches of the Hotan River in Xinjiang Province, Northwestern China. According to Chinese folklore they (or a different, mythological mythical Kunlun Mountain) are the residence of a pantheon of gods.
Acrosseth the air, aboveth in the azure,
The Kunlun peaks, snow white,
Thou hath't seen the fairest of man and nature
Three million jade dragons in flight,
Freezing the Heavens, up in the bone-chilling height.
In summer days, to thine melting snow,
Thy torrents rage and flow,
Where thou hath't sent many a men to sleep tight
With the fishes and turtles down below.
From whom has judgement passed to the evil and the good
In these thousands of autumns thou haths't stood?
Today, to Kunlun I sayeth: NO!
Needless is thine height!
Nor is all thine snow!
Could the Celestial Sword in all its might
Cleave thee in three at my behest
Sendeth to the Occident thine crest,
Giveth to Mundus Novus thine breast,
And keepeth in the Orient the rest.
Peace wouldst prevail, acrosseth all mankind
The same warmth and cold with none left behind!
Mao added annotations to this poem, commenting "An ancient poet said, 'Three million dragons of white jade are fighting, their broken scales fly all over the sky. In this way he described the flying snow, but here I have used it to describe snowy mountains. In summer, when one climbs the Min Mountain, one looks out on far mountains that seem to dance and shine in dazzling whiteness. There was a saying among the people that years ago the Monkey King (Sun Hsing-che) passed by, all the mountains were on fire. But he borrowed a palm-leaf fan and quenched the flame and that is why the mountains froze and turned white."[37]
Mount Liupan (October 1935)
"Mount Liupan"[43] was written in late 1935 after the Red Army almost finished the Long March. Mount Liupan is a mountain in northwestern China.
Heavens are high, clouds are light
Wild geese disappear Southwards in flight!
None can claim Greatness without surmounting the Great Wall's majestic height!
Twenty thousand leagues we marched, to this site.
High upon the zenith of the Six Coils crest
Fluttering in the west wind, our Red banners glow in zest
Today, with the long spear in hand,
When shall we seize the Azure Dragon?
Line 3 is a quote that inspires millions of tourists who visit the Great Wall every year.
Snow (February 1936)
Also translated as Patio Spring Snow, Snow is Mao's most famous poem.[1]: 132 It was written in 1936 just after the Long March[44]: 40 when the communists had reached Yan'an.[1]: 133 He presented it to Liu Yazi, a poet whom Mao had met in Guangzhou in the early 1920s and who, like Mao, favored the traditional ci and lü forms. Through its descriptions of the limitations of the most prominent emperors in Chinese history and its exhortation to look to the present, the poem reflects Mao's ambitions.[44]: 40
Snow was published in newspapers in 1945 when Mao went to Chongqing in 1945 to hold peace talks with Chiang Kai-shek.[44]: 40–41 Chiang tried to write a similar poem but failed to do so.[44]: 41
Now, it is widely studied by students in mainland China.
Below is the original poem in Chinese[citation needed] with both a literal English translation and a metric adaptation[45] using one iamb per Chinese character:
Triumphantly competing with the heavens’ lofty height.
And come a clear day,
The land adorned with sunlight, draped in white,
Seduces all who bear its sight.
That wondrous view, so dear and tender all at once,
Moved countless heroes, bowing from their waists, to pay their due homage.
Alas, for Zheng of Qin and Wu of Han
Grasped not the art of poetry,
While Zong of Tang and Zu of Song
Had not virile minds nor forms.
A generation’s pride and joy,
The fierce and mighty Genghis Khan,
Knew only how to shoot the condors up above the steppes.
They are but history,
For those who seek a greater figure yet
Must look toward this age alone.
The first half praises the grandeur and beauty of northern China in the winter.[1]: 133 The more politically significant part is the second half, where Mao lists important Chinese emperors,[1]: 133 including Qin Shihuang,[46] the first emperor of a united China; Emperor Wu of Han,[47] the Han emperor who defeated the Huns; Emperor Taizong of Tang,[48] the second emperor of the Tang dynasty; Emperor Taizu of Song,[49] the first emperor of the Song dynasty; and Genghis Khan,[50] whom the Chinese celebrate as the founder of the Yuan dynasty despite him never personally conquering China. After describing the shortcomings of these past leaders, Mao hints at his aspiration to surpass them, alluding to a famous passage from Romance of the Three Kingdoms where Cao Cao says to Liu Bei that “the only heroes in the world are you and I.”
In late April 1949, the communistPLA (People's Liberation Army) crossed the Yangtze River and captured the capital of KMT government: Nanjing. Mao wrote this poem to celebrate this historical event.
Wind howls and rain falls upon the Bell Hills in twilight,
A million gallant warriors shall cross the river tonight.
Like a Tiger Crouched and a Dragon Coiled we outshine our glorious past!
Heaven Turns and the Earth Churns, the World upside-down at last!
Hark! We cross, we chase our foe who flee to our advance,
We shall not be the crowned monkey, not a single chance.
If the Heavens above had Heart and Soul then Heaven itself shall age!
The righteous path in the world is filled with obstacles and change.
Zhong Mountain, or Bel Hill is a hill at the suburb of Nanjing.
Nanjing,[53] a great city, had been the capital of six dynasties in Chinese history. Strategiests said this city was like a "crouching tiger", and a "curling dragon". Also can be in reference to Zhuge Liang's nickname of the crouching dragon.
Line 6: We shall not be the crowned monkey, not a single chance.
Xiang Yu[54] led the uprising that toppled the Qin dynasty. After winning the war against the Qin dynasty, Xiang Yu fought against Liu Bang for the control of China. Xiang Xu was defeated and killed. His story was recorded in the Beijing OperaThe Hegemon-King Bids His Concubine Farewell. Upon destroying the Qin, one of his advisors advised Xiang to establish his capital in the same place as the Qin. When Xiang refused, the advisor mocked him as a "Crowned Monkey" (沐猴而冠). Xiang responded by executing the advisor by frying in hot oil.
Prelude to Water Melody: Swimming In Changsha I drank the water of the Xiang, Now I savour the fish of Wuchang. As I swim across the Ten Thousand league Chang Jiang, I gaze above at the wide Welkin over the ancient Kingdom of Chu. Let the winds blow and waves wash upon this wondrous view! Far surpassing idle strolls in the courtyard in lieu, For today I am relaxed and mellow. Upon the river, the Master lamented, well and true: Thus like a current doth time flow!
Sails doth the wind fill, The Tortoise and Snake lay still, Great plans doth we fulfill! A bridge flies from south to north, the deep chasm becomes a thoroughfare henceforth! To my west shall stand a great stone wall, and hold the clouds and rains of Mount Wu as they fall, a great lake shall rise in the high gorge! The Goddess of the Mountain shall stand tall, and marvel at the world we shall forge!
The Great Stone Wall is one of the first references to the Three Gorges Dam. The Tortoise and the Snake refers to two mountains in Wuhan. He had previously referenced the two mountains in his previous poem The Yellow Crane Tower. The bridge in question completes the final section of the Beijing Guangzhou railway. The incomplete railroad was again referenced previously in the Yellow Crane Tower.
Tay, C. N. (1970). "Two Poems of Mao Tse-Tung in the Light of Chinese Literary Tradition". The Journal of Asian Studies. 29 (3): 633–655. doi:10.2307/2943248. JSTOR2943248. S2CID162305238.
——— (1966). "From Snow to Plum Blossoms: A Commentary on Some Poems by Mao Tse-Tung". The Journal of Asian Studies. 25 (2): 287–303. doi:10.2307/2051329. JSTOR2051329. S2CID163282812.