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My Lady of the Chinese Courtyard

Chapter 3 No.3

Word Count: 499    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

ear

are as like each othe

ere is no news to tell

hat come to all women

rnoons I am on the terr

gust Mother must be ma

the peace inde

embroidery and sit upo

ng the people in the v

a thousand dwellings

ho dwell beneath the

-fields; watch them dr

for fertilizing; hear t

g bamboo, he drives t

over the fields to se

far below, and can but

bride and the train o

home. Often the waili

ars, and we lean far o

spirit money that will

yesterday we saw the p

esting-place of sycee

is sons made great boa

in all the province. B

e that he began this l

llions. But his milli

without ceasing, and

rn out, departed, o

e clang-clang of a go

ing the boards and ban

en upon them, and we c

me poor peasant wa

w. The hillside is purp

a golden haze. The red

that soon the winter w

sing sleepily in grass

ly spent. The wild geese

hee. All is sad, and s

eyes are filled with t

ind happiness without t

the days as tra

Wi

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My Lady of the Chinese Courtyard
My Lady of the Chinese Courtyard
“"In these letters I have drawn quite freely and sometimes literally from the excellent and authoritative translations of Chinese classics by Professor Giles in his "Chinese Literature" and from "The Lute of Jude" and "The Mastersingers of Japan," two books in the "Wisdom of the East" series edited by L. Cranmer-Byng and S. A. Kapadia. These translators have loved the songs of the ancient poets of China and Japan and caught with sympathetic appreciation, in their translations, the spirit of the East." -- Elizabeth Cooper”