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黄庭坚[查看正文] [修改] [查看历史]ctext:615413
生平
其名庭坚,出于古贤人八恺之名。
治平四年(1067年)许安世榜进士。曾任吉州太和(今江西泰和县)知县。
元佑初,召为校书郎、主持编写《神宗实录》,擢起居舍人。宋元佑二年(1087年),迁著作佐郎,加集贤校理。《神宗实录》修成后,提拔为起居舍人。母丧,丁忧,复出任秘书丞,兼国史编修。
绍圣初,任宣州知州,后改鄂州。被章敦、蔡卞等新党人士指为修史「多诬」,黄庭坚逐一答辩,但依然被新党贬为涪州别驾,黔州安置,移戎州。
道君皇帝即位后,任领太平州事,九日即被罢免,改为主管玉龙观。黄庭坚昔年与赵挺之不睦,赵挺之执政,部下陈举诬害黄庭坚,指控黄庭坚写的《荆南承天院记》涉及诽谤,黄庭坚被放逐到宜州(今广西宜山县)。崇宁三年三月,黄庭坚到宜州贬所,初租民房,后迁伽蓝,都被官府刁难。崇宁四年五月,被迫搬到城头破败戍楼里栖身,人不堪其忧,庭坚终日读书赋诗,举酒浩歌,处之泰然。宜州人民敬其旷达高洁,许多人慕名前往求诗求书,向他请教学问,他也尽量满足来访者的要求。崇宁四年(1105年)九月三十日病逝于戍楼,终年61岁。大观三年(1109年)春,由苏伯固、蒋伟护柩归葬修水县双井祖坟之西。
性情
庭坚性至孝,亲自为母亲洗涤便溺之具。母病一年,他日夜察问母病,宵衣旰食,母丧,他筑庵守孝于墓旁,哀痛成疾,几至死亡。
庭坚笃信佛教,四十岁时曾写《发愿文》,发愿素食,戒除女色、饮酒:「今日对佛发大誓:愿从今日尽未来也,不复淫欲、饮酒、食肉。设复为之,当堕地狱,为一切众生代受头苦。」
庭坚好饮茶,以茶代酒二十年,多次规劝外甥洪驹父戒酒,富弼称其为「分宁一茶客」又说,「人生莫非求禄色,惟有山谷茶一杯」。洪州双井茶即因黄之推广而闻名。
庭坚自称有香癖。对用香之道颇为了解。其诗有云:贾侯怀六韬,家有十二戟。天资喜文事,如我有香癖。
成就
诗词
黄庭坚诗名尤盛,与苏轼并称苏黄,朱弁《曲洧旧闻》:「东坡文章至黄州以后,人莫能及,唯黄鲁直诗时可以抗衡。」黄庭坚为江西诗派之祖,有《豫章黄先生文集》、《山谷琴趣外篇》。其弟子任渊著有《山谷诗集注》二十卷,《后山诗注》十二卷,《山谷精华录》八卷。钱锺书对任注作了补正与纠谬达四十条。
黄庭坚在诗歌上主张袭用古人章句,以创新其意义,其手法多侧重在「点铁成金」与「夺胎换骨」等形式,影响后世深远。
「点铁成金」与「夺胎换骨」本来是道教术语,「点铁成金」原本指炼金术,把铁炼成黄金,在此的意思是把古人的诗文或小故事加以变化,如增删字句,变换语序等,增加文句的韵味。如黄庭坚:「寄雁传书谢不能。」就用了两个典故,一是苏武「雁足传书」,二是「雁到衡阳而止」的小故事。
「夺胎换骨」中「夺胎」,是道教仙人死后,灵魂还想继续留在人世,于是附到孕妇腹中,将原本的胎儿魂魄驱离,以凭此胎而出生。此即模仿古人诗文的形式,但是另以词句形容。王羲之《兰亭序》:「俯仰之间,已为陈迹」,被黄庭坚改为「俯仰之间已陈迹。」「换骨」是说,古人认为「骨浊不能成仙」,仙人利用法术让门下弟子变成「仙风道骨」。在此即撷取古人诗文之意,而另用他语。如王安石:「只向贫家促机杼,几家能有一絇丝?」黄庭坚改为「莫作秋虫促机杼,贫家能有几絇丝?」
书法
黄庭坚书法别树一格,擅行书、草书,尤善草书,其作品有《诸上座帖》、《李白忆旧游诗帖》、《花气诗帖》、《松风阁诗帖》、《寒山子庞居士诗》、《赠张大同卷跋尾》等,被后人评为纵横奇倔,波澜老成,且收放自如,突破方正均匀的体例,因而与苏轼、米芾、蔡襄并称宋四家。
「宋四家」虽然都以行书见长,但只有黄庭坚的草书雄视当世。由于黄庭坚心胸豁大,不择笔墨,遇纸即书,直到纸尽为止,所以他的草书不为旧规矩所束缚。正因如此,黄庭坚被视为继怀素、张旭之后,宋代最重要的草书大家,明代沈周更称他为「草圣」。
其作品《砥柱铭》在2010年保利春拍卖会上以总成交价4.368亿元人民币创中国艺术品的世界拍卖纪录。
显示更多...: Biography Early years in Jiangnan With Uncle Li in Anhui Jinshi and early career Tianjin earthquakes Teaching career Fame and conviction for conspiracy against the emperor Yuanyou era Death of his mother and exile Pardon and exile, again XiaoXiang poetry Death Health Family Religion Works Calligraphy Poetry Gallery
Biography
Early years in Jiangnan
Huang Tingjian was born into the prominent Huang clan, which had established residence in Jiangnan, south of the Yangzi River, just across the river gorge from the main turmoils and troubles of the Five Dynasties period. Tingjian's great-great-grandfather had then and there established a great library, together with an educational system. Achievement of the jinshi degree was a common attainment for men of the Huang clan. Huang Tingjian's mother, Lady Li, was an accomplished painter of bamboo and player of the guqin. His father, Huang Shu (,1018-1058) received his jinshi in 1042, and introduced his son Huang Tingjian to the works of Du Fu and Han Yu, before dying when Tingjian was 13 years old, at which point Huang Tingjian left his hometown of Fenning (,in modern Jiangxi).
With Uncle Li in Anhui
After his father's death, Huang Tingjian was sent to Anhui to be further brought up by his uncle, Li Chang (,1027-1090), who was also possessed of a large library.
Jinshi and early career
Huang Tingjian failed his jinshi in the Imperial examination, at his first attempt, in 1064, but was passed in 1067, when he was 22 years old. His first employment was in Song Shenzong's first year as emperor.
Tianjin earthquakes
In 1068-1069 a series of major earthquakes occurred southwest of modern Tianjin. The devastating human consequences were noted by Huang Tingjian. This was the occasion of his writing the poem "Lament for the Refugees" (流民叹/流民叹, using the imagery of a giant tortoise moving mountains which it carried upon its back .
Teaching career
Huang Tingjian passed his teaching credential exam in 1072, and spent the next 7 years teaching at the Damingfu Imperial Academy in Hebei. Its location was in what is currently Daming County. Damingfu was then Northern Capital of the Song Chinese Empire, and not far from the militarily turbulent northern border with the rival Khitan Empire.
Fame and conviction for conspiracy against the emperor
In 1072, Li Chang, his maternal uncle, and Sun Jue his father-in-law had shown examples of Huang Tingjiang's works to the famous poet and New Policy opponent Su Shi (Dongpo). In 1078, Huang presented Su with a letter and two elaborate gushi-style poems, to which Su returned with two poems of his own, matching Huang's rhyme-scheme. Huang's fame was secured when Su Shi (Dongpo) heaped his praises upon him, and the two became close friends for life.
So far, it seems that Huang had managed to avoid entanglement in politics, and in fact his early career as an imperial teaching official seems to have been in part secured by the favor of Wang Anshi, upon reading a poem of Huang's, hinting at retiring from the boredom which he was experiencing at that point of his career. At the time, there were two major parties, a "reform" party (also known as the New Policies Group), led by Wang Anshi and a "conservative" party, which included such prominent officials as Sima Guang, Ouyang Xiu, and Su Shi. Under the imperial system the winning side was chosen by the emperor (or the emperor's regent in the case of his minority). Imperial disfavor could range from death to a stalled career.
As Emperor Shenzong increasingly favored Wang Anshi's New Policies, as they were known, their opponents suffered politically: this included exile for Su Shi, beginning in 1080, to Hangzhou (which was the time period when Su adopted the nickname of Dongpo). As Su's conviction was for writing in a defamatory way about the emperor and his government, anyone who had circulated his writings without reporting them (as Shen Kuo did), was likely to be found guilty of conspiracy. Both Huang Tingjian and his Uncle Li were convicted as co-conspirators and accordingly given considerable fines (20 catties of copper). Huang was also exiled, first to Jizhou Subprefecture (now Jizhou District, Jiangxi), then to Depingzhen, in Shandong. Like, Su Shi, Huang Tingjian was known for good governance: light with taxes and empathetic with the common folk over whom they were placed in charge. Among other deeds, Huang Tingjian failed to enforce the New Policy of government monopoly of salt production.
Yuanyou era
The Yuanyou (, Yuányòu) era (1086–1093) was the first regnal period of the new emperor, Song Zhezong, and an important period in the life of Huang Tingjian. During the Yuanyou years, Zhezong was in his minority, and Empress Dowager Gao acted as regent. Empress Dowager Gao was not a New Policy enthusiast. Wang Anshi's party fell out of favor, and Wang Anshi himself was forced into retirement. Huang Tingjian and the other exiles were recalled from their places of banishment. Happy days were here again: now, Su, Huang, and the others could enjoy each other's company in person, and Huang was promoted, to sub-editor of the Academy of Scholarly Worthies and examining editor for the official records of former Emperor Shenzong's reign. Editing the official records of the previous emperor, in light of the factional politics which had ignited at that time and were still burning, would turn out to be a perilous undertaking for Huang Tingjian's future.
Death of his mother and exile
Huang Tingjian's mother died in 1091. Obligatory retirement for a period of mourning in the case of the death of either parent was then the custom, and Huang returned to the family cemetery in Fenning, Jiangnan, with the remains of his mother, his two wives that had died, and those of an aunt. While he was engaged in the three-year ritual mourning period, Empress Dowager Gao died, and Zhezong began to reign in fact as well as name. Zhezong favored the reformist party, and their remnant members returned with a vengeance: their opponents alive or dead were persecuted: Su Shi was demoted and exiled, Sima Guang and Lü Gongzhu's tombs were defaced, and Huang Tingjian was denounced by Cai Bian (Wang Anshi's son-in-law). Huang was convicted of sarcastically editing the official records of former Emperor Shenzong. Huang Tingjian spent the ensuing decade in exile, in various locations in Sichuan.
Pardon and exile, again
In the year 1100, Emperor Zhezong died young and unexpectedly, at 23 years old, and with his death came a new political alignment: the new emperor was Huizong, then in his late teenage years. Much of the power was in the hands of his older brother's wife, the former Empress Xiang. A general amnesty was declared between the two parties, the reformists and, the conservatives. By this time the anti-reformist conservatives were known as the "Yanyou Party". Cai Bian and his adherents were dismissed from office. Huang Tingjian found out he had been pardoned, later in the year of 1100. He was also granted a sinecure position in Ezhou city, in southeastern Hubei (responsible for collecting tax revenues on salt), which meant that he received a salary or other remuneration; but, as he was not required to live or work there, this was not exile. However, Huang Tingjian remained in Sichuan long enough to attend his son's marriage ceremony, to the daughter of a local official. In 1102, Huang Tingjian visited Fenning, after extensive travels and several illnesses. As the year 1102 progressed, the political pendulum again reversed itself: the Yuanyou officials were out of favor once more. A list of somewhat over 100 officials whom the emperor considered to be heterodox was erected on a stele at the capital: Huang Tingjian was one of those named. Huang had been the recipient of a major promotion, but was now dismissed summarily, just 9 days after his appointment. As the year 1102 waned, Huang Tingjian returned to Ezhou, and visited various other places including Wuchang. It was during this period that he wrote "Wind in the Pines Hall". Huang Tingjian awaited further developments at Ezhou, hearing no news about how the emperor intended to deal with his case, until the end of 1103. It was exile, again. This time to the far south, Yizhou (now in Guangxi). At the time, as now Yizhou, was a fairly small settlement composed of both ethnic Han people and Zhuang people. However, then it was only tenuously part of the Chinese Empire. Guangxi, then administered as Guangnanxi ("West Southern Expanse"), had only been annexed by the Song Dynasty in 971. And, as recently as 1052, the Zhuang leader Nong Zhigao had led a revolt, briefly making the area part of an independent kingdom. Sending the then 58-year-old, sick and frail Huang Tingjian to an official exile in this remote and precarious position was not far from a death sentence.
XiaoXiang poetry
Travel to his remote posting meant passing through the XiaoXiang: the classic poetic place of exile. Not that he was not already there, in Ezhou; but, now, Huang Tingjian was faced with traveling through the depths of it, only to emerge into an even more remote and difficult territory. He faced a fate similar to Su Shi Dongpo, who never quite made it back from his final exile in the then remote and undeveloped island of Hainan. The far southern lands were known as the "gates of hell", but when the emperor ordered one of his subjects there, there was little choice. Open resistance could be and often was met with the mass annihilation of ones entire family, and even whole clan. The main hope was a quick recall from exile. However, in Huang Tingjian's case, this never happened.
In early 1104, Huang Tingjian packed up his family and headed south, towards his place of banishment, Yizhou. That springtime, during the course of his journey, Huang Tingjian met the Chan monk Zhongren (also known as Huaguang, after the name of his monastery). Zhongren shared a scroll of poems by Su Shi, Su Shi's brother Su Che, the monk Shenliao, and Qin Guan (another one of the Yuanyou crew): and, both Su Shi and Qin Guan had died as a result of their exiles in the south, the journey which Huang Tingjian was now upon.
The two became friends: Zhongren painted branches of flowering plum blossoms and landscapes for Huang, Huang wrote poems in his inimitable calligraphy for Zhongren, even appending a poem with praise of Zhongren to the end of his precious scroll of poems. Together the two helped to change the art world forever: establishing monochrome painting of plums among the scholar-official class.
Death
Parting ways with his friend Zhongren, Huang Tingjian headed onward towards his destined place of banishment, Yizhou. Emperor Huizong had ordered him there, and so, leaving his family in the mountains of Yongzhou (Hunan), in order to "spare them from the intense heat", Huang Tingjian traveled on to his destination without them.
Once there, he continued his calligraphy, of which an ink rubbing survives, a rather pointed quote about the life of Fan Pang (137-169), who was arrested and executed due to getting caught up in factional politics, during the second of the Disasters of Partisan Prohibitions which occurred during the Han dynastic era.
In the early Winter of 1105, Huang Tingjian died, alone from his family, in exile, in Yizhou.
His funeral was arranged by a stranger, who had traveled to Yizhou, hoping to make his acquaintance.
Health
Huang Tingjian's health was poor throughout his life. His health problems included "beriberi, severe coughs and colds, malarial fever, headaches, dizziness, and in his later years, heart trouble and chest and arm pains." Huang Tingjian also had a deep interest in medicinal substances, and at one point seriously mulled over the idea of giving up his aspirations for an official career, in favor of opening up a shop and dealing in herbs and herbal medications.
Family
Huang Tingjian had 3 wives during his life, and one son, to the third. His first wife was the daughter of the scholar, Sun Jue (1028-1090). She died in 1070. His second wife, from the Xie clan, had a daughter to him, before her death, in Damingfu, in 1079. His third wife gave birth to his only son, whom he gave the unusual name of "Forty", because he was 40 years old when the boy was born.
Religion
Huang Tingjian had a strong lifelong interest in Buddhism and Daoism. In his hometown of Fenning were 10 monasteries of the Chan practice ("Chan" is Chinese for Zen); indeed, Jiangnan had hundreds of them. The year after his second wife died, Huang retreated to the Shan'gu (Mountain Valley) Daoist monastery in Anhui, and took the religious name Shan'gu Daoren.
Works
Huang Tingjian is noted for his prodigious talent in terms of his vast knowledge of Classical Chinese poetry and literature. He is famous both for the calligraphy and the poetry of his work "Wind in the Pines Hall", which survives in the Palace Museum, Taipei.
Calligraphy
Huang is also regarded as a particularly fine and creative calligrapher of the Song Dynasty. His xingshu (semi-cursive style of script) displays a sharpness and aggression that is instantly recognizable to students of Chinese calligraphy. His calligraphic piece Biographies of Lian Po and Lin Xiangru epitomises a technique today known as "flying-white" "when writing calligraphy, the areas within a brushstroke where the brush fails to leave a full measure of ink and streaks of white paper or silk appear".
Poetry
Huang Tingjian is considered to be the founder of the Jiangxi school of poetry.
Gallery
File:Huang Tingjian.jpg|Picture of Huang Tingjian, from much later times.
File:Su Shi, Foyin Huang Tingjian at Long Corridor.jpg|Illustration from the Long Corridor. Left to right: Su Shi, Fo Yin (佛印), and Huang Tingjian, drinking wine.
File:Wei Qing Dao Ren Observance.jpg|Wei Qing Dao Ren Observance
File:Huang Tingjian - Seven-character Poetry.jpg|Besotted by Flower Vapors
File:24 parangons of filial piety - Huang Tingjian.jpg|24 paragons of filial piety - Huang Tingjian, who "so loved his mother, that he emptied her chamber pot himself".
主題 | 關係 |
---|---|
山谷内集 | creator |
山谷内集诗注 | creator |
山谷刀笔 | creator |
山谷别集诗注 | creator |
山谷词 | creator |
山谷诗集注 | creator |
豫章黄先生文集 | creator |
文献资料 | 引用次数 |
---|---|
御选历代诗馀 | 2 |
河南通志 | 2 |
百川书志 | 4 |
钦定续文献通考 | 3 |
御定佩文斋书画谱 | 2 |
御定渊鉴类函 | 2 |
宋元学案 | 2 |
铁琴铜剑楼藏书目录 | 1 |
山堂肆考 | 2 |
曾公遗录 | 1 |
东都事略 | 9 |
粤西文载 | 2 |
宋史纪事本末 | 5 |
四库全书总目提要 | 9 |
郡斋读书志 | 4 |
文献通考 | 6 |
尧山堂外纪 | 2 |
书史会要 | 16 |
直斋书录解题 | 6 |
御批历代通鉴辑览 | 2 |
道山清话 | 6 |
能改斋漫录 | 1 |
书诀 | 2 |
名贤氏族言行类稿 | 2 |
山西通志 | 2 |
宋史 | 36 |
方舆胜览 | 2 |
四库全书简明目录 | 12 |
桂故 | 2 |
氏族大全 | 2 |
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