WRITTEN IN THE CHARACTER OF A BEAUTIFUL WOMAN GRIEVING BEFORE HER MIRROR

BY LI T'AI-PO

I

Bright, bright, the gilded magpie mirror,

Absolutely perfect in front of me on the jade dressing-stand.

Wiped, rubbed, splendid as the Winter moon;

Its light and brilliance, how clear and round!

The rose-red face is older than it was yesterday,

The hair is whiter than it was last year.

The white-lead powder is neglected,

It is useless to look into the mirror. I am utterly miserable.

II

When my Lord went away, he gave me this precious mirror coiled with dragons

That I might gaze at my golden-threaded dress of silken gauze.

Again and again I take my red sleeve and polish the bright moon.

Because I love to see its splendour lighting up everything.

In its centre is my reflection, and the golden magpie which does not fly away.

I sit at my dressing-stand, and I am like the green Fire-Bird who, thinking of its mate, died alone.

My husband is parted from me as an arrow from the bowstring.

I know the day he left; I do not know the year when he will return.

The cruel wind blows—truly the heart of the Unworthy One is cut to pieces.

My tears, like white jade chop-sticks, fall in a single piece before the water-chestnut mirror.