It's the Wednesday hump, and many of you at one point in time today imagined yourself far away.
I imagined myself inside an oak-laqured little room, with my bookcase and calligraphy set. Large doors face south as I watch my tea farm as sunlight melts away the morning fog. As my tea leaves awaken the smell of sweet leaves reassure me that this year would be a good harvest. I slowly drink my morning tea. This is a good day....
But it's night time after a day of work. My feet smell like bad blue cheese. That's right, I need a drink.
Tao Qian 陶潛, famous for his utopia in "The Origin of the Peach Blossom," wrote a lesser known piece on drinking and writing with his friends at home. Alcohol will be a recurring theme as a blog on with all sorts of drunks (ie emo drunks, sad drunks, blissful drunks, transcendent drunks).
飲酒二十首 序
Drinking 12 Verses: Preface
陶潛
Tao Qian
余閒居寡歡
My quite house has few pleasures
兼比夜已長
Furthermore the night is getting longer
偶有名酒
If by chance I have rice wine
無夕不飲
There is not an evening where I do not drink
顧影獨盡
I look at my shadow finishing it myself
忽焉復醉
My solitude suddenly ends again
既醉之後
After being drunk
輒題數句自娯
Soon after I write a few phrases to amuse myself
紙墨遂多
There is much to write
辭無詮次
I leave it without order
聊命故人書之
For the time being I beseech my friend to write a letter.
以爲歡笑爾
so that I simply chuckle.
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