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The Book of Poetry, tr. by James Legge, [1876], at sacred-texts.com


p. 229

III

The Huang Niao; metaphorical. Some officer, who had withdrawn to another state, finds his expectations of the people there disappointed, and proposes to return to the royal domain.

1Thou yellow-plumaged bird, O spare
  The paper shrubs and fields of grain!
For me these people show no care;—
  I long for kin and home again.
That we judged ill, when we came here,
Does from their cold neglect appear.

2The mulberry trees and fields of maize,
  Thou yellow-plumaged bird, eschew!
These people are a dullard race;
  I long my brethren's face to view.
That we judged ill, when we came here,
Does from their cold neglect appear.

3Thou yellow-plumaged bird, O fly
  Those oak trees, nor the millet eat!
From this bad land I back must hie;—
  I long my father's kin to greet.
That we judged ill, when we came here,
Does from their cold neglect appear.


Next: IV. Wo Hsing Ch‘i Yeh