 |
Li Bai, Hard Roads in ShuOh, but it is high and very
dangerous! Such travelling is harder than scaling the blue sky. ...Until two rulers of this region Pushed their
way through in the misty ages, Forty-eight thousand years had passed With nobody arriving across the Qin border.
And the Great White Mountain, westward, still has only a bird's path Up to the summit of Emei Peak – Which
was broken once by an earthquake and there were brave men lost, Just finishing the stone rungs of their ladder toward
heaven. ...High, as on a tall flag, six dragons drive the sun, While the river, far below, lashes its twisted course.
Such height would be hard going for even a yellow crane, So pity the poor monkeys who have only paws to use.
The Mountain of Green Clay is formed of many circles- Each hundred steps, we have to turn nine turns among its mound
– Panting, we brush Orion and pass the Well Star, Then, holding our chests with our hands and sinking to the
ground with a groan, We wonder if this westward trail will never have an end. The formidable path ahead grows darker,
darker still, With nothing heard but the call of birds hemmed in by the ancient forest, Male birds smoothly wheeling,
following the females; And there come to us the melancholy voices of the cuckoos Out on the empty mountain, under
the lonely moon.... Such travelling is harder than scaling the blue sky. Even to hear of it turns the cheek pale,
With the highest crag barely a foot below heaven. Dry pines hang, head down, from the face of the cliffs, And
a thousand plunging cataracts outroar one another And send through ten thousand valleys a thunder of spinning stones.
With all this danger upon danger, Why do people come here who live at a safe distance? ...Though Dagger-Tower
Pass be firm and grim, And while one man guards it Ten thousand cannot force it, What if he be not loyal,
But a wolf toward his fellows? ...There are ravenous tigers to fear in the day And venomous reptiles in the night
With their teeth and their fangs ready To cut people down like hemp. Though the City of Silk be delectable,
I would rather turn home quickly. Such travelling is harder than scaling the blue sky.... But I still face westward
with a dreary moan.
|
 |