Song of the Yellow Bird

Song of the Yellow Bird (Korean: 황조가; Hanja: 黃鳥歌, Hwangjoga) is the oldest known Korean song[1] and was written by Yuri of Goguryeo in 17 B.C. It was written lamenting the loss of one of his wives who left his household following a quarrel with another of his wives. While Yuri of Goguryeo was away hunting, his second wife Chihui, who was Han Chinese, was scolded by his first wife Hwa hui, saying “How can you be so rude even though you are only a Han Chinese housemaid?"[2] Chihui left the household, never to return. Missing her greatly Yuri of Goguryeo wrote this song.[3]

Song of the Yellow Bird
AuthorYuri of Goguryeo
Original title황조가
CountryKorea
LanguageClassical Chinese
Publication date
17 BC

A Chinese translation of Song of the Yellow Bird is recorded in the Samguk Sagi.

Song Structure

One day, Yuri of Goguryeo saw a couple of yellow birds (Oriolus chinensis), and wrote the Song of the Yellow Bird.[4]

翩翩黃鳥,
雌雄相依。
念我之獨,
誰其與歸?

Orioles fly smoothly
Female and male cuddle close together
Thinking of my loneliness
Whom shall I go with?

gollark: Also, this is mildly interesting: https://www.theregister.com/2020/05/28/openssh_deprecating_sha1/
gollark: What poster?
gollark: To randomly partly restart a conversation from 10 minutes ago, the UK government apparently cares enough about security that they have this program to (apparently) try and teach "cybersecurity" stuff to teenagers, but I have no idea how good they actually are about pentesting.
gollark: Sounds like your country has stupid laws. I wonder if the UK's are better but I kind of doubt it.
gollark: !!FUN!!

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.