Guo Ai Explained

Guo Ai
Concubine Guo
Birth Place:Fengyang
Death Date:1428
Xuande 3
(宣德三年)
Spouse:Xuande Emperor
Full Name:Guo Ai (郭愛)
Posthumous Name:Zhen'ai (貞哀)
House:Guo (郭)
House-Type:Clan

Concubine Guo (; died 1428), personal name Guo Ai, courtesy name Shanli (善理), was a concubine of Xuande Emperor.

Biography

Concubine Guo was born as Guo Ai in Fengyang in present day Anhui province. She was selected into the palace because she was intelligent and quick witted, and excelled at poetry and prose. She died of illness in 1435,[1] soon after she was selected into the palace. She was buried with the Xuande Emperor after his death.[1]

Poetry

Well versed in poetry, Gao composed a poem in the ancient rhapsody (fu) style, for her previous life didn't seem to be happy, and probably due to illness. Later critics commented that this poem lamenting her fate was in the style of Cai Yan, a Chinese composer, poet, and writer who lived during the late Eastern Han dynasty of China. The way she expressed her feeling was neither overblown nor undignified. The poem appears in different anthologies with slight textual variations. The variant titles are version of "Feeling Sorry for Myself When Seriously Ill in My Residence in the Capital" (jingdi bingji zi'ai/Bingley zi'ai/zi'ai).

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Xuande Emperor (宣德 [ɕɥántɤ̌]; Beijing, 16 March 1399– 31 January 1435) was Emperor of China from 1425 to 1435. His era name means "Proclamation of Virtue". . Chinese Monarchs . 2021-05-27.