Nguyễn Du

Nguyễn Du (阮攸; 3 January 1766 – 16 September 1820), pen names Tố Như (素如) and Thanh Hiên (清軒), is a celebrated Vietnamese poet who wrote in chữ nôm, the ancient writing script of Vietnam. He is most known for writing the epic poem The Tale of Kiều.

Quotes
Alone, at the window, I read through old pages. A smudge of rouge, a scent of perfume, but I still weep. Is there a Fate for books? Why mourn for a half-burned poem? There is nothing, there is no one to question, and yet this misery feels like my own. Ah, in another three hundred years will anyone weep, remembering my fate?
 * West Lake flower garden: a desert, now.
 * "Reading Hsiao-ch'ing", in The Harpercollins World Reader: The Modern World, eds. Mary Ann Caws and Christopher Prendergast (HarperCollins Publishers, 1994), ISBN 978-0065013832, p. 1411
 * Note: Hsiao-Ching was "a seventeenth-century poet who was forced to become a concubine to a man whose jealous primary wife burned almost all of her poems" — David Damrosch, "Global Scripts and the Formation of Literary Traditions", in Approaches to World Literature (2013), p. 98

The Tale of Kiều (1813)




Chữ tài chữ mệnh khéo là ghét nhau. Trải qua một cuộc bể dâu, Những điều trông thấy mà đau đớn lòng. Lạ gì bỉ sắc tư phong, Trời xanh quen thói má hồng đánh ghen. talent and destiny are apt to feud. You must go through a play of ebb and flow and watch such things as make you sick at heart. Is it so strange that losses balance gains? Blue Heaven's wont to strike a rose from spite.
 * Trăm năm trong cõi người ta,
 * A hundred years—in this life span on earth
 * Opening lines

Phong tình có lục còn truyền sử xanh. a tale of love recorded in old books.
 * Cảo thơm lần giở trước đèn,
 * By lamplight turn these scented leaves and read
 * Lines 7–8

Lời rằng bạc mệnh cũng là lời chung. "We all partake of woe, our common fate."
 * Đau đớn thay phận đàn bà!
 * "How sorrowful is women's lot!" she cried.
 * Lines 83–84

Tình trong như đã, mặt ngoài còn e. Chập chờn cơn tỉnh cơn mê. what stirred their hearts their eyes still dared not say. They hovered, rapture-bound, 'tween wake and dream.
 * Người quốc sắc, kẻ thiên tài,
 * Beautiful girl and talented young man—
 * Lines 163–165

Của tin gọi một chút này làm ghi. "Call these small gifts a token of my love."
 * Rằng: trăm năm cũng từ đây,
 * "Henceforth I'm bound to you for life," he said.
 * Lines 355–356; quoted by Barack Obama, in "Remarks by President Obama in Address to the People of Vietnam" (24 May 2016): "Please take from me this token of trust, so we can embark upon our 100-year journey together."

Biết đâu rồi nữa chẳng là chiêm bao? we shan't wake up and learn it was a dream?
 * Bây giờ rõ mặt đôi ta,
 * Now we stand face to face—but who can tell
 * Lines 443–444

Bên tình bên hiếu, bên nào nặng hơn? Để lời thệ hải minh sơn, Làm con trước phải đền ơn sinh thành. and filial duty, which will turn the scale? She put aside all vows of love and troth— a child first pays the debts of birth and care.
 * Duyên hội ngộ, đức cù lao,
 * As you must weigh and choose between your love
 * Lines 601–604


 * Trông vời cố quốc biết đâu là nhà.
 * She peered far into space: where was her home?
 * Line 1788

Sầu dài ngày ngắn đông đà sang xuân. time softens grief, and winter turns to spring.
 * Sen tàn cúc lại nở hoa,
 * Just as the lotus wilts, the mums bloom forth—
 * Lines 1795–1796; quoted by Bill Clinton, in "Remarks at a State Dinner Hosted by President Tran Duc Luong of Vietnam in Hanoi" (17 November 2000): "Just as the lotus wilts, the mums bloom forth; time softens grief; and the winter turns to spring."

Tan sương đầu ngõ vén mây giữa trời. all mists have cleared; on high, clouds roll away.
 * Trời còn để có hôm nay,
 * Heaven grants us this hour: now from our gate
 * Lines 3121–3122; quoted by Joe Biden, while welcoming Party General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong in Washington (July 2015), as reported in "The Tale of Kieu, lotus and the US President" by Bui Hoang Tam, dtinews.vn (25 May 2016): "Thank heaven we are here today, to see the sun through parting fog and clouds."

Chữ tâm kia mới bằng ba chữ tài. the heart outweighs all talents on this earth.
 * Thiện căn ở tại lòng ta,
 * Inside ourselves there lies the root of good:
 * Lines 3251–3252

Quotes about Nguyễn Du

 * As a medium for literature in Vietnam, the native tongue had been fighting a difficult battle against classical Chinese since the early part of the fifteenth century, when Nguyễn Trãi (1380–1442) wrote his short poems of four or eight lines. In a poem of over three thousand lines, Nguyễn Du led that fight to a victorious conclusion... By triumphantly rescuing Vietnamese poetry from the stranglehold of classical Chinese, Nguyễn Du performed for the vernacular what Dante had once done for Italian, liberating it from its position of subservience to Latin.
 * Huỳnh Sanh Thông, The Tale of Kiều (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1983), p. xxi

you reached and touched no soul mate by your side. Your sorrow matched the fate of humankind: Kieu spoke your thoughts and crystallized your life. Kings rose and fell—the poem still abides. You fought and won your feats on waves of words. You planted stakes in the Bach-dang of time: our language and the moon forever shine.
 * Born into those foul times of dusk and dust,
 * Chế Lan Viên, "Thoughts on Nguyen", as quoted in "Global Scripts and the Formation of Literary Traditions" by David Damrosch, in Approaches to World Literature, ed. Joachim Küpper (Akademie Verlag, 2013), p. 99