@article{oai:hama-med.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000167, author = {櫻井, 信夫 and 大木, 俊夫 and Kelley, David B. and Alexander, Martha L.}, issue = {5}, journal = {浜松医科大学紀要. 一般教育, Reports of Liberal Arts, Hamamatsu University School of Medicine}, month = {Mar}, note = {Tao Yuan-ming (c.365-427), a Chinese poet and regarded by modern critics as the most important of his period, in his own time, was said to be and has generally been believed ever since to be a recluse or hermit far from the "madding crowd" In his actual life, however, he was most likely an ordinary man, who yearned fora beautiful woman at around age thirty, after his first wife died (The Song of a Graceful Love), loved home-life and liquor (My Sons; Autumn in the Countryside), and grumbled in his old age about unachieved ambitions and the frustrations he once felt in his youth (Twelve Miscellaneous Poems; Nine poems in the Old Style: No 8). He candidly expressed all those human feelings in his poems. By taking. him for an ordinary man, rather than just a poet lacking such mundane interests one can get a better appreciation of some of his poems.}, pages = {45--71}, title = {『陶淵明考』 (其一) 東と西:漢詩の英訳 (3)}, year = {1991} }