歸田錄

audiobook

歸田錄

by Xiu Ouyang

ZH·~30 minutes·1 chapter

Chapters

1 total

30:59

Description

A lively window onto the Song dynasty, this collection gathers the unrecorded moments of court life that official histories left out. Ouyang Xiu began by confessing his own desire for a quieter life, yet he could not resist preserving the witty exchanges, humble confessions, and occasional missteps of his contemporaries. The opening pages set the tone with anecdotes about emperors deciding whether to bow before a Buddha statue and clever craftsmen justifying a leaning pagoda, inviting listeners to hear the human side of power.

From scholars debating the proper use of ancient rites to ministers navigating personal loyalty and public duty, each story blends humor with moral reflection. The narrator’s candid voice offers both amusement and insight, revealing how officials balanced ambition, integrity, and the whims of imperial favor. As the portraits unfold, listeners gain a vivid sense of a bustling bureaucracy where clever retorts and quiet doubts shape history’s quieter corners.

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Details

Language

zh

Duration

~30 minutes (29K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2008-05-11

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Xiu Ouyang

Xiu Ouyang

1007–1072

A major voice of the Northern Song, this poet, historian, and statesman helped bring Chinese prose back to a clearer, more classical style. His essays and historical writing stayed influential long after his lifetime.

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