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| Portrait of Qu Yuan by Chen Hongshou | 
[This excerpt from The Nine Songs by Qu Yuan (332-296 B.C.), which appeared in the earlier edition of my Technicians of the Sacred in Arthur Waley�s different & text-only translation, was in its origins a clear example of poetry as an act of �total performance.�  Writes Wai-lim Yip as translator: �Recent scholarship, particularly the work of the poet-scholar Wen Yiduo, sees Qu Yuan's The Nine Songs as a collection of songs of folk and oral nature used in ancient shamanistic ritualistic dramas performed near Dongting  Lake 
What follows is how the excerpt will appear in the expanded edition of Technicians of the Sacred now in progress. (J.R.)]
The Senior Arbiter of Fate
(Upon the Kongsang  Mountain North  Palace 
          Arbiter:  May the gates of Heaven be opened wide!
                         I ride upon a dark cloud
                         And command the whirlwind to be my 
herald.
herald.
                         May the chill rain lay the dust to rest!
(The Arbiter sees the beautiful girls, descends quickly and runs after them. Surprised, the girls try to escape. The Arbiter succeeds in catching one of them.)
          Girl :        The Lord circles and circles in the sky and 
suddenly descends.
suddenly descends.
                           Would that I follow you to the Kongsang  
                                 Mountain 
                            Variegated and manifold are the peoples 
in the nine provinces
in the nine provinces
                            Whose lives and deaths are in your hands.
(The Arbiter and Girl  begin to dance.  The other girls now come back to cheer them on.)
          Girl :          Skyward flight, how smooth and serene!
                             He rides upon the pure air, commanding 
yin and yang .
yin and yang .
                             Quickly, solemnly, I hasten to follow you, 
my Lord,
my Lord,
                             To accompany you all the way to the Nine  
                                  Mountains 
                             Cloud-robes flutter and flutter.
                             Jade-pendants quiver and quiver.
          Arbiter:  One yin and one yang, one yang and one 
yin.
yin.
                         None knows the extent of my power.
          All in chorus: One yin and one yang, one yang and 
one yin.
one yin.
                                  None knows the extent of my power.
(The girls are all exhausted and fall asleep on the ground. The Arbiter is left alone, as if in deep contemplation.  Picking a flower from the bush and quietly putting it into the Girl's palm .)
          Arbiter: I pick this rarest cassia flower 
                        For the one who lives away from home. 
(The Arbiter sighs.)                   
                        Old age has now crept in, closing upon me.
                        Not to come closer ends in drifting apart.
(The Arbiter quietly goes.  Girl wakes up, finds the flower in her palm, looks for the Arbiter and catches sight of the Arbiter leaving up in the clouds, to her great dismay.)
          Girl:        He rides upon the rumbling dragon-chariot
                            Soaring, soaring into the high heavens.
                            Twisting the cassia-branch, I wait.
                            Longing, O Longing cuts deep into my 
heart!
heart!
          Chorus:    Sorrow, sorrow cuts heart; to it, what can 
we do?
we do?
                            How one wish the now is forever.
                            Man's course is fated.
                            Unions and separations, who can master 
them?
them?
The Lesser Arbiter of Fate
(Sunset. In a garden full of semi-tropical flowers. Several girls are playing in the garden. The Lesser Arbiter of Fate arrives.)
          Arbiter:  Autumn orchids and deer parsleys
                          Grow in rows and rows under the hall.
                          Green leaves, white flowers
                          Such fragrance! to attack my senses.
          Girl :       It is nature's law that man finds 
his woman.
his woman.
                          No need to be so down, so sad.
          Arbiter:  Green leaves, white flowers
                          Such fragrance! to attack my senses.
          Girl :       Autumn orchids are green upon green.
                          Green leaves, in sprays, emerge from 
purple stems.
purple stems.
                          A full hall of beautiful girls;
                          Why me, why his eyes are all glued at me, 
ever so suddenly?
ever so suddenly?
                          Ever so suddenly?
(For some unknown reasons, the Arbiter, apparently agitated, leaves in a hurry.)
          Girl :       Coming: no words. Leaving: no words.
                          He rode away upon the winds, carrying 
flags of cloud.
flags of cloud.
                          Grief, not to grieve? O this life-separation!
                          Joy, not to enjoy? O friends that we newly 
made!
made!
          Chorus:   Joy, not to enjoy? O friends that we newly 
made!
made!
                          Grief, not to grieve?  O this life-separation!
          Girl :       Lotus-garment, basil-belt;
                          So sudden, he came, so sudden, he went.
                          In the evening, he rests in the precincts of 
God.
God.
                          Lord, whom are you waiting for by the 
clouds' edge?
clouds' edge?
          Arbiter (from afar):
                          I would bathe with you in the Pool of 
Heaven
Heaven
                          And dry your hair in the Bank of Sunlight.
                          I look for the Beautiful One who has not 
come.
come.
                          Loudly into the winds, I sing my song.
          Chorus:  Peacock canopy and kingfisher banners,
                          He mounts the Nine Heavens, stroking the 
comet,
comet,
                          Stroking his long sword  to protect the 
young and the old.
young and the old.
                          O You alone, the most fit to judge over 
men.
men.
The River God
(The River God emerges from the water riding on the back of a white turtle. Fishes of all imaginable kinds swim around him. The River God sings in response to some girls dressed in white in front of the riverside temple.)
          God:   With you I will roam the nine rivers.
                      A riot of winds arises and cuts across the 
waves.
waves.
                      We will ride the lotus-canopied water-chariot 
                       Drawn by two dragons flanked by hornless 
serpents.
serpents.
          Girl:     I climb up the Kunlun  Mountains 
all directions.
all directions.
                       My spirit flies high as I face the infinite 
space.
space.
                       Dusk is here; absorbed, I forget to return.
                       I only look back upon the distant shore.
                       A fish-scale house, a hall of dragons,
                       A purple-shell gateway and a palace of pearl,
                       O God, why do you dwell in the waters?    
          God (ignoring her question):
                       Riding a white turtle, chasing spotted fishes,
                       I will roam with you among the small islets
                       As swollen waters come tumbling down.
                       With crossed hands, I will go with you to the 
East,
East,
                       To escort my beautiful one to the Southern 
Shore.
Shore.
                                                                                                you.
   God & Girl:  Wave after wave comes to welcome
                                                                                                 me.
                        Shoal on shoal the fishes take us all the way.
 
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