Six Records of a Floating Life (Chinese: 浮生六記; pinyin: Fú Shēng Liù Jì) is an autobiography by Shen Fu (沈復, –) who lived in Changzhou (now known as Suzhou) during the Qing dynasty. The four known "records" are "Wedded Bliss", "The Little Pleasures of Life", "Sorrow" and "The Joys of Travel". Two further chapters are missing (or perhaps were not completed): "A History of Life at Chungsha" . 8 rows · · Six Records of a Floating Life () is an extraordinary blend of autobiography, love story and Brand: Penguin Publishing Group. This translation of Shen Fu’s early eighteenth-century work _Six Records of a Floating Life_ was first published in , but surprisingly I was not aware of it until I came across a copy at local bookstore. While the book was not exactly what I was expecting, I was pleasantly surprised by these memoirs of a flawed bureaucrat/5(71).
Shěn Fù *沈復* | 沈復* | *沈復. Shen Fu (c. ), Qing dynasty writer, author of Six Records of a Floating Life 浮生六記|浮生六记. 沈 复. 神 甫. shén fu. Shen Fu (simplified Chinese: 沈复; traditional Chinese: 沈復; pinyin: Shěn Fù; ?), courtesy name Sanbai (三白), was a Chinese writer of the Qing Dynasty, best known for his autobiography Six Records of a Floating Life.. Life. Shen Fu was born in Changzhou (长洲, in Suzhou, Jiangsu province) in He was known as a great writer and wrote one of the best known. Shen Fu — (Traditional Chinese:沈復; Simplified Chinese:沈复; Hanyu Pinyin:Shěn Fù, ?) was a Chinese writer. He wrote one of the best known descriptions of everyday life during the Ch ing Dynasty, entitled Six Records of a Floating Life. In this text Wikipedia.
Quotes by Shěn Fù. “The world is so vast, but still everyone looks up at the same moon”. ― Fu Shen, Six Records of a Floating Life. 3 likes. Like. “In laying out gardens, pavilions, wandering paths, small mountains of stone, and flower paintings, try to give the feeling of the small in the large and the large in the small, of the real in the illusion, and of the illusion in reality. Shen Fu does not present his life in chronological order. This may be a challenge or a refreshing variant. The memoirs are divided into four parts, which deal with the married life, leisure, misfortune, and travel, respectively. The complete text of _Six Records of a Floating Life_ has not survived, hence the four sections. Six Records of a Floating Life (Chinese: 浮生六記; pinyin: Fú Shēng Liù Jì) is an autobiography by Shen Fu (沈復, –) who lived in Changzhou (now known as Suzhou) during the Qing dynasty. The four known "records" are "Wedded Bliss", "The Little Pleasures of Life", "Sorrow" and "The Joys of Travel".
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