The poetry of the Jian'an 建安 (196–220) era is often praised for its
authentic depiction of individual character. But the danger of offending the
patrons of the court, the Cao family, must have limited the ability of these
writers to express their thoughts and emotions directly. Thus it seems likely
that Jian'an poets might often have chosen to be reticent about their actual
opinions, conveying their intentions instead through understatement or even
irony. This essay is an experiment in identifying an ironic element in the works
of one of the finest poets of Jian'an, Liu Zhen 劉楨 (?–217). One clue to Liu's
ironical distance from the court around him is in an anecdote preserved in the
Shishuo xinyu. Two of Liu's best poems also contain internal conflicts that
seem to demand interpretation, not as lyrical self-expression, but something
more complex and indeterminate. The traditional critical concept of “wind and
bone,” frequently applied retrospectively to Jian'an poets, contains an inherent
tension that supports this approach. The sword of Damocles hanging over the
writers of Jian'an means that their writings were produced in consciousness
of the possible death sentence they might incur for impropriety. Another
suggestive source for the interpretation of Liu Zhen is a stele inscription he
wrote for a friend who had remained independent of politics. The political
context of Jian'an and its reflection in literary irony is well represented by
the figure of the “empty vessel,” which occurs in a number of historical and
literary contexts during this period.