"'Set the Controls...' is about an unknown person who, while piloting a mighty flying saucer, is overcome with solar suicidal tendencies and sets the controls for the heart of the sun."
"I managed to get hold of a book of Chinese poetry from the late T'ang period - and I just ripped it off. Except for the title, I've no idea where that came from. It came from ... within me."
- Roger Waters
(Karl Dallas has identified the title as a quote from William S. Burroughs.)
Except from "Pink Floyd - Through the Eyes of ..." by Bruno MacDonald
Summer 1997 - Johan Lif
When browsing the shelves of a store for used books in Uppsala, Sweden, I came upon a book called "Poems of the late T'ang". I wasn't looking for it, it was a happy accident. It seems that this was the book Waters drew on for the lyrics of "Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun". Contrary to what Cliff Jones says, it's not a Waley translation. The translator is A.C. Graham, and the book was first published in 1965, which I suppose must have been the edition Waters used (there was a reprint 1968, but wouldn't that be a little too late?). My copy is the 1988 edition, a part of the Penguin Clasics series, ISBN 0-14-044157-3.
Here's my line-by-line account of the lyrics and their sources:
This line comes from an untitled poem by Li Shang-Yin (812-58), p. 147 in the book
(iii)
Bite black passion. Spring now sets.
Watch little by little the night turn around.
Echoes in the house; want to go up, dare not.
A glow behind the screen; wish to go through, cannot.
It would hurt too much, the swallow on a hairpin;
Truly shame me, the phoenix on a mirror.
On the road back, sunrise over Heng-t'ang.
The blossoming of the morning star shines farewell on
the jewelled saddle.
[Heng-t'ang was a pleasure quarter; cf. Li Ho's High Dike.]
Taken from another Li Shang-Yin poem, "Willow" p. 154
Willow
['Willow eyebrows' is a phrase used for both willow leaves and arched eyebrows.]
Boundless the leaves roused by spring,
Countless the twigs which tremble in the dawn.
Whether the willow can love or not,
Never a time when it does not dance.
Blown fluff hides white butterflies,
Drooping bands disclose the yellow oriole.
The beauty which shakes a kingdom must reach through
all the body:
Who comes only to view the willow's eyebrows?
This line derives from "In Ch'i-an, on a Chance Theme"; by Tu Mu (803-52), p. 135
I Ch'i-an, on a Chance Theme
(First of two)
The setting sun is two rods high on the bridge over the
brook,
Light floss of mist curls half way up from the shadows
of the willows.
So many green lotus-stalks lean on each other in yearning!
....For an instant they turn their heads to the West
wind behind them.
[The lotuses, like the poet, look toward the sunset and Ch'ang-an.]
No direct source for this line. Perhaps Waters created it with several lines in mind - on p. 75, we find "Back from a walk, I lie under the front eaves", and on p. 151: "Two swallows in the rafters hear the long sigh."
Poet: Han Yu
Evening: for Chang Chi and Chou K'uang
The sunlight thins, the view empties:
Back from a walk, I lie under the front eaves.
Fairweather clouds like torn fluff
And the new moon like a whetted sickle.
A zest for the fields and moors stirs in me,
The ambition for robes of office has long since turned
to loathing.
While I live, shall I take your hand again
Sighing that our years will soon be done?
Poet: Li Shang-Yin
(vii)
Where is it, the sad lyre which follows the quick flute?
Down endless lanes where the cherries flower, on a bank
where the willows droop.
The lady of the East house grows old without a husband,
The white sun at high noon, the last spring month half
over. Princess Li-yang is fourteen,
In the cool of the day, after the Rain Feast, with him
behind the fence, look.
....Come home, toss and turn till the fifth watch.
Two swallows in the rafters hear the long sigh.
This line, while emotionally in tune with several of the poems, doesn't seem to be in the book. Of course, mountains figure frequently in the poems, and watchmen appear from time to time too.
Beaker: "The Watcher" is a Marvel comic book figure, who "watches" the Universe keeping an eye on the balance of power. This ties in with " Dan Dare" from Astronomy Domine, who was also a comic book character.
It is also interesting to note that the Chinese phrase for "going on a pilgrimage," ch'ao-shan chin-hsiang, actually means "paying one's respects to the mountain,". The mountain could be considered an empress or an ancestor before whom one must kneel. The recorded history of Taoism began during the second century A.D., and regarded mountains as home to immortals and as places where magic herbs to aid transcendence could be found. Confucians saw mountains as emblems of world order. In that context, this line could mean something like "I am observant of what is beyond this world". A less esoteric meaning could be that the sun is the "watcher", the great eye in the sky which rises over the mountain.
From "Questions to Heaven - The Chinese Journies of an American Buddhist" by Gretel Elrlich, Beacon Press
I have no idea where this line comes from. It's not to be found in the book.
Beaker: I believe this line thematically ties in with the previous line, in which we could say the rising sun "breaks the darkness". The grapevine could then be viewed as a symbol of life.
Taken from another untitled Li Shang-Yin poem, p. 146. Interestingly enough, Roger changed "ashes" to "shadow", which perhaps led him to create the line which follows it, "love is the shadow that ripens the wine".
The east wind sighs, the fine rains come:
Beyond the pool of water-lilies, the noise of faint thunder.
A gold toad gnaws the lock. Open it, burn the incense.
A tiger of jade pulls the rope. Draw from the well and escape.
Chia's daughter peeped through the screen when Han the clerk was young,
The goddess of River left her pillow for the great Prince of Wei.
Never let your heart open with the spring flowers:
One inch of loves is an inch of ashes.
a line that, as far as I can tell, isn't in the book. There are many mentions of "wine", though.
"Wine" could tie in with "grapevine," as wine comes from grapes. But though the sun can make the grapevine grow, it is only with human care and skill can wine be created.
These lines derive from the last line of "Don't Go Out of the Door" by Li Ho (791-817): "Witness the man who raved at the wall as he wrote his questions to heaven", the man being a certain Ch'u Yuan. "Questions to Heaven" was one his books.
Poet: Li HoWhy not call them 'Questions to Heaven'? Heaven is too august to be questioned, so he called them 'Heavenly Questions'. Ch'u Yuan in exile, his anxious heart wasted with cares, roamed among the mountains and marshes, crossed over the hills and plains, crying aloud to the Most High, and sighing as he looked up at heaven. He saw in Ch'u the shrines of the former kings and the ancestral halls of the nobles, painted with pictures of heaven and earth, mountains and rivers, gods and spirits, jewels and monsters, and the wonders and the deeds of ancient sages. When he tired of wandering among them he rested beneath them; and he took the pictures which he saw above him as themes for writing on the walls his raving questions.
(From the preface to the Heavenly Questions in the Songs of Ch'u)
I plucked the autumn orchid to adorn my girdle.
(Ch'u Yuan, Encountering Sorrows)
Heaven is inscrutable,
Earth keeps its secrets.
The nine-headed monsters eat our souls,
Frosts and snows snap our bones.
Dogs are set on us, snarl and sniff around us,
And lick their paws, partial to the orchid-girdled,
Till the end of all afflictions, when God sends us his
chariot,
And the sword starred with jewels and the yoke of
yellow gold.
I straddle my horse but there is no way back,
On the lake which swamped Li-yang the waves are huge
as mountains,
Deadly dragons stare at me, jostle the rings on the
bridle,
Lions and chimaeras spit from slavering mouths.
Pao Chiao slept all his life in the parted ferns,
Yen Hui before thirty was flecked at the temples,
Not that Yen Hui had weak blood
Nor that Pao Chiao had offended Heaven:
Heaven dreaded the time when teeth would close and
rend them.
For this and this cause only made it so.
Plain though it is, I fear that still you doubt me.
Witness the man who raved at the wall as he wrote his
questions to Heaven.
Not in the book. Perhaps Waters created it with the "Questions to Heaven" in mind.
Not to be found in the book. Many Chinese poems end with a question; maybe Waters decided to write his own Chinese-flavoured conclusion.
Beaker: I think the last two lines are linked, as the man wonders if the sun will leave again at the end of the day. Will the gift of heat and light from "Heaven" end? Will it come again tomorrow? I think Roger ends the song with a socialist inspired idea, that the "lesson of giving" could be that the sunlight which caused his vine to grow was given freely.
So what are we to make of those lines that aren't in the book? There are several alternatives: 1) Roger used another source. 2) The lines escaped me and are in fact lurking somewhere in the book (not very likely - it's only 171 pages, and I've been through them a few times). 3) They are Roger's own poetic creations. This last option seems the most likely one to me, especially seeing that Waters didn't slavishly follow the source book - most lines are altered in some way.
Anyway, I think this discovery settles some lyrical disputes: it's "yearning" rather than "union", "one inch" rather than "knowledge", "witness" rather than "who is", "raves" rather than "waves" or "arrives", "to heaven" rather than "by asking". Is it "counting" or "countless"? I don't know.
I found something else too: the Li Ho poem "On the Frontier" includes the line "On the Great Wall, a thousand miles of moonlight". It seems that Roger borrowed the words "a thousand miles of moonlight" for Cirrus Minor. And one poem by Lu T'ung is called "The Eclipse of the Moon". Sounds familiar, doesn't it? :)
If anyone is interested in reading a poem in full to get the context of the lines, contact me in private and I'll transcribe it for you.
Johan
Beaker: Tremendous thanks to Johan Lif for his incredible research. This was a project I had hunted for quite some time, and Johan's post to Echoes was invaluable in creating this page. Thanks again!
Cirrus Minor
Roger Waters
In a churchyard by a river
Lazing in the haze of midday
Laughing in the grasses and the graze
Yellow bird you are not lone in singing and in flying on
In laughing and in leaving
Willow weeping in the water
Waving to the river daughters
Swaying in the ripples and the reeds
On a trip to Cirrus Minor, saw a crater in the sun
A thousand miles of moonlight later
Beaker: Could the river daughters be a reference to Oenone? A Floydian composition from around this time?
Poet: Li Ho
On the Frontier
A Tartar horn tugs at the north wind,
Thistle Gate shines whiter than the stream.
The sky swallows the road to Kokonor.
On the Great Wall, a thousand miles of moonlight.
The dew comes down, the banners drizzle,
Cold bronze rings the watches of the night.
The nomads' armour meshes serpents' scales.
Horses neigh, Evergreen Mound's champed white.
In the still of autumn see the Pleiades.
Far out on the sands, danger in the furze.
North of their tents is surely the sky's end.
Where the sound of the river streams beyond the border.
['Evergreen Mound': tomb of Wang Chao-chun, concubine of the Emperor Yuan of Han (48-33 B.C.), who gave her as wife to a Tartar Khan; the grass always grew on her tomb. 'Pleiades': their flickering was an omen of nomad invasion.]
Beaker: The Pleiades is a star cluster.
for further reading, check out this great page on Chinese Poets and Poetry: