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===In the East=== Li Bai's poetry was immensely influential in his own time, as well as for subsequent generations in China. From early on, he was paired with Du Fu. The recent scholar Paula Varsano observes that "in the literary imagination they were, and remain, the two greatest poets of the Tangโor even of China". Yet she notes the persistence of "what we can rightly call the 'Li-Du debate', the terms of which became so deeply ingrained in the critical discourse surrounding these two poets that almost any characterization of the one implicitly critiqued the other".{{sfnb|Varsano|2014}} Li's influence has also been demonstrated in the immediate geographical area of Chinese cultural influence, being known as Ri Haku in Japan. This influence continues even today. Examples range from poetry to painting and to literature. In his own lifetime, during his many wanderings and while he was attending court in Chang'an, Li Bai met and parted from various contemporary poets. These meetings and separations were typical occasions for versification in the tradition of the literate Chinese of the time, a prime example being his relationship with Du Fu. After his lifetime, Li Bai's influence continued to grow. Some four centuries later, during the [[Song dynasty]], for example, just in the case of his poem that is sometimes translated "Drinking Alone Beneath the Moon", the poet [[Yang Wanli]] wrote a whole poem alluding to it (and to two other Li Bai poems), in the same ''gushi'', or old-style poetry form.<ref>Frankel, 22</ref> In the 20th century, Li Bai even influenced the poetry of [[Mao Zedong]]. In China, his poem "[[Quiet Night Thought]]s", reflecting a nostalgia of a traveller away from home,<ref>''How to read Chinese poetry: a guided anthology'' By Zong-qi Cai p. 210. Columbia University Press [https://books.google.com/books?id=u-oTHkUit_kC&q=%22Li+Bai%22&pg=PA211]</ref> has been widely "memorized by school children and quoted by adults".<ref>Speaking of Chinese By Raymond Chang, Margaret Scrogin Chang p. 176 WW Norton & Company [https://books.google.com/books?id=i2xrmK_GZ4kC&dq=Chinese+Poet+%22Li+Bai%22&pg=PA174]</ref> He is sometimes worshipped as an immortal in [[Chinese folk religion]] and is also considered a divinity in [[Vietnam]] [[Caodaism|Cao Dai religion]].
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