Wan Han had one poem collected in Three Hundred Tang Poems, a seven-syllable line quatrain '', which was translated by Witter Bynner as "A Song of Liangzhou". This poem discusses the vicissitudes of war, contrasting the threat of death with the music of the pipa and drinking grape wine out of luminous cups of a .
"A Song of Liangzhou"
涼州詞 葡萄美酒夜光杯,欲飲琵琶馬上催。 醉臥沙場君莫笑,古來征戰幾人回。
A SONG OF LIANGZHOU
They sing, they drain their cups of jade, They strum on horseback their guitars. ...Why laugh when they fall asleep drunk on the sand ? – How many soldiers ever come home?
The title of this poem refers to the sometimes province of Liangzhou, formed as part of the Han conquest of parts of the Xiongnu empire of the 120s BCE, in the Han–Xiongnu War. Settlement of Liangzhou occurred thereafter, although this crucial transportaion corridor was subsequently lost, only later to be regained by a newly reunified China -- events remembered in Tang poetry, including by Wang Han. The Hexi Corridor served to connect China proper with the Western Regions, which helped secure important parts of the Silk Road into Central Asia. This was paralleled in the Sui-Tang dynastic era, and is also a key transport route in modern times.
Pipa
The pipa is a four-stringed Chinese musical instrument, belonging to the plucked category of instruments. Sometimes called the Chinese lute, the instrument has a pear-shaped wooden body with a varying number of frets ranging from 12 to 26. Another Chinese four-string plucked lute is the liuqin, which looks like a smaller version of the pipa. The pear-shaped instrument may have existed in China as early as the Han dynasty, and although historically the term pipa was once used to refer to a variety of plucked chordophones, its usage since the Song dynasty refers exclusively to the pear-shaped instrument. The pipa is one of the most popular Chinese instruments and has been played for almost two thousand years in China.
''Ci'' form
Cí developed into a type of lyric poetry in the tradition of Classical Chinese poetry: generally cí use a set of poetic meters derived from a base set of certain patterns, in fixed-rhythm, fixed-tone, and variable line-length formal types, or model examples, with rhythmic and tonal pattern based upon a musical song tune. Surviving textual examples of cí date from 8th century CE Dunhuang manuscripts. Beginning in the poetry of the Liang Dynasty, the ci were lyrics which developed from anonymous popular songs into a sophisticated literary genre, and often hint at an origin in Central Asia. In this case, however, Wang Han seems to have used the term ci to refer to a poetic form of regular syllable line lengths, but with a suggestion of Central Asia, at least in the topic area.
Biography
Most detailed biographical detail of Wang Han's life is lacking, such as the years of his birth and death. However, Wang Han's life is known to date to the early eighth century, part of the Tang dynasty era. He is associated with Jinyang, part of a middle class family.