Words for the Quiet Mind

Poems of Stillness — 300 Tang Poems Read by AI over Calm Music

2026-05-23

Frequently asked

Can listening to Tang poems help you sleep?

Yes. "Poems of Stillness" hands the whole 300 Tang Poems anthology to an AI reader over long stretches of ambient music — no ads, no switching, no commentary. It's built for winding down before bed, meditation, and quiet study: leave it playing an hour before sleep and let the steady recitation lower your thoughts more gently than scrolling a phone.

Which poets are in the 300 Tang Poems?

The great names of the Tang — Li Bai, Du Fu, Wang Wei, Meng Haoran and more, one after another. Tang verse lasts because it concentrates emotion: a five-character quatrain holds twenty characters, a seven-character regulated verse fifty-six — enough for an afternoon, a mountain, a farewell. Heard aloud by AI, it feels more like time travel than reading.

When is the best time to listen?

Three moments come up most: as white noise an hour before bed, during a 20-minute meditation, or as background on an afternoon when your writing is stuck. Put it on whenever you want the world to quiet down — you don't have to listen start to finish; drop in and out as you like.

300 Tang Poems | AI Recitation + Relaxing Music | Sleep, Meditation, Unwind | Let Poetry Heal Your Soul.

300 Tang Poems | AI Recitation + Relaxing Music | 300 Tang Poems

"Poems of Stillness" is Morgan's corner for those too busy to sleep, too restless to quiet the mind. AI recites the 300 Tang Poems, paired with long stretches of soothing music—Li Bai, Du Fu, Wang Wei, Meng Haoran, one after another. No ads, no switching, no commentary.

Why Tang poetry? Because Tang poems are the most concentrated “moment of emotion” in the Chinese-speaking world. A five-character quatrain holds twenty characters; a seven-character regulated verse holds fifty-six—enough to contain an afternoon, a mountain, a farewell. Hearing it spoken by AI feels more like time travel than reading—you’ll realize that people over a thousand years ago had pretty much the same reasons for lying awake as you do.

When to watch: an hour before bed, a 20-minute meditation, an afternoon stuck on writing, or simply when you want the world to quiet down a little.

About this collection

Eight straight hours of Tang poetry, read aloud by AI over ambient music. That's the central artifact of this hub. All 300 poems in the classical anthology, in order, with continuous music suitable for sleep, meditation, late-night study, or just background quiet.

Why combine Tang Poetry with modern ambient music? Because the original Tang poems were meant to be heard  sung, chanted, recited aloud. The ambient setting respects that listening tradition while making it accessible to modern listeners who don't know the poems and may not even know Chinese. The AI recitation handles the language; the music handles the mood; the listener handles the rest.

The track is one continuous 8-hour stream. There are no chapter breaks, no abrupt poem transitions. The transitions are designed so the listener can drift in and out without losing the flow. People use it for actual sleep (it loops via YouTube's autoplay), for meditation sessions, for long study blocks, and for background while writing.

This hub is the slowest of the five  explicitly designed for the long, quiet attention span. It doesn't compete with Tainan street food rhymes or 3-minute travel songs for time. It complements them. When the Food Poetry hub's energy is too much, this is where you go. When you want to come down at the end of a long day, this is where you stay.

For listeners who want shorter samples first, individual Tang Poem highlights appear in the YouTube channel description. The full 8-hour version is the headline piece.