Who is the author of Qingming?

The author of Qingming is Du Mu, a famous poet in Tang Dynasty. This poem is about a scene in Tomb-Sweeping Day. Through the description of characters and scenery, we can deepen our understanding of Tomb-Sweeping Day. The last two sentences are meaningful in the form of questions and answers.

At the beginning, I pointed out that it was Tomb-Sweeping Day, and then I used the word "one after another" to highlight the feeling that the spring rain was as fine as silk, and then I got in touch with people. If I looked at people in a hurry, I would be "heartbroken" if I was very sad. Ask questions later, who should I ask for directions? The "shepherd boy" in the last sentence is not only a character, but also a person. The word "Yao" stands for distance and points out the direction, which is quite philosophical and has the same effect as "road resistance is long". At the end of this sentence, I feel more charming.

Extended data:

Du Muyou has twenty volumes of Collected Works of Fan Chuan, which was compiled by his nephew Pei. Later, Song people compiled Collected Works of Fan Chuan and Collected Works of Fan Chuan. The four-part series "Collected Works of Fan Chuan" consists of 20 volumes, and the other sets 1 volume and the outer set 1 volume are photocopied according to the Song Dynasty. There is also the Song version of Su Jing Yuan Ying by Yang Shouchang in Qing Dynasty, which was copied by Yang Shoujing's calligrapher from the Japanese official library in Fengshan. These two books are rare. The Collected Works of Fan Chuan published by Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House 1978 is a popular reading.

This proofreading is based on four manuscripts of Ming and Song Dynasties, with Tang Dynasty and Yuan Wen as participants, and with reference to other relevant materials, we proofread books with Jingsu Garden in Song Dynasty. Based on this, this paper holds that Du Mu's poems are the same as those quoted. Du Mu's poems, the first four volumes of Fan Chuanji compiled by Pei are credible, but not all of Fan Chuanji compiled by Pei, so there were supplements such as Fan Chuanji and Fan Chuanji in Song Dynasty.

In addition to the appendix of Fan Chuan's Biography of Poetry, Feng also supplemented Fan Chuan's Biography of Poetry in Qing Dynasty. 1962, when Zhonghua Book Company edited and published Notes on Feng Fanchuan's Poems, a Supplement to Fan Chuan's Poems was added according to The Whole Tang Poetry, with 486 topics and 524 poems titled Du Mu.