Everyone may know that The Book of Songs can be divided into three parts: wind, elegance and ode. But what exactly is in each part? To sum up, the wind is a ballad in all parts of the Zhou Dynasty. Elegant music is the official music of Zhou people, which is divided into harmony and elegance. Fu, on the other hand, is a kind of music song used in Zhou and noble ancestral temples, which is divided into, and Shang songs.
Speaking of these three parts, the wind should be regarded as the most grounded part. It is said that there are ballads from all over the Zhou Dynasty in The Wind, which may not be easy to understand, but they are actually folk songs. "Wind" refers to folk customs and customs. The Wind contains the folk songs of fifteen places in the Zhou Dynasty, mainly the folk songs in the Yellow River valley, such as the folk songs in Shaanxi, which we are familiar with today. The most familiar phrase "Guan Luo's dove, in Hezhou, is a gentle and graceful lady, and a gentleman is good" is a phrase from Nan Zhou, Guo Feng. As the pheasants sing together and love each other, the association of a lady with a gentleman arises.
Ya is a music song near the capital of Zhou Dynasty, which not only reflects the imperial achievements, but also works about war and labor, especially the part that reflects the sufferings of people's livelihood is the most touching.
Modern scholars also believe that ode is the joy of offering sacrifices to ancestral temples. Compared with fireworks in the wind, carols seem to be the farthest from us. Ode poems include Zhou Song, truffle and Shang Ode. There are 3 1 poems in Ode to Zhou, all of which are works of the early Zhou Dynasty. The space is short, and some works don't rhyme.