It should be noted that Ling Yunzhi's complete poem when he was young: How has the tiger's head been eaten by meat? Fortunately, the article did not meet Huang Zu, and he is still embarrassed by Ma Zhou. Since your talents are difficult to use in this world, how can it be that I am not a good minister? It should be noted that for a young man's ambition, he once promised to be the best in the world. This sentence comes from "Thirty Little Elephants".
Creative background:
In the helplessness of time passing by, the poet developed a sense of sadness that his old age was approaching and his ambitions were difficult to achieve. He wrote everything he could not achieve in real life into his articles and expressed them through poems. As time goes by, the poet laments that he is getting older and has long been unable to do what he has done. His previous ambitions and pride have now disappeared, making him extremely sad. What makes him sad is not that he is getting older and facing death, but that his ideals and ambitions have not yet been realized.
About the author:
Wu Qingdi, also known as Zixiu, also known as Jingjiang, and nicknamed Bu Songlaoren. A native of Qiantang (today's Hangzhou), he was a Jinshi in the twelfth year of Guangxu's reign, and became a Shujishi of the Hanlin Academy. After disbanding, he was taught as an editor. He has successively served as Sichuan Academic Affairs Officer, Hunan Academic Envoy, General Office of the Government Affairs Office, and Member of the Zizhengyuan with master's degrees and Confucianism. He is good at poetry and calligraphy, and is close to the iron statue stele of Su Ganoderma lucidum. Participated in the compilation of "Hangzhou Prefecture Chronicles" and "Zhejiang General Chronicles".
He is the author of eight volumes of "Records of Bu Songlu", six volumes of "Records of Poems of Bu Songlu", "Poems of Regret for the Rest of Life", "Records of Jiaolang Yin", and "Continuation of Records of Yizhou Painting and Calligraphy" wait. Wu had a good relationship with Ding, the owner of the Eight Thousand Volumes Building and a famous bibliophile in the Qing Dynasty. She once participated in the Tiehua Song Society and sang with Ding Bing; her daughter is Ding Bing's grandson.