1. The meaning of "Wing the Willow" is: the anthropomorphic technique depicts the beauty of spring and the craftsmanship of nature, vividly expresses the spring breeze nurturing all things, highlights the infinite beauty, and expresses the poet's love .
2. Expand knowledge:
1. Appreciation of the original poem: Ode to the Willow
The jasper is as high as a tree, with thousands of green silk ribbons hanging down.
I don’t know who cut out the thin leaves. The spring breeze in February is like scissors.
2. Introduction to the work: "Ode to the Willows" is a seven-character quatrain written by He Zhizhang, a poet in the prosperous Tang Dynasty. This poem is a poem about things. The first two lines of the poem use two new and beautiful metaphors to describe the vitality and verdant beauty of spring willows; the last two lines even more creatively compare the spring breeze to "scissors", vividly expressing the invisible and elusive "spring breeze". Come out, not only the idea is novel, but also full of charm.
3. Introduction to the author: He Zhizhang (659~744), a poet of the Tang Dynasty, also known as Jizhen, who called himself Siming Kuangke, was born in Yongxing, Yuezhou (now Xiaoshan City, Zhejiang Province). He became a Jinshi, entered Lizhengdian Academy to study books, and participated in the writing of "Six Canons" and "Wenzhuan". Later he was promoted to Minister of Rites, and Lei was promoted to Secretary Supervisor, so he was known as "He Supervisor". He is open-minded and uninhibited, and is known as a "clear talker". In the third year of Tang Tianbao's reign (744), he retired and returned to his hometown to become a Taoist priest. He Zhizhang is as famous as Zhang Ruoxu, Zhang Xu and Bao Rong, and is known as the "Four Scholars in Wuzhong". There are nineteen poems in "Complete Poems of the Tang Dynasty". His landscape paintings are fresh and popular, without any intention of seeking craftsmanship but with new ideas.