Wang Wei studied Zen to understand the truth and studied the Taoism. Many of Wang Wei's poems are cold and profound, far away from the world, without any smoke of the world, full of Zen, and the artistic conception of landscape has surpassed the ordinary plain and natural aesthetics, and its meaning Entering a religious realm is an inevitable manifestation of Wang Wei's Buddhist cultivation. Wang Wei lived in an era when Buddhism was flourishing.
The scholar-bureaucrats were very popular in studying Buddhism. Political dissatisfaction and seclusion several times in his life made Wang Wei devote himself to studying Buddhism in order to ignore fame and fortune and get rid of troubles, so he was known as the "Poetry Buddha".
The remoteness of the charm is the soul of the painting in Wang Wei's poems. In the poem "Deer and Chai", "There are no people in the empty mountain, but you can hear the sound of people's voices. Returning to the deep forest, the light shines on the moss again." The performance is vivid and vivid.
"Lu Chai" comes from Wang Wei, a Tang Dynasty poet.
Vernacular translation: I went to the dense forest and returned to the mountains without seeing anyone, but I could hear people talking. Returning to the depths of the jungle, the sun shines on the moss.
The poem deliberately describes the author being alone in an empty mountain and deep forest, seeing a ray of sunset shining through the gaps in the dense forest and shining on the moss in the forest. In the vast and complex natural scenery, the poet captured At the most fascinating moment, there are simple brushstrokes, meticulously presenting a quiet and quiet picture, which is far-reaching and fascinating.
Extended information:
Wang Wei's literary achievements related to "Poetic Buddha". There are not many poems related to Zen that have been handed down from generation to generation, but there are still traces of some poems, such as "The Passing of Fragrance" "Ji Temple", "Zhongnan Bieye", "Reward Zhang Shaofu", etc.
Most of Wang Wei's poems are about landscapes and pastoral works. While describing the natural beauty, they also reveal the leisurely and leisurely taste of leisurely life. Wang Wei's landscape poems often use the form of five rhymes and five uniques. They are short in length, exquisite in language, and have relatively soothing syllables. They are especially suitable for expressing quiet landscapes and the poet's peaceful mood.
Wang Wei has become increasingly depressed since middle age, and has sought sustenance in Buddhism and mountains and rivers. He believes that realizing silence is happiness, and is full of Zen ideas of being close to nature, transforming the body and objects, and letting fate happen.
The artistic conception expressed in Wang Wei's poems makes everything silent, illusory and impermanent, with no purpose, no consciousness, no joy of life, no sorrow of death, but everything is immortal. , eternal.
Also, as Hu Yinglin and Yao Zhouxing commented, Wang Wei's poems make people forget to eliminate all distracting thoughts in their hearts when reading them, as if they are not in the frequency of sound transmission. This is a wonderful thing.
Baidu Encyclopedia-Wang Wei