Begging for clever poems
Qiao Qi is a famous poem written by Lin Jie, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, describing the grand occasion of the Chinese Valentine's Day. It is an imaginative and widely circulated ancient poem. Poems are simple and easy to understand, involving well-known myths and legends, and expressing girls' good wishes of seeking wisdom and pursuing happiness.
Original poem "Qiao Qi"
See Bixiao tonight on Tanabata, and cross the river bridge with the cowherd and the weaver girl.
Every family watches the autumn moon, and every family wears HongLing.
Qiao Qi's Translation
In Chinese Valentine's Day, people have looked up at the vast sky, as if they could see the Cowherd and the Weaver Girl crossing the Milky Way and meeting on the Magpie Bridge.
Every household is praying for good luck while watching the autumn moon, and tens of thousands of red lines pass through.
Begging for clever appreciation
The meaning of this poem is not complicated, much like a poet going to collect folk songs. Although it is about the cowherd and the weaver girl, it has nothing to do with the author's own emotional problems. The whole poem is mainly about description, supplemented by lyricism. If there is any feeling, it is homesickness. When expressing homesickness in ancient poems, it is often more specific, such as "the thread in the hands of a loving mother makes clothes for the body of a wayward boy" She mended it carefully and thoroughly, fearing that it would delay his time to go home. "Two words. Although these poems are plain, they are generally vivid, just like when we are homesick, I'm afraid we can't think of any profound famous sentences, but we are homesick after all.
Brief introduction of Lin Jie
Lin Jie (83 1-847) was a poet in the Tang Dynasty. Fujian people, smart since childhood, can write poetry at the age of six, and are good at calligraphy and chess. He was only sixteen when he died. There are two poems in the whole Tang Dynasty, among which "Begging for Cleverness" is a famous poem written by Lin Jie, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, describing the grand occasion of folk Qixi.