Who was Xie Wang in front of Wang Xietang in the old society? Which poem does he come from?

In the old days, the words "Wang" and "Xie" in the front swallow of Wang Xie Tang respectively referred to Wang Dao and Xie An in the Eastern Jin Dynasty, which were two famous families in the imperial court. The original text is from Wu Yi Xiang written by Liu Yuxi, a writer in the Tang Dynasty. Original: There are wild grass flowers on the Suzaku Bridge, and the sunset is oblique at the entrance of Wuyi Lane. Swallows under the eaves of Wang Dao and Xie An have now flown into the homes of ordinary people.

Who does the former Wang Xietang's Yan Wangxie refer to? Xie Wang in the poem refers to Wang Dao and Xie An.

Wang Dao was a founding father, politician and calligrapher in the Eastern Jin Dynasty.

Xie An was a politician, strategist and celebrity in the Eastern Jin Dynasty.

These words come from the poem Wuyi Lane written by Liu Yuxi, a poet in the Tang Dynasty.

The old Wang Xietang Yan Qian originated from the original Wuyi Lane written by Liu Yuxi.

There are some weeds blooming by the Suzaku Bridge, and there is only sunset at the corner of Wuyi Lane.

Swallows under the eaves of Wang Dao and Xie An have now flown into the homes of ordinary people.

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The deserted weeds are in full bloom by the Suzaku Bridge, and the sunset hangs in the broken walls at the entrance of Wuyi Lane.

Swallows under the eaves of Xie 'an in Wang Dao have now flown into the homes of ordinary people.

Appreciation of the Full Text of Wuyi Lane This is a nostalgic poem. In the Eastern Jin Dynasty, Zhuque Bridge on the Qinhuai River in Nanjing and Wuyi Lane on the south bank were prosperous, but now they are overgrown with weeds and desolate. Feel the vicissitudes of life, life is changeable. Arouse people's imagination with Yan Qi's lair, which contains but does not show; Painting the background with "wild flowers" and "sunset oblique" is beautiful but not vulgar. Although the language is extremely shallow, it is full of interest.

The poet's deep affection for the rise and fall of this poem. Suzaku Bridge and Wuyi Lane are still the same, just overgrown with weeds and the setting sun is slanting. The desolate scene implies the poet's sensitive experience of prosperity and decline. The last two sentences use the swallow nest to express the author's lament over the vicissitudes of the world, ups and downs, and the pen is particularly tortuous.

Liu Yuxi (772-842), the author of Wuyi Xiang, was born in Pengcheng (now Xuzhou), China, a writer and philosopher in the Tang Dynasty. He claimed to be a descendant of the King of Jin in Hanzhong, and was a member of the Wang Reform School. A famous poet in the middle and late Tang Dynasty, he is known as the "great poet". His family is a scholarly family handed down from generation to generation by Confucianism. Advocating political innovation is one of the core figures of the Wang school's political innovation activities. Later, Yongzhen failed in innovation and was demoted to Sima Langzhou (now Changde, Hunan). According to the textual research of Mr. Zhou, a historian and collector in Changde, Hunan Province, Liu Yuxi was demoted to Sima Langzhou, during which he wrote the famous "Han Shou Chun Wang".