This is an ancient seven-character quatrain that eulogizes. Taking the allusion of "Zhao Jun's leaving the fortress" as the theme, the author highly praised Wang Zhaojun's great contribution to promoting national unity and satirized the political situation that the Chinese language in the imperial court of Han and Yuan Dynasties was greedy and cowardly and could not serve the country.
About the author:
Wang Zun, Wang Zun and Jiang Zun were all wrong. Xuanzhou Jingxian (now Anhui) people. Yi lived in Xian Tong for seven years (866). His poetic style is similar to that of Zeng, a poet in Hutong era. Most of his poems are nostalgic, especially good at reciting history with quatrains. "Biography of Talented Men in the Tang Dynasty" said that he "pulled out dirty clothes and won the reputation of Wen Yuan." Complete Tang Poetry is compiled as 1 volume, and Complete Tang Poetry is supplemented with two supplementary poems.
Wang Zhaojun (about 54 BC-BC 19) was born in Zigui (now Xingshan County, Yichang City, Hubei Province). His name is Zhaojun (one of the four beauties in ancient China), and he has a story of losing his heart, stone and stone. In the idiom, the painter abandoned the city and recorded her life story.
Calling on the evil spirits of the Han Dynasty to return to the Han Dynasty and show their monarch to leave the fortress not only prompted the Huns to end years of division and war, but also laid the foundation for the reunification of the Central Plains dynasty. Coupled with the strengthening of exchanges between the two sides, the relatively backward ethnic minorities at that time inevitably yearned for the advanced system of the Central Plains, prompting some ethnic minorities to imitate the system of the Central Plains.