What is the full text of this poem "It is difficult to enter lightly when you know that there is no fate, and dare to compete with the swallow"

First, the full text: "Opening the curtain of chanting"

Embroidering rain makes her complacent, and beauty rides bamboo, but I miss it.

Knowing that there is no fate, it is difficult to enter lightly and dare to compete with swallows?

Second, expand the scope of knowledge:

1. Appreciation of works: Poetry refers to the rarity of fate. Zhang Ailing once said: "Among thousands of people, you met the person you met, and in the boundless wilderness of thousands of years, you happened to catch up, neither earlier nor later. There is nothing else to say, but gently ask:' Oh! "Are you here, too?" "So, when it comes to fate, both sides of the communication will have a feeling of euphoria psychologically, and some even meet each other after a brief encounter. Fate is also a kind of "accident". For example, on one occasion, Du Fu wrote in the poem Qingming:

A new passenger ship came from North Korea, and the lake was a clean spring scenery.

Embroidering feathers makes him complacent. Beauty rides bamboo, but I miss it.

Finally, with the ending of Hutong, Chu women's waist is also poor.

I can't see the old place of the city, but I still have Jiafu's well.

Coke's empty touch is cold food, and real money is sold in Jun Yan.

The mountains and forests in Zhong Ding are different in nature. Mud mash and coarse rice are my years.

In Shen Zhou's poem "Chanting the Curtain": "It is difficult to know that there is no division between fate and Yan!" It can be seen that literati are also lamenting the rarity of fate.

2. About the author: Shen Zhou (1427- 1509) was born in Changzhou (now Suzhou, Jiangsu Province), a painter of the Ming Dynasty, the founder of Wu Pai, Qin 'an, Baishi Weng, Tian Yu, and You Zhuju. Born in the second year of Xuande in Ming Dynasty, he died in the fourth year of Zhengde in Ming Dynasty at the age of eighty-two (virtual eighty-three). He didn't take the imperial examination, but specialized in poetry, calligraphy and painting. He was the pioneer of the "five schools" of literati painting in the middle of Ming Dynasty, and was also called "Ming Sijia" with Wen Zhiming, Tang Yin and Chou Ying. Handed down from ancient times, his works include High Map of Lushan Mountain, Old Map of Lin Qiu and Interesting Map of Cangzhou. He is the author of Shi Tian Ji and Ke Wen.