"A deer is seen in the depth of a tree" is a sentence in Li Bai's Interview with Taoist Dai Tian.
It is not a good thing to visit Taoist priests in Daitianshan Mountain.
In the barking of dogs, peach blossoms are thick.
See the deer when the tree is deep, but don't ring the bell at noon.
Wild bamboos are green and misty, and flying springs hang blue peaks.
No one knows where to go. I'm worried about two or three loose.
Extended data:
Vernacular translation
The water is very clear, echoing the faint barking of dogs; Peach blossoms are in full bloom and dew is abundant.
The Woods are deep and secluded, and the wild deer are sometimes hidden. There was silence at noon, but no bell was heard.
Wild bamboos split from the blue mist and went straight through the blue sky, with waterfalls hanging above the Qingfeng Mountain.
No one knows where the Taoist priest is going. Had to rely on Gu Song, send ten thousand sorrow.
Visiting a Taoist priest in Dai Tianshan Mountain is the Five Laws written by Li Bai, a great poet in Tang Dynasty, when he was studying in Dai Tianshan Mountain in his early years. This poem, written by Dai Tianshan, depicts a colorful picture of a Taoist visiting. Throughout, focusing on the scenery, it vividly reproduces the beautiful life realm of Taoist paradise.
Li Bai is a great romantic poet. His later mature poems are very free and easy, vigorous and elegant, and the lines are full of heroism. However, the characteristics of his poems in this respect are not obvious enough and rich enough. This shows that this work still bears traces of his early works.
References:
Baidu Encyclopedia-Interview with Taoist Dai Tianshan