What is the poem in Wei Yingwu's "at chuzhou on the western stream" that expresses "setting off a quiet and quiet scene with the trend of flying and flowing"?

In Wei Yingwu's "at chuzhou on the western stream", a poem that expresses "flying and flowing, setting off a quiet and quiet scene" is: the spring tide brings rain late and comes in a hurry, and there is no boat crossing the wild.

The specific interpretation of at chuzhou on the western stream is as follows:

1. Literary genre:

Seven-character quatrains

2. Original text:

Tang Wei Yingwu

lives alone in a secluded grass stream, with orioles singing in the trees.

The spring tide brings rain late and comes in a hurry, and no one crosses the river in the wild.

3. About the author:

Wei Yingwu (737-792), a poet of Tang Dynasty in China, was born in Chang 'an (now Xi 'an, Shaanxi). Since the age of 15, Sanweilang has been Xuanzong's near servant, and he has been in and out of the palace, and he is fortunate to be a retinue. Since the Anshi Rebellion, Xuanzong went to Shu, lost his job and decided to study. From Zongguangde to Dezong Zhenyuan, he successively served as Luoyang Cheng, Jingzhaofu Gongcao to join the army, Hubei county magistrate, Bibu Yuanwailang, Chuzhou and Jiangzhou secretariat, Zuosi Langzhong and Suzhou secretariat. He retired in 791 (the seventh year of Zhenyuan). The world is called Wei Jiangzhou, Wei Zuosi or Wei Suzhou.

4. Ideological content

This is a famous landscape poem, and it is also one of Wei Yingwu's representative works. It was written in the secretariat of Chuzhou. The governing place of Chuzhou in the Tang Dynasty is now the urban area of Chuzhou City, Anhui Province, and Xijian is in the western suburb of Chuzhou City. This poem describes the quiet scene of the mountain stream and the poet's view of at chuzhou on the western stream in spring and the wild crossing with rain in late tide.