What is the next line of Hanshan Temple outside Gusu, and what is the next poem of Hanshan Temple outside Gusu?

1. The next sentence of Hanshan Temple outside Gusu City is midnight bell to passenger ship.

2. From a night-mooring near maple bridge written by Zhang Ji in Tang Dynasty: Frosty night caught fire with Jiang Feng and fell asleep.

3. Hanshan Temple outside Gusu City, the midnight bell goes to the passenger ship.

4. Appreciation of poetry: The first sentence of the poem wrote three closely related scenes at midnight: the moon sets, crows and frost all over the sky.

The first quarter moon rose early and sank at midnight, leaving only a gray light and shadow in the whole sky.

6. The perching on the tree is probably due to the change of light and shade before and after the setting of the moon, and it makes a few crows after being awakened.

7. The moon sets in the middle of the night and the frost is dark.

8. In the dark and quiet environment, people's feeling of being cool at night becomes particularly acute.

9. The description of "Frosty Sky" does not conform to the reality of the natural landscape (frost is on the ground but not in the sky), but it completely conforms to the poet's feelings: the chill that attacks the bones and muscles in the middle of the night and the boats that the poet berthed from all directions at night make him feel that the boundless night sky outside is filled with frost.

10. In a word, what the moon saw, what the crow heard, and what first frost felt clearly reflected a continuous process of time and feeling.

1 1. and all this is harmoniously unified in the cold and cheerless atmosphere of autumn night in the water town and the lonely feeling of travelers.

12. From here we can see the poet's meticulous thinking.

13. The second sentence of this poem continues to describe the characteristic scene of "a night-mooring near maple bridge" and the feelings of travelers.

14. In the dim night, the trees along the river can only see a vague outline. Perhaps the reason why they are called "Jiangfeng" is a guess caused by the name Qiao Feng, or the image of "Jiangfeng" is chosen to give readers a hint of autumn.

15. "There is a maple on the water in Zhanzhanjiang, and it hurts the heart of spring." "There is no sorrow on the green maple." These predecessors' poems can explain the emotional content precipitated by the word "Jiang Feng" and its association.

16. Through the misty river, you can see several "fishing fires" dotted around, which are particularly eye-catching and charming because of the hazy mist background around.

17. "Jiang Feng" and "Fishing Fire", one static and one moving, one dark and one bright, one river and one river, the combination of scenery is quite intentional.

18. Only when I wrote this down, did I point out the passengers parked at Qiao Feng Bridge.

19. "Sleeping in sorrow" refers to a traveler lying on the boat with his worries about traveling.

20. The word "a pair of melancholy sleep" contains the meaning of "partner", but it is not as exposed as the word "partner".

2 1. In the face of fishing in Jiangfeng on a frosty night, there is indeed a lingering sadness of lonely travelers, but at the same time it implies a sense of freshness of the beautiful scenery of the journey.

22. The foreground of the poem is very dense. Fourteen words describe six scenes, but the pictures behind it are particularly sparse. Of the two poems, only one thing is written: sleeping at the night bell of the mountain temple.

This is because the poet's most vivid, profound and poetic impression in a night-mooring near maple bridge is the midnight bell of Hanshan Temple.

24. Scenes such as crows at sunset, frosty nights, fishing in the river and solitary boat passengers all show the characteristics of a night berth near Fengqiao, but it is not enough to convey its charm.

25. In the dark night, people's hearing rises to the top of their perception of external things.

26. The bell in the still night gives a particularly strong impression.

27. In this way, "Midnight Bell" not only sets off the silence of the night, but also reveals the depth and clarity of the night. The poet's unspeakable feelings when lying listening to the bell are beyond words.