When does the West Lake song and dance stop outside the Qingshan Building outside the mountain?

When will the singing and dancing on the West Lake stop outside the Qingshan Building outside the mountain?

Lin 'an House is a four-line poem by Lin Sheng, a poet in the Song Dynasty. The first sentence of this poem points out the characteristics of Lin 'an City, with green hills and terraced fields, and the second sentence points out the endless singing and dancing by the West Lake in a rhetorical tone.

The last two sentences describe the indulgence of the rulers in sarcastic language, and through the comparison between "Hangzhou" and "Bianzhou", they reveal the decadent essence of "wanderer" without emotion, and also show the author's anger at the rulers' failure to recover lost land and his concern about the fate of the country.

Full text: When will the singing and dancing of West Lake stop? Warm winds make tourists drunk and make Hangzhou a continent.

When will the songs and dances on the West Lake stop? The warm spring breeze is intoxicating, as if Hangzhou were Bianzhou.

Extended data:

This is a poem written on the wall of a hotel in Lin 'an. It not only expresses grief through the description of music scenes, but also multiplies emotions, which contains profound implications in the profound aesthetic realm. At the same time, the poet exposed the reactionary nature of "vagrants" in ironic language, and also showed the poet's anger.

In the first sentence of the poem, "There are green mountains and towers outside the mountain", the poet grasped the characteristics of Lin 'an City-green mountains and towers are lined up. This first describes the great mountains and rivers of the motherland, rolling mountains and pavilions. What a beautiful nature it is. As far as poetry creation is concerned, the poet's description of the beautiful scenery of mountains and rivers shows a sense of pleasure.

Then he wrote, "When will the West Lake dance stop?" The poet was hurt by the reality of this country. Such beautiful mountains and rivers were occupied by Jin people. The word "Hugh" in the poem not only implies the poet's heartache about the real social situation, but more importantly, it shows the poet's indignation that he blindly "Hugh" to make peace with those in power, unwilling to recover the lost land in the Central Plains, and only seeking peace and indulgence.