Use a poem to describe a person who knows little.

Source: Diao Zhang Ji by Han Yu in Tang Dynasty

Excerpt from the original:

Du Li's articles are in full swing. I don't know, stupid, so it's slander.

Mayflies shake trees, ridiculous! After I was born, I raised my neck and looked at each other from a distance.

The coexistence of Li Bai's and Du Fu's poems is like a radiant light shining on the poetry circle. But I don't know that frivolous literati are ignorant. How can we vilify them by always slandering and resigning? Just as ants try to shake trees, it is ridiculous that they don't measure themselves. Although I live behind Du Li, I always admire them.

Extended data:

The poet's brushwork is bold and unrestrained, and the whole poem runs down like the mighty Yangtze River, with twists and turns, splashing water and diarrhea, which is abnormal.

The poet wrote down these frivolous youths who tried to slander Li and Du: "It's ridiculous to fly and shake trees!" The metaphor is apt and the image is novel, which has been refined into idioms by later generations and has long been a household name. The radiant flame, grinding blade, loud noise between the dry and the Kun, Mount Tai, whales and other magnificent things in the poem are all used as metaphors, which fully show the majestic momentum and mysterious realm of the poem.

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