Poems with oriole

Poems with oriole characters include "Quatrains", "Chuzhou West Stream", and "Jiyu Wangchuanzhuang Zuo".

1. Quatrains (Tang Dynasty) Du Fu

Two orioles sing in the green willows, and a row of egrets ascends to the blue sky.

The window contains Qianqiu snow of Xiling, and the door is docked with a ship thousands of miles away from Dongwu.

Appreciation: In 762 AD, during the heyday of the Tang Dynasty, Yin Yanwu from Chengdu entered the dynasty. At that time, due to the "Anshi Rebellion", Du Fu fled to Zizhou for a time. The next year, the rebellion was put down and Yan Wu returned to Chengdu. Du Fu also returned to Chengdu thatched cottage. At that time, he was in a good mood. Faced with the vitality of this school, he couldn't help but write this short poem on the spot.

2. Wei Yingwu, Chuzhou West Stream (Tang Dynasty)

Only the grass grows beside the stream, and there are orioles singing in the deep trees.

The spring tide brings rain late and comes quickly, and there is no boat crossing the wild river.

Appreciation: This is a short poem describing scenery, describing what I saw during a spring trip to Chuzhou’s West Stream to enjoy the scenery and the rainy Yedu in the late tide. The first two sentences describe the spring scenery, loving the quiet grass and valuing the oriole, which is a metaphor for music and keeping the festival, but jealous of the beauty; the last two sentences describe the scene of the spring tide with rain and the rushing water, which contains a feeling of being out of place and unable to do so. Its use is helpless sadness. The whole poem expresses the tranquility and sadness.

3. Jiyu Wangchuan Zhuangzuo (Tang Dynasty) Wang Wei

The fireworks in the forest are late in Jiyu, and the quinoa is steamed and cooked.

Egrets fly in the desert paddy fields, and orioles sing in the overcast summer trees.

In the mountains, I learn to watch the hibiscus trees quietly, and under the pine tree, I fold the dew sunflower in Qingzhai.

Let the old man compete with others for a seat, but the seagull is even more suspicious of it.

Appreciation: This seven-line poem has a vivid image and profound interest. It expresses the poet's leisurely mood of living in seclusion in the mountains and forests, breaking away from the worldly world, and reveals the poet's deep love for the simple pastoral life. It is one of Wang Wei's pastoral poems. Representative work. In the past, some people regarded it as the final volume of the Seven Rhymes of the Tang Dynasty, and said it was the ultimate in "empty ancient times and accurate modern times". This was certainly due to the preference of feudal scholar-bureaucrats; while some people believed that "it is as elegant and quiet as "Jiu Yu" by You Cheng. ", I appreciate the profound artistic conception and ultra-modern style of this poem, and the artistic insights are quite good.