The last sentence in the Mid-Autumn Festival is: the thin cloud breaks up.
First, the source, author and original text
Source: "Looking at the Moon in the South Building"
Author: Jiao Ran
Original text: Every family in jathyapple looks at this building, and the pavilions love it. The thin cloud is broken, and the willow shadow is scattered in the Mid-Autumn Festival. Gradually reflected thousands of peaks, and separated into thousands of streams. Whoever sees Guanshan again should worry about it alone.
2. Appreciation
This poem takes the scene of looking at the moon from the south tower as the theme, and depicts the bright moon, tall buildings, thin clouds and streams, sparse willows and distant mountain peaks at night. These scenes are in sharp contrast with the people on the Great Wall Mountains, expressing the author's yearning for beautiful scenery and his thoughts and concerns for the people on the border of the Great Wall.
Moonlight at night and scenery description are used in the poem, which gives people a quiet feeling. The author especially likes this building, probably because it has a better view with high energy, so as to enjoy the moon and beautiful scenery. Thin clouds and sparse willows add autumn breath, giving people a quiet and cool feeling.
Jiao Ran's biographies and anecdotes
1. The biographies of the characters
Jiao Ran visited famous mountains, searched for great virtues everywhere, often entered the law table, and took part in studies everywhere. Not only did he study Buddhist scriptures, but he was also quite proficient in sub-historical scriptures. Everywhere you go, you are highly respected. The princes and ministers of the capital treated him with courtesy, and the dignitaries of the counties respected him very much.
Jiao Ran often makes friends with poems, and is closely related to many scholars and scholars, such as Yan Zhenqing, Wei Yingwu, Lu Youping, Wu Jide, Li E, Huang Fuzeng, Liang Su, Cui Zi Xiang, Xue Feng, Lu Wei and Yang Kui.
Second, anecdotes and allusions
When it comes to the ancestor of China tea industry, people must first think of Lu Yu, who is known as the tea god, Cha Sheng, tea fairy and the tea ancestor. However, the ancestor of tea culture and tea ceremony in China should have another strange man, Jiao Ran. Jiao Ran and Lu Yu can be said to be equal, or even greater and more ethereal unsung heroes. Jiao Ran is known as a great poet of poets and tea monks, and a generation of Buddhist monks.
Jiao Ran's main activities were between Dali and Zhenyuan in the Middle Tang Dynasty, and he had many contacts with calligrapher Yan Zhenqing, poets Wei Yingwu and Gu Kuang, and some literati.