Li Yi (about 750 AD-about 830 AD) was born in Didao, Longxi (now Lintao, Gansu), and later moved to Zhengzhou, Henan, a poet in the Tang Dynasty.
Born in Longxi, Li's ancestral home, he was a scholar in Dali four years (769). He was appointed as Zheng County Commandant for the first time and could not be promoted for a long time. In 783, Jianzhong was awarded the title of scholar. Frustrated in his official career, he abandoned his post and wandered around Zhao Yan. Known for frontier poems, he is good at quatrains, especially seven-character quatrains.
Li Yi's poetic style is bold and lively, especially frontier poems. He is a representative poet of frontier fortress poems in the middle Tang Dynasty. Two songs, "Send the Troops to Liaoyang" and "Shout at Night in the Hometown", were widely sung at that time. Although there are many heroic words in his frontier poems, they tend to be sentimental, mainly expressing the long-standing resentment and hope of frontier soldiers, and no longer have the heroic optimism of frontier poems in the prosperous Tang Dynasty. He is good at quatrains, especially at writing seven sentences, such as love, going to Xicheng at night, joining the army in the north, being surrendered, and smelling the flute in spring night. There are also many famous sentences in its legal system, such as "I heard your surname first, thought you were a stranger, then I heard your name, and remembered your young face", and I met my brother-in-law briefly but happily, "Meet by chance, just for parting", which is a famous sentence passed down from generation to generation. Seven Laws, Lodging with Cui Fu at the Heron House and Huer Drinking Horse Spring in Wuyuan (also known as Huer Drinking Horse Spring in Yanzhou) are all excellent works. Eryoutang Series has two volumes of Li Yiji, two volumes of Li Junyu's Poems and Li Shangshu's Poems 1 volume.
In a good sang good poems, and by the end of Zhenyuan, he was as famous as his ancestor Li He. Every time you write a song, the musicians in the workshop ask for it by bribery and sing it as a sacrificial song. His "Song of Recruitment" and "Morning Walk" were painted as barriers by busybodies. His most famous masterpieces are Jiangnan Qu and Night Crying on the Watch Wall. The former wrote that a woman couldn't get together every day because her husband was a businessman in Qutang, so she couldn't help secretly regretting: "If I had known the tides were regular, I might as well choose a river boy" (if I had known, I might as well marry a frolic! After all, there is a definite time for the ebb and flow of the tide, and you can always get along with the frolicters, which is much better than being a businessman's wife. Psychological description can be described as vivid and meticulous. The latter is about the homesickness of the soldiers guarding the border in the surrendered city. "I don't know where to play the flute, and I miss my hometown all night." Melodious reed pipes evoke long-lost homesickness, which makes people feel sympathetic and sad to read. Set one volume, and now make up two volumes of poems (volumes 282 and 283 of the whole Tang poetry).