What's the name of Cao Cao?

The word Meng De, no name

Cao Cao, a Geely, small print A-hide, was born in Peiguoqiaoxian County (now Bozhou, Anhui Province). At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, he was an outstanding politician, strategist, writer and calligrapher, and the founder of the Cao Wei regime in the Three Kingdoms.

Cao Cao's word Meng De has no number. Cao Cao's life was very famous, and the last years of the Eastern Han Dynasty, when he lived, was a special era, in which it was difficult to return, consorts and eunuchs were authoritarian, the state animal husbandry was dominant, people were in poverty for years, and dynasties changed, which made the troubled times give Cao Cao a chance to dominate the world.

Therefore, based on the life orientation, firm belief, great ambition and life purport of "who is the other", Cao's poems show too much psychological tendency of eager to make contributions in his poems, which will inevitably point to the anxiety of "waiting for time and waiting for no one" and the desire to attract talents, thus making it interpreted as the aesthetic charm of Cao's poems.

Cao Cao's poems are sad for mountains and rivers

Cao Cao lived in troubled times, served as a military commander and fought all day long, and most of his poems were recited during the journey, covering vast themes such as military conquest, people's livelihood difficulties, landscape feelings and so on, and sketching out a beautiful landscape of social life in the Jian 'an era for the world. In addition, Cao Cao inherited, expanded and sublimated the writing tradition in the Book of Songs and the folk songs of Han Yuefu in his poetry creation, personally experienced the social turmoil and chaos at the end of Han Dynasty, witnessed the darkness of current events with his own eyes, and had a real insight into the bitterness and sorrow of the lower classes, thus showing the poet's fervent, thick, complex and deep anxiety in his poems. In the Ming Dynasty, Zhong Xing praised it as "a record of the late Han Dynasty, which is also a true history of poetry" in "The Return of Ancient Poems".

Cao Cao made the following statement about heroes in "On Heroes by Boiling Wine": "A hero is ambitious, has a good plan in his belly, has the opportunity to hide the universe, and breathes the ambition of heaven and earth." Cao Cao had illusions about the Han Dynasty in his early days, and liked to crack down on the evil forces of turbidity current at the beginning of his official career. Later, he heard and witnessed the corruption and decline of the Eastern Han Dynasty, and gradually realized that the Han Dynasty could not do anything, so he paid attention to the use of it, and gradually gained strong military power and embarked on a life journey of rebuilding the world, calming the troubled times and saving the people. For example, "Watching the Sea" compares one's broad mind with a magnificent seascape, showing the magnificent style that the sea swallows the sun and the moon, contains pregnant stars and dominates the mountains and rivers. On the surface, it depicts the scenery and depicts the sea, in essence, it represents the poet's heroic, lofty, magnificent and domineering life charm. Similarly, "The Life of a Turtle" shows with sincere brushwork that one's years are old, one's ambition cannot be taken away, one's martyr is in his twilight years, and one's ambition endures forever, which makes the world feel that one's pen is at stake, one's spirit is united, one's momentum is multiplied, and one's strength is endless.