A berth under the Beibao Mountain is the work of Wang Wan, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. This poem accurately and concisely describes the magnificent scenery such as green hills, green waters, flat tides and broad shores that the author saw when he was parked at the foot of Gubei Mountain in late winter and early spring, and expresses the author's deep homesickness.
At the beginning, it begins with a antithesis, writing the feelings of drifting and drifting in the hometown of Shenchi; The second time I wrote "Tidal Beach" and "Positive Wind on the River", the scene was magnificent and broad; Sanlian wrote the scene of sailing at dawn, and the antithesis implied philosophy, "describe the scenery, it will last forever", giving people a positive artistic charm; The tail couplet saw that the geese missed their parents and echoed the first couplet.
Extended data:
Yin Kun, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, wrote many different essays when he wrote "Jiang Nanyi" with a berth under the Beibao Mountain: "The south is full of new ideas, and the east is the first day. On both sides of the beach, the wind is hanging. ... night gives way to the ocean of the sun, and the old year melts in freshness. I have never observed the weather, but I am biased. "
Wang Wan, a native of Luoyang, was born in the mid-Tang Dynasty and once went back and forth. "Beigushan" is in the north of Zhenjiang City, Jiangsu Province, facing the river on three sides. The first two sentences of "Jiangnan Yi" quoted above are "South Manchuria is full of new ideas, and East is in the early stage".
"Its' eastbound' is when it passes through Zhenjiang to the south of the Yangtze River. The poet traveled all the way, and when he set sail at a berth at the foot of the Beibao Mountain, the tide was flat and the shore was wide, and the geese returned at night, which triggered feelings in his heart and became a masterpiece through the ages.