"Remembering Shandong Brothers on September 9th". A stranger in a foreign land. Every festive season, we miss our loved ones even more. I know from afar that when my brothers climbed to a high place, there was only one less person planting dogwood trees. There was bright moonlight in front of the bed, which was probably due to frost on the ground. Raise your head to look at the bright moon, lower your head to think about your hometown.
"Remembering Shandong Brothers on September 9th" is a poem written by Wang Wei, a poet of the Tang Dynasty. This poem expresses the homesickness of a wanderer. The poem focuses closely on the title at the beginning, describing the loneliness and desolation of life in a foreign land. Therefore, I miss my hometown and people all the time, and when I encounter a good festival, I miss you even more.
Then the poem jumps to writing about brothers far away in their hometown. When they climb high according to the custom of Double Ninth Festival, they are also missing themselves. The poetic meaning of the whole poem jumps repeatedly, is implicit and deep, is simple and natural, and has twists and turns. Among them, "I miss my relatives more during the festive season" is an eternal famous line.
Wang Wei, a poet of the Tang Dynasty. The word Mojie. His ancestors were from Taiyuan Qi (now part of Shanxi), and his father moved to Puzhou (now west of Yongji, Shanxi), so he was a native of Hedong. Kaiyuan Jinshi. Tired of official duties. He was appointed Prince Zhongyun when An Lushan's rebels fell into Chang'an. After the rebellion was over, he was demoted to Prince Zhongyun. Later he became a minister, Youcheng, so he was also called Wang Youcheng. After middle age, he lived in Wangchuan, Lantian, and lived a leisurely life of both officialdom and seclusion.
The poem is as famous as Meng Haoran, and is also called "Wang Meng". In the early days, he wrote some poems on the theme of frontier fortresses, but the most important part of his works were landscape poems. Through the depiction of pastoral landscapes, he promoted the hermit life and Buddhist Zen philosophy; He is also proficient in music and calligraphy and painting. There is "Wang Youcheng Collection".