Li Bo's String Poems

Nankai News Network (trainee reporter Wang Photography Yin Yunhang) On the evening of March 30th, Datong Student Center of Jinnan Campus of Nankai University held a special lecture on "Three Realms of Life". Li Bo, the speaker, appreciated and analyzed the works and lives of many famous poets in ancient China, put forward the challenges faced by contemporary people and led the audience to think about life.

Li Bo, Professor College of Nanjing Normal University, Ph.D. in Classical Literature and Culture in China of Nanjing Normal University, postdoctoral fellow in Chinese Language and Literature, and special guest of Chinese Poetry Conference.

At the beginning of the lecture, Libo took the Qing poem "Moss Part I" as the entrance, and looked back on the works handed down from generation to generation with great pride. Li Bo affirmed the author Yuan Mei's personal interest in the poem "Moss is as small as rice, but also learns peony". At the same time, he also admired Lu You and Xin Qiji's patriotic feelings of contributing to the country.

In view of two obvious problems brought by network technology-teenagers' addiction to mobile games and people's fragmented living habits, Li Bo put forward the theory of "three realms of life", and thought that inward pursuit was the solution. "Three realms of life" means "fun, fun and taste". Adhere to the development of interest to form interest, consolidate interest, and then pursue a higher level of self-pleasure to gain interest. These three are all ways to seek self-worth inward. The so-called taste, he thinks, is Yuan Mei's desire for food in Suiyuan Food List, the iron horse glacier that Lu You dreamed of during the storm, and the "killing thieves" that Xin Qiji lamented before his death.

Li Bo believes that his "three realms of life" and Wang Guowei's "three realms of establishment, outlook and achievement" and the three realms of Buddhism all achieve the same goal through different routes, and all realize the true meaning of self-realization in the process of establishing-denying-affirming. He said that after reading the vicissitudes of life, his eyes will become more determined, and the initial heart of his lifelong pursuit will also appear in the "twilight" in an instant. In today's highly developed science and technology, while appreciating the taste of the ancients, how to persist in pursuing taste inward is an urgent problem that we need to think about.