Appreciation of the ancient poem Qiao Qi

Begging for the Spirit is a poem by Lin Jie, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. In his poems, the poet did not specifically write out various wishes, but left room for imagination, expressing people's desire to pursue intelligence and happiness. The following is my appreciation of the ancient poem "Begging for Cleverness". Welcome everyone to learn from it, I hope it will help you.

Begging festival

challenger

Tonight on Tanabata, I will watch Bixiao and lead the cowherd and weaver girl across the river bridge.

Every family watches the autumn moon, and every family wears HongLing.

To annotate ...

⑵ Jojo: An ancient festival, which is on the seventh day of the seventh lunar month, is also called Qixi.

(2) Blue sky: refers to the boundless blue sky.

translate

The annual Tanabata Festival has arrived again, and Penny Weaver once again crossed the magpie bridge to meet. People in every household can't help looking up at the vast sky. There are at least tens of thousands of clever women wearing red silk from door to door.

Creation background

When I was a child, Lin Jie, like her mother or other women, was interested in such a wonderful legend as Qiao Qi. Looking up at the brilliant Tianhe in the distant night sky, looking at the dazzling two stars on both sides of Tianhe, expecting to see the convergence of these two stars, I wrote the poem Begging for the Spirit.

Distinguish and appreciate

Qiao Qi is a poem written by Lin Jie, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, which describes the grand occasion of the folk Qixi Festival. On the evening of the seventh day of the seventh lunar month, commonly known as Qixi, it is also called Daughter's Day and Daughter's Day. It is the legendary day when the Cowherd and the Weaver Girl meet on the bridge across the "Tianhe". Begging for wisdom is begging for a pair of skillful hands from the weaver girl. The most common way to beg for wisdom is to put a needle on the moon. If the line passes through a pinhole, it is called cleverness.

"Today's Tanabata, I see the blue sky. I want to lead the cow and the weaver girl across the river bridge." "Blue sky" refers to the boundless blue sky. The first two sentences describe the folk stories of the Cowherd and the Weaver Girl. The annual Chinese Valentine's Day is coming again, and people in every household can't help looking up at the vast sky. This is because this beautiful legend has touched a kind and beautiful heart and aroused people's beautiful wishes and rich imagination.

"Every family watches the autumn moon, and every family wears HongLing." The last two sentences explain the clever things clearly, concisely and vividly. Poets do not specifically write out various wishes in their poems, but leave room for imagination, which more and more reflects people's joy at festivals.

Brief introduction of the author

Lin Jie (831-847), a Fujian native, was a poet in the Tang Dynasty. When I was a child, I was very smart. You can write poetry at the age of six, and once you write it, it becomes a chapter. He is also good at calligraphy and chess. Death, only seventeen years old. There are two Poems of the Tang Dynasty.

Background knowledge:

The origin of Tanabata:

Qixi Qiqiao originated in the Han Dynasty. Ge Hong's Miscellaneous Notes on Xijing in the Eastern Jin Dynasty records that "women in the Han Dynasty often wear seven-hole needles on July 7 in the building, and everyone wears them", which is the earliest record of begging for cleverness in ancient literature we have seen. In later Tang and Song poems, women's begging for cleverness was repeatedly mentioned. In the Tang Dynasty, Wang Jian wrote a poem "The stars are bright and the pearls are bright, and Gong E is busy begging for cleverness". According to "The Legacy of Kaiyuan Tianbao", every time Emperor Taizong and his concubines held a banquet in the Qing Palace on Tanabata, the ladies-in-waiting begged with their own ingenuity. This custom is also enduring among the people and passed down from generation to generation.

During the Song and Yuan Dynasties, Qiaqiao was quite grand, and there was also a market in Beijing that monopolized Qiaqiao goods, which was called Qiaqiao City by the world. Song He's series "Talking about Drunken Weng" said: "Tanabata, the property is a gimmick. From July 1 ST, horses and chariots were swallowed, and three days before Chinese Valentine's Day, horses and chariots were not allowed to pass, and they stopped driving again and again until the night. " Here, we can infer the lively scene of the Jocci Festival from the grand occasion of buying Qiao Qi goods from Qiao Qi. People have been putting up flattering articles since the first day of July, and people are coming and going in the flattering market. By the time of Tanabata, the market of Qiqiao was already crowded with people, as if it were the biggest festival-Spring Festival, which showed that Qiqiao Festival was one of the favorite festivals of the ancients.

On the seventh day of the seventh lunar month, Chinese Valentine's Day, also known as the Begging Festival, is closely related to the myths and legends of the Cowherd and the Weaver Girl.

Valentine's Day in China is always associated with the legend of Cowherd and Weaver Girl. This is a beautiful love story that has been passed down through the ages and has become one of the four folk love legends in China.