Spring grass will grow green next year, my friend, will you come back?
Farewell in the Mountains is the work of Wang Wei, a great poet in the Tang Dynasty. This poem is written to bid farewell to friends, expressing the feeling of being reluctant to part with friends. The theme is common, but the idea is unique.
Its most striking feature is not the word "farewell", but what it does and thinks after farewell, which expresses the poet's expectation of meeting his friends when the spring grass returns to green in the next year. The language of the whole poem is simple and natural, with deep and sincere feelings, originality and thought-provoking.
This poem "Farewell in the Mountain" did not write a farewell scene from the pavilion, but was ingenious and chose a completely different point from ordinary farewell poems.
The first sentence of the poem, "Friend, I have watched you go down the mountain", tells the reader to say goodbye at the beginning, and uses a seemingly unemotional word "ba" to brush off the farewell scene and feelings. Here, from farewell to sending away, we skipped for a while. The second sentence, "I still closed my thatched door until now", was written during the day when pedestrians were sent away, and it took longer. When the poet connects his life with poetry, he cuts off the feelings and thoughts of those who bid him farewell during this time and regards it as a dark field.