1, original: I'm wondering why my Jinse has fifty strings, and each string has a youthful interval. Zhuangzi daydreaming, a saint, was bewitched by butterflies, and cuckoo crowed in the imperial spring. Mermaids shed pearl-like tears on the moon-green sea, and the blue fields breathed their jade to the sun. A moment that should last forever has come and gone before I know it. Why do exquisite musical instruments have fifty strings, each of which reminds me of my youth?
2. Zhuangzi dreamed that he became a butterfly, and Du Yu's heart became a cuckoo. Under the sea and moon, pearls are accompanied by tears, and the beautiful jade in the warmth of Lantian gives birth to a soft texture like smoke. Where is this feeling that can only be recalled now? But at that time, I was completely intoxicated in the charming realm.
3. About the author: Li Shangyin (about 813-about 858), whose name is Yishan, was born in western Henan, also known as Fan Nansheng, and was born in Xingyang, Zhengzhou (now Xingyang, Zhengzhou, Henan), a famous poet in the late Tang Dynasty, and was also called Du Mu and Wen.
The background of golden times.
1, "golden times" is one of the representative works of Li Shangyin, a modern poet in China. Its creative background involves the political, social and cultural environment in China in the late Tang Dynasty. When Li Shangyin wrote Jinse, it was at a critical moment when China's Tang Dynasty turned from prosperity to decline. Politically, the Tang Dynasty gradually declined, with social unrest and depressed people's livelihood.
2. Li Shangyin is a poet deeply influenced by China traditional culture. His works often involve themes such as history, philosophy and religion. In "Jinse", he used Zhuangzi's dream butterfly, cuckoo's tears of blood and other allusions to express his feelings and thoughts about the short and fleeting life. At the same time, he also expressed his feelings about love, friendship and affection in his poems.
3. When Li Shangyin wrote Jinse, he was also influenced by Buddhist thought. He used Buddhist images and language in his poems to express his thoughts on the reincarnation of life and death and the rebirth of nirvana. These thoughts are closely related to the social environment and cultural atmosphere at that time, and also reflect Li Shangyin's inner world and emotional experience in his creation.