This is a poem by Shi Hao, a poet in the Song Dynasty, "Late Smoke Collection on Wet Mountain in Cuihu". Original: Wet Cuihu Mountain collects late smoke. Yuehua is like practicing water. Xing Lai hurried on the fishing boat. There is a statue of Cao Ting beside the green grass, and the frost clouds count bamboo lace. Where to find a fairy.
The meaning of this poem is: In the sunset glow, the wet green hills are gradually shrouded in smoke. Wet green here refers to wet green mountains, and evening smoke refers to smoke rising in the evening. The whole poem depicts the beautiful natural scenery, giving people a sense of tranquility and serenity.
Huanxisha, formerly known as Tang, was later used as an inscription name. This tone is divided into flat and flat, with 42 words in the majority, 44 words and 46 words. Han Wo, a Tang Dynasty man, first adopted this tune, usually taking his word "Huanxisha, hangover" as the main body, and there are four other variants.
Forty-two words are disyllabic, the first three sentences are three-level rhymes, and the next three sentences are two-level rhymes. This tone has distinct syllables and is commonly used by graceful and unrestrained poets. Representative works include Yan Shu's Huanxisha, a new word and a glass of wine, and Qin Guan's Huanxisha, a lonely cold building.
The author's writing style
Shi Hao (1106-1194), whose original name was Ruone, was a real hermit. Yinxian, Mingzhou (now Ningbo, Zhejiang). China was a politician and poet in the Southern Song Dynasty. Shi Hao studied in Taoyuan Academy since childhood and met Wang Siwen, Qin Zheng, Wei Qi, Yuan Xie and others. Taoyuan Academy was founded by Wang Zhi, one of Li Qingwu's bachelors, and Shi Hao's great-grandfather Shi Ji studied under Wang Zhi.
Shi Hao, a mature and honest man, learned lessons from classics and history, and made a firm argument. For example, he argued that it was impossible to use troops in Shandong, that he was right for people, that he failed in the Northern Expedition and that he fought back to the North, all of which strongly indicated that the imperial court should do what he could, and that the Northern Expedition should not be carried out rashly. All these were the opinions of mature men for the country.