What is the meaning of the poem "Crossing the River and thousands of feet Waves Make Bamboo"?

The meaning of this poem is that scraping across the river can set off huge waves in thousands of feet, and blowing into the bamboo forest can make ten thousand poles tilt. F: Yes. Oblique: Oblique. This poem is from The Wind, a poem by Li Qiao, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. The original poem is as follows:

It can blow off the golden leaves in autumn and bloom beautiful flowers in spring.

Scraping the river surface can set off several huge waves in thousands of feet, and blowing bamboo can make tens of thousands of poles tilt.

Explain in vernacular Chinese: gold leaves can be blown off in autumn and beautiful flowers can be produced in spring. Blowing across the river can set off huge waves in thousands of feet, and blowing into bamboo forests can make ten thousand poles tilt.

Extended data

About the author: Li Qiao (644 ~ 7 13) was a poet in the Tang Dynasty. Word giant mountain. Zhao Zhou Zanhuang (now Hebei) was born. Li Qiao had a certain influence on the development of regular poetry in Tang Dynasty. He has contacts with Yang Jiong, and is called "four friends of articles" with Du, Cui Rong and Su Weidao.

By grasping the variability of four natural images of leaves, flowers, waves and bamboo under the action of wind, this poem indirectly shows the various forms, charm and strength of wind, and also expresses the poet's reverence for nature.

This poem can make people see the power of the wind, which is intangible and real. We can't see the wind, but we can feel it Autumn wind can sweep away fallen leaves, spring wind can push bloom, wind energy can stir up a thousand waves, and wind energy can tilt a thousand bamboos. Invisible, intangible and inaudible "wind" becomes vivid in the author's pen, as if the hand can hold it, the nose can smell it and the ear can hear it.