Bee ancient poetry with pinyin
Phoenix dance
Bees (Luo Yin)
Bron Ping da y incarnation,
Regardless of the flat land and the top of the mountain,
Wuxi à n f ě ng gu ā ng j ě n bé i zhan
The infinite scenery is completely occupied.
céI débéI Huāchéng míhòu,
After picking flowers and honey,
K. visutian
For who? For who?
Bees: Bees is a poem about objects written by Luo Yin, a poet in the late Tang Dynasty, and it is also a meaningful poem. This poem praises the noble character of hard work of bees, and also implies the author's hatred and dissatisfaction with people who get something for nothing. The artistic features of this poem are: to grasp the past, we must fall back forcefully; Narrative backchat, singing sighs and feelings; The meaning is profound and can be interpreted in two ways.
Luo Yin: Born in the seventh year of Taihe (AD 833), he entered Beijing at the end of the thirteenth year of Dazhong (AD 859) and took the imperial examination for seven years. Later, I took the exam intermittently for several years, and finally I failed the exam, which is called the "top ten" in history. Disappointment with the examination system at that time, the imperial court at that time, and resentment caused by seeing people working hard in the fields and some imperial officials getting something for nothing are roughly the reasons why Luo Yin made this satirical "Bee".
Ancient poetry: it is the general name of China's ancient poetry, referring to China's poetry works before the 1840 * * war. From the perspective of meter, ancient poetry can be divided into ancient poetry and modern poetry. Taking the Tang Dynasty as the boundary, the previous poems were all ancient poems, and later, the ancient poems gradually declined and died out. Ancient poetry is also called ancient poetry or ancient style; Modern poetry is also called modern poetry. From the Book of Songs to Yu Xin in the Southern and Northern Dynasties, they are all ancient poems, but the poems after the Tang Dynasty are not necessarily modern poems, specifically in the distinction between rhyme and meter.