Where did the snow in the capital not fall in Jiangnan come from?

From Tang Dynasty Bai Juyi's "Pipa Xing (Preface)" "I am a girl from the capital." The snow under the capital does not fall in the south of the Yangtze River, which means that the geographical location is different, the ambient temperature is different, and the feeling is also different.

"Pipa Xing" is a long narrative poem written by Bai Juyi, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. By describing the pipa girl's superb playing skills and her unfortunate experiences, this poem exposes unreasonable phenomena such as bureaucratic corruption, poor people's livelihood, and buried talents in feudal society. It expresses the poet's deep sympathy for her, and also expresses the poet's innocence towards himself. Resentment at being demoted.

By writing about the misfortune of the Pipa girl’s life, combined with the blows the poet himself suffered in his official career, he sang the sentiment of “We are both fallen people at the end of the world, so why should we meet before”. The turmoil of society, the harshness of the world, sympathy for the fate of the unfortunate, and feelings about one's own frustration, all these painful feelings accumulated in the heart are all poured into the poem.

Its artistic success also lies in the use of beautiful, distinctive and musical language, and the use of visual images to express the feelings gained from hearing; the natural scenery of the bleak autumn wind and the emotions of separation make the work More touching.

In this poem, the poet strives to create the image of the pipa girl. Through it, it profoundly reflects the tragic fate of musicians and artists who were insulted and damaged in feudal society, and expresses "the same people who have fallen from the world" "Feelings.

The beginning of the poem is "Send off guests on an autumn night", "suddenly heard" the "sound of pipa", so "searched for the sound", "asked secretly", "moved the boat" and "invited to meet", after "thousands of years" "Hello," and then the singer came out with her face half-covered. This reverberating and tortuous description lays the foundation for the theme of "The End of the World".