The mountains and rivers are not heavy enough. It is important to meet a bosom friend and know each other far and near. What do you mean, Wan Li or a neighbor?

"The mountains and rivers are not heavy enough. It is important to meet bosom friends and know each other far and near, and Wan Li is still a neighbor"?

Beautiful rivers and mountains are not the most important thing, but it is important to meet someone who knows each other, no matter how far away, because even if they are thousands of miles away, they can understand each other's minds.

Describe each other as neighbors, though separated by Wan Li.

Source:

In the Tang Dynasty, Zhang Jiuling wrote in his poem "Send to Wei Li Shaofu":

Nanchangwei, Fujian, leaving the pavilion for spring.

Wildflowers are eager to see, but woodbirds are fresh to hear.

If you don't get drunk, you won't return.

Knowing each other far and near, Wan Li is still a neighbor.

Extended data:

Wei Cheng Farewell to Li Shaofu was written by Zhang Jiuling when he was in Hongzhou. It is written with great tolerance and broad artistic conception, especially "Knowing each other far and near, Wan Li is still a neighbor." "However, as long as China keeps our friendship, heaven will remain our neighbor" with Wang Bo. It's a famous sentence that has been passed down from generation to generation.

Zhang Jiuling (678 ~ 740) was a poet in the Tang Dynasty. Zizishou. A native of Qujiang, Shaozhou (now Shaoguan, Guangdong). Shen Gong, the marquis of Wu, was a scholar, and he was the secretary of the provincial school book lang. In the first year of birth (7 13), we should give an example of "Yi Dao guest", get the highest position, and give the left one an addendum. Tired of being an official to assistant minister of Zhongshu, he worked with Pingzhang and moved to Zhongshu. After being squeezed out by Li, he withdrew from politics and was demoted to Jingzhou Secretariat. Zhang Jiuling died in the same year as Tang Shutong. Only 68 years old, according to Xu Hao's inscription should be 63 years old.

Zhang Jiuling was an important poet in the early Tang Dynasty. In particular, his five-character poems have a high position and great influence in the development of Tang poetry. He is the author of twenty volumes of Zhang Qujiang Collection. There are three volumes in The Whole Tang Poetry, more than the collection. However, it is doubtful whether The Addition is Zhang Jiuling's work. For example, Zhu Fang wrote the 49th volume "Answering Lu Li". For the deeds, see Biography of Old and New Books of Tang Dynasty. He Geen has made up Zhang Jiuling Chronology, Qujiang Chronology (No.4 1 No.2 of Lingnan Journal) and Zhang Qujiang's Poetry Chronology (No.5 of Guangdong Cultural Relics) for reference.