What kind of poem is Pipa half-covered?

The whole poem is still holding the pipa and half covering the face.

The original sentence of this poem is "Still holding the pipa half-hiding my face", which comes from "Pipa Line" by Bai Juyi, a poet of the Tang Dynasty. "Pipa Line" is a well-known realist masterpiece. The full text is based on characters. As a clue, it not only writes the life experience of the pipa girl, but also writes the poet's feelings, and then converges on the two sentences "the same people are reduced to the end of the world".

The tragic experience of the singer is very specific, which can be regarded as an overt line; the poet's emotions permeate between the lines, and ripples along with the music played by the pipa girl and the constant changes in her life experience, which can be regarded as a hidden line. This light and darkness, one reality and one imaginary, make the plot ups and downs.

The story it narrates is tortuous and touching, and the emotions it expresses can arouse people's excitement. The language is beautiful but not flashy, refined but not obscure. The content is close to life but has broad sociality, elegance and vulgarity. ***reward.

Bai Juyi (772-846), whose courtesy name was Letian, also known as Xiangshan Jushi, and also Mr. Zuiyin, was originally from Taiyuan, Shanxi Province. He moved to Xiagui when his great-grandfather was there, and was born in Xinzheng, Henan Province. He was a great realist poet in the Tang Dynasty and one of the three major poets in the Tang Dynasty. Bai Juyi and Yuan Zhen jointly advocated the New Yuefu Movement, known as "Yuan Bai" in the world, and "Liu Bai" together with Liu Yuxi.

Bai Juyi's poetry has a wide range of themes, diverse forms, and simple and popular language. He is known as the "Poetry Demon" and the "Poetry King". He became a bachelor of the Hanlin Academy and a doctor of Zuo Zanshan. In 846 AD, Bai Juyi died in Luoyang and was buried in Xiangshan. There is "Bai's Changqing Collection" handed down from generation to generation, and his representative poems include "Song of Everlasting Sorrow", "Charcoal Seller", "Pipa Play" and so on.