"Hundreds of dusk claim the sea, but at this moment the red sun is pleasing to the heart" was written by Li Shangyin, a poet of the Tang Dynasty.
It means that although the sound of sunset and dusk will soon be reflected in the vast sea, the bright red sunset at this moment is more vivid in people's hearts. ?
Excerpt:
Dusk color words
Hundreds of dusk claim the sea, and at this moment the red sun is pleasing to the people.
When will the red sun rise again in the east and fall behind the green mountains?
Translation:
Although the sound of sunset will soon be reflected in the vast sea, the bright red sunset at this moment is even more impressive. The sun rises again from the east, and I don’t know when it will set over the green mountains.
Extended information
About the author
Li Shangyin (about 813-about 858), whose courtesy name was Yishan and whose name was Yuxisheng, was born in Hanoi, Huaizhou (now Henan) Qinyang City), born in Xingyang, Zhengzhou (now Xingyang City, Zhengzhou, Henan). A famous poet in the late Tang Dynasty, he and Du Mu were collectively known as "Xiao Li Du".
In the second year of Kaicheng (837), he passed the imperial examination and became a secretary of the provincial school. He moved to Hongnong County and became a staff member of Wang Maoyuan (father-in-law), the governor of Jingyuan. Involved in the political whirlpool of the "Niu-Li Party Controversy", he was marginalized and struggled throughout his life. In the last year of Dazhong (about 858), he died of illness in Zhengzhou.
Li Shangyin was one of the few poets in the late Tang Dynasty and even the entire Tang Dynasty who deliberately pursued poetic beauty. He is good at poetry writing, and his parallel prose has high literary value. His poems are novel in conception and beautiful in style, especially some love poems and untitled poems, which are sentimental, beautiful and moving, and are widely read. However, some poems (represented by "Jin Se") are too obscure and difficult to understand. There is a saying that "poets always love Xikun and hate that no one writes Zheng Jian."