Poems of the pale moon

Do it at once

Jiguang Qi

The north and south drive to report the main feelings, and the riverside spends a moonlit night laughing for a lifetime.

I spend 360 days a year on the battlefield, and my weapon is on my horse.

Qi Jiguang (1528 ——1587), a famous anti-Japanese poet and patriotic poet in Ming dynasty, was a famous poet. He wrote records of military training, new books about the armed forces and the suspension of schools. A book entitled "Go at once" summarizes the author's life and shows his long-term ambition to join the army and defend his country.

The first sentence, "Ride the North and South, Respond to the host's feelings", comes straight to the point and has an extraordinary momentum. It is nothing more than introducing yourself to serve the country by galloping in Fujian, Zhejiang and Guangdong in the south and Jizhou in the north. The second sentence "Jiang lace laughs all her life" is the continuation of the first sentence. The river is the flower on the south river, and the edge moon refers to the pale moon in the north, corresponding to the previous sentence "North and South". This writer has served his country with Jiang's lace moon all his life. These two sentences are both rigid and flexible, and correspond to each other. The first sentence is Malik galloping, flying sand and stones, and the second sentence has the smell of spring in the south and desolation in the north, but the author uses a word "smile" to express his heroic spirit of defending the country, no matter how bad the environment is, it will not change. This "smile" highlights the theme of the poem and also outlines the fearless hero image of the general. The phrase "360 days a year" is not poetic, but the author came up with the phrase "mostly across Goma", which further strengthened the meaning of the whole poem. The first half of the poem describes the author's life, while the second half emphasizes that the author is armed to the teeth, riding a horse and guarding the frontier day and night. This poem is clear and poetic, which makes the whole poem light and heavy, orderly in thickness, more rhythmic and musical, and shows the passionate spirit of the protagonist.

After reading Qi's poems, I can't help thinking of symplectic words. Xin Qiji and Qi Jiguang, two national heroes who are literate and good at martial arts, have similarities in their life and living environment. The same is a horizontal knife, reading at night and reciting poems at once. They also have the idea of loyalty to the country, so their poems are generous and lofty, like magnificent marches, passionate and resounding through the sky.

"The mountain height has its own passenger road, and the water depth has its own ferryman" comes from the seventy-fourth journey to the West.

A wise man doesn't need a benevolent man, but a benevolent man must have a wise man. (Pu Songling's Strange Tales from a Lonely Studio)