From the Tang Dynasty poet Li Bai's "Night Stay Mountain Temple"
The tall buildings of the temple on the mountain are really high, like a hundred feet. People upstairs are like a hand that can pick off the stars in the sky.
Standing here, I dare not speak loudly for fear of disturbing the gods in the sky.
(1) Accommodation: overnight.
⑵ Dangerous building: High-rise building, which refers to the temple at the top of the mountain. Danger: high. 100 feet: Fictional, not real. The buildings here are very high.
⑶ Stars: The general name for the stars in the sky.
(4) language: speaking.
5] fear: fear, fear. Surprise: Call the police.
The high-rise building of the temple on the mountain is really high, it seems to be 100 feet. People upstairs seem to be able to pick off the stars in the sky with one hand. Standing here, I dare not speak loudly for fear of disturbing the gods in the sky.
This poem was written by Li Bai after he stayed in the mountain temple and boarded the temple building during his trip.
Li Bai yearned for the life of wandering immortals all his life. In his creation, he supplemented or organized the picture with wandering immortals, dreams or dreamland. In the virtual description, he expresses his ideal and Wang Yang feelings more wantonly. When surging poetry cannot be accommodated by ordinary images, romantic poets often expand their imagination and control their words with qi to realize artistic deformation.
Sleeping in the Mountain Temple is such a poem, which not only reflects the poet's romantic feelings, but also reflects the character of advocating Zhuang and Lao in the prosperous Tang Dynasty, transcending reality, being liberated in returning to the fields and publicizing personality.
The poet took exaggeration and imagination to the extreme, described the height of temple architecture step by step, and showed the poet's transcendence consciousness of being close to heaven and earth and nature.
The first sentence, "The dangerous building is 100 feet high", uses 100 words to describe the height of the temple building. How high is it? Hands can pick stars. Climbing to the top floor, reaching out seems to be able to pick the stars.
Three or four sentences pushed the imagination to the extreme. "I dare not speak loudly for fear of scaring people." The poet stood upstairs, afraid to speak loudly, for fear of disturbing the gods in the sky. It turns out that we can be so close to the extraordinary nature!
This poem is a bit exaggerated, but it makes people feel the same. Can't help but admire Li Taibai's surging poetry and fantastic imagination. This kind of thing and imagination embodies the aesthetic pursuit of nature by ancient philosophers in China, that is, the freedom to return to life and the realm of carefree life.
In the eyes of ancient philosophers in China, the ideal personality to realize "carefree travel" is to return to nature, abandon man-made, interact with the endless sun, moon, stars, rivers and earth, and blend into infinite nature, so that heaven and man, things and me enter the sacred realm of unity.