First, Wang Jian's Fifteen Nights Full Moon Send Du Langzhong.
There are crows in Bai Shu and osmanthus in Coody Leng in the atrium.
Tonight, people are looking forward to it. I wonder who will fall in Qiu Si?
Appreciation: "Looking at the Moon for Fifteen Nights" is a seven-character quatrain written by the Tang Dynasty poet Wang Jian. The first two sentences of this poem select three typical features: bright moonlight, quiet crow and wet osmanthus, and write a unique night scene of Mid-Autumn Festival.
The last two sentences do not express feelings from the front, but use euphemistic questioning tone to express the poet's yearning for his friends on the moon more deeply. The whole poem begins with a description of the scenery and ends with lyricism. Beautiful artistic conception, rich imagination, vivid language image and sincere and euphemistic feelings.
Second, Su Shi's Mid-Autumn Festival in Yangguan District
The twilight clouds are cold, and the silver-haired people silently turn to the tracts.
If you don't meet a good night in this life, where will you see the bright moon next year?
Appreciation: Yangguanqu Mid-Autumn Festival is a word written by Su Shi, a writer in the Northern Song Dynasty. This poem describes the reunion of the author and his younger brother Su Zhe after a long separation, enjoying the Mid-Autumn Festival, and also expresses the sadness and emotion of breaking up soon after the reunion. This little word, entitled "Mid-Autumn Festival", is naturally the joy of writing "a full moon"; Sticking "Yangguan District" involves other feelings.
It describes the reunion of the author and his younger brother Su Zhe after a long separation, enjoying the Mid-Autumn Festival, and also expresses the sadness and emotion of breaking up soon after the reunion.
Iii. Li Bai's Thoughts on a Quiet Night
The foot of my bed is shining so brightly. Is there frost already?
I looked up at the moon and looked down, feeling nostalgic.
Appreciation: Thinking about a Quiet Night is a poem by Li Bai, a great poet in the Tang Dynasty. This poem describes the feelings of the lyric hero who lives abroad, looking up at the bright moon in the house on autumn night and missing his hometown. The first two sentences describe the illusion that the protagonist has for a moment in a specific foreign environment.
The last two sentences deepen the hero's homesickness through the portrayal of action expressions. The whole poem uses metaphor and contrast to express homesickness. The language is fresh and simple, but the charm is implicit and endless, and it has been widely read.