Pinyin: It's good to be ugly for a hundred days, while Yin Biandong is on the horizon. Luo Hongbu Kate, Hua Zuochun Ni Hu Hua.
Ancient poetry: Worrying about the horizon, whipping refers to the horizon. I quit my job and go home, just like a flower falling from a branch, but this is not a heartless thing. It can be turned into the soil of spring and can also play a role in nurturing the next generation.
The sadness of parting extends to the distant place where the sun goes down. When you leave Beijing, you will feel that you are at the end of the world, and a whip is drawn to the east. I quit my job and went home, just like a fallen flower, but it was not a heartless thing. It has become the soil of spring and can also play a role in cultivating the next generation.
Appreciation of Ji Hai's Miscellaneous Poems: Leaving Sorrow and Forgetting the Sun
Ji Hai Miscellaneous Poems is the fifth poem in Ji Hai Miscellaneous Poems by Gong Zizhen, a poet in Qing Dynasty, which describes the poet's feelings of leaving Beijing. The whole poem is divided into two parts, the first two sentences are the first part, and the last two sentences are the second part. In the first part, the poet wrote the majestic sadness of parting from the horizon, sunset and fallen flowers, and gave himself a sense of life experience with fallen flowers.
The second part takes the fallen flower as the transition, starting with the fallen flower and the spring mud, feeling the fallen flower, and then making a statement on behalf of the fallen flower, taking an oath to the spring and pouring out the will to sing deeply. The whole poem is simple, but the scene is muddy, the contrast is unprovoked and the heart is clear. Twenty-eight short words show the poet's broad mind and reveal a valuable life value, which can be called the masterpiece of Ding 'an's poems.
Reference to the above content: Baidu Encyclopedia-"Ji Hai Miscellaneous Poems, Disturbing Self-sadness and Forgetting Heaven"