Poetry and Significance of "Looking for Flowers Alone by the Riverside"

The poem "Looking for Flowers Alone by the River" is as follows:

Looking for flowers by the river alone

Du fu?

Huang Si's maiden is full of flowers,

Thousands of flowers bent the branches. ?

Even butterflies have been dancing.

Charming songbirds sing freely.

It means: the path of Huangsi's maiden is full of flowers, and thousands of flowers are hanging on the branches. The frolicking butterflies are constantly dancing, and the charming Oriole sings just right.

Looking for Flowers Alone by the Riverside is a group of poems written by Du Fu, a great poet in the Tang Dynasty, with a total of seven poems.

The reason why the first song was written about finding flowers alone began with annoying flowers; The second song is about seeing many flowers by the river; The third song is about some people's flowers, dazzling red and dazzling white. The fourth song is to see the flowers in a small town, imagine the prosperity of flowers and the joy of people; The fifth song is about the peach blossom in front of Master Huang's tower. The sixth song writes that Huang Si's maiden is full of flowers; The seventh song summarizes the appreciation, love and cherish of flowers. The first four poems in the group describe the feelings of annoying flowers, fearing spring, welcoming spring and pitying flowers respectively, showing sadness; The last three songs show the joy of Shang Huashi, implying that it is difficult to stay in spring.

The whole poem is a unique flower-seeking picture with clear context and orderly levels, which shows Du Fu's love for flowers, lingering for a better life and unchanging hope for beautiful things.

Du Fu (7 12-770) was born in Xiangyang, Han nationality, and then moved to Gongxian County, Henan Province. A great realistic poet in the Tang Dynasty, who claimed to be a young man at night, was called "Du Li" together with Li Bai. In order to distinguish Li Shangyin, Du Mu and Xiao Du Li, Du Fu and Li Bai are also called Da Du Li, and Du Fu is often called Lao Du.

Du Fu's influence on China's classical poetry is far-reaching, and he is called "the sage of poetry" by later generations, and his poems are called "the history of poetry". Later generations called him Du Shiyi and Du Gongbu, and also called him Du Shaoling and Du Caotang.