This paper analyzes the similarities and differences between Du Fu's "Looking at Yue" and "Ascending the Mountain" from two aspects of images and artistic techniques.

The so-called knowing people and discussing the world, the two poems were written in different periods of the poet's creation, and their feelings are quite different. There are three poems in Wang Yue, which are about Dongyue, Nanyue and Xiyue. The famous poem is "Looking at Mount Tai in Dongyue". This poem was written in the 24th year of Kaiyuan (736). At this time, Du Fu lived a roaming life of "chasing horses", and the lines were filled with the vitality of young Du Fu. The whole poem praises the majesty of Mount Tai, expresses the love for the rivers and mountains of the motherland, and embodies the poet's ambition and spirit of not being afraid of difficulties, daring to reach the top and overlooking everything, and is praised as "the swan song" by later generations.

Ascending the Mountain was written in Kuizhou in the autumn of 767, the second year of Du Fu's Dali period. At this time, Du Fu was old and helpless, and experienced many vicissitudes of life. Through climbing the mountain, the whole poem reveals the poet's complex feelings of long-term wandering, old illness and loneliness, which is impassioned and touching. At the same time, coupled with the anguish of worrying about and hurting the country, the whole poem has a kind of sadness that is beyond words. Some people call this poem "Du Ji's seven-character quatrain is the first".

Wang Yue

1 .. the miracle of nature. Long-awaited reverence and admiration for Mount Tai.

2. It is connected with the blue sky in the boundless sky, continuously spanning the land of Qilu, majestic and steady, tall and straight.

3. Magical beauty and towering height

Climb the balcony

1. When autumn is boundless, the leaves are falling and the river is surging, I feel like a tree, and I have reached the late autumn of my life.

2. The couplets on the neck are translated into adult life experiences, and "nothing …" and "bitterness and bitterness" not only refers to the author's own difficult situation and life experience when he was a guest in Wan Li. ...