1, source
Wang Wan, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, wrote "Park on the North Fort Mountain".
2. Original text
Under the blue mountain, my boat and I meandered along the green water.
Until the river bank widens at low tide, and no wind blows my lonely sail.
... night gives way to the ocean of the sun, and the old year melts in freshness.
Finally, I can send my messenger, Wild Goose, back to Luoyang.
3, the original interpretation
Wandering alone outside the green hills, sailing alone among the green waters.
With the rising tide, the gap between the two sides is getting bigger and bigger. The wind blows; A white sail hung high.
The night will pass and the sunrise on the sea will rise; Spring has already appeared in the river before the New Year.
Now that the letter from home has been sent, where will it be sent? I hope the geese will return to the north and be sent to the edge of Luoyang.
Extended data:
Creative background:
As a northern poet in the early years of Kaiyuan, Wang Wan traveled around the world, fascinated by the beautiful landscapes in the south of the Yangtze River, and influenced by the delicate poetic style of Wuzhong poets at that time, he wrote some works praising the landscapes in the south of the Yangtze River. The first "a berth at the foot of Beibao Mountain" is one of the most famous.
These five laws were first seen in the Collection of National Repairs edited by Rui in Tang Dynasty. This is what the poet felt when he entered Wu from Chu in late winter and early spring and moored his boat at the foot of Gubei Mountain in Zhenjiang, Jiangsu Province on the way to the east of the Yangtze River.