A message to Du Langzhong by looking at the moon for fifteen nights is a poem written by Wang Jian, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, with the Mid-Autumn Festival moonlit as its content. The whole poem consists of four sentences with 28 characters, each sentence has a meaning, which describes the moonlight and the feeling of looking at the moon in the Mid-Autumn Festival respectively, showing a lonely, deserted and quiet picture on the Mid-Autumn Festival night. This poem begins with a description of the scenery and ends with lyricism, full of imagination and charm.
Full text: Bai Shu Habitat Crow Atrium, Coody Leng Silent Wet Osmanthus fragrans. I don't know who Qiu Si will meet tonight.
Crows inhabit the snow-white trees on the ground of the courtyard, and the dew in autumn silently wets the osmanthus in the courtyard. The whole world is looking up at the bright moon tonight, and I wonder whose home this autumn will fall.
Extended data:
The artistic conception of this poem is beautiful. First of all, it gives people the impression of picturesque scenery. In Su Shi's words, it is "painting in poetry". There is a print with this poem as the theme in the paintings of Tang poetry in the Ming Dynasty, but this print is only the artistic conception conceived by the painter, which does not coincide with Wang Jian's original work one by one, nor does it fully show the crowning touch of the whole poem-Qiu Si.
At this point, the art of poetic language shows its irreplaceability. With vivid language and rich imagination, the poet rendered the specific environment atmosphere of enjoying the moon in the Mid-Autumn Festival, bringing readers into a thoughtful mood far away from the moon. Sighing together, endless ending, parting together and thinking together are euphemistic and touching.