The author of "Jianjia" cannot be verified.
"Jian Jia" comes from "The Book of Songs·Guo Feng·Qin Feng". The author of "The Book of Songs" is unknown, and most of it cannot be verified. It is said that it was collected by Yin Jifu and compiled by Confucius. The Book of Songs was called "The Book of Songs" in the pre-Qin period, or the round number was called "The Three Hundred Songs". It was revered as a Confucian classic during the Western Han Dynasty and was first called the Book of Songs, which is still used today.
The Book of Songs is divided into three parts: "Wind", "Ya" and "Song". "Wind" is a ballad from various places in the Zhou Dynasty; "Ya" is a formal song of the Zhou people, and is divided into "Xiaoya" and "Daya"; "Song of Lu", "Song of Lu" and "Song of Shang".
Appreciation of "Qin Feng·Jianjia"
"Qin Feng·Jianjia" is a poem in the "Book of Songs", the first poetry collection in ancient China. This poem was once thought to be a way to ridicule Qin Xianggong for not being able to use Zhou rites to consolidate his country, or to regret that he could not attract wise men who lived in seclusion.
Modern scholars generally believe that this is a love song, describing the melancholy and depression of pursuing the one you love but not being able to achieve it, creating a wonderful state of beauty in autumn water. The whole poem consists of three chapters, with repeated chapters sung over and over again. The last two chapters are just slight changes to the text of the first chapter, creating the effect of harmonious rhythm within each chapter but uneven rhythm between chapters, and also resulting in a reciprocal advancement of semantics.