Jiang Jie (1245? ~ 1301?), also known as Shengyu, also known as Zhushan, was a poet in the late Song Dynasty and the early Yuan Dynasty. Together with Zhou Mi, Wang Yisun and Zhang Yan, he was known as the "four poets in the late Song Dynasty". Everyone".
Jiang Jie was born in Yangxian (now Yixing, Jiangsu). Emperor Gong of the Song Dynasty was a Jinshi in the 10th year of Xianchun (1274). He lived during the period when the Song Dynasty fell and the Yuan army invaded Jiangnan. Especially after the fall of the Southern Song Dynasty, he was forced to move many times and his life was very unstable. The Yuan Dynasty recruited him as an official many times. "Zang Lu recommended his talents, but his soldiers refused to rise." In his later years, he settled in Zhushan, Taihu, and wrote "Zhushan Ci".
Jiang Jie’s poems are mostly inherited from Su and Xin Yiyi, and their contents are mostly about longing for the motherland and the sorrow of mountains and rivers, with various styles. The most famous one is "Poppy Poppies":
" A young man listens to Upstairs in Yuge, the tents are lit by red candles. The old man is listening to the rain in the boat, the clouds are low in the vast river, and the wild geese are calling in the west wind. Now, listening to the rain below the monk's house, there are stars on the temples, and the joys and sorrows are always ruthless. Every step in front of the door is dripping until dawn.