Hebei Dingzhou poetry

The poem describing Dingzhou in Hebei Province is as follows:

1, source

Jiang Feng's pair of fishing and fire comes from a night-mooring near maple bridge written by Tang Dynasty poet Zhang Ji: "On a frosty night, Jiang Feng's pair of fishing and fire is worried."

A night-mooring near maple bridge is a seven-character quatrain written by Zhang Ji. This poem is based on Qiao Feng, a water town in the south of the Yangtze River. By depicting the river scene at night, it expresses the poet's lonely and sad mood in his journey. The whole poem is concise in language and beautiful in artistic conception, which gives people a profound artistic feeling and is one of Zhang Ji's representative works.

2. Poetry analysis

In this poem, "Jiang Feng" refers to the maple tree in the water town in the south of the Yangtze River, representing the poet's environment; "Fishing fire" refers to the lights on fishing boats at night, which is the characteristic landscape of Jiangnan water town. Through the words "sleeping for sorrow", the author links this scene with his own inner sadness, vividly expressing his lonely and helpless feelings.

The whole poem has a beautiful artistic conception, which expresses the poet's appreciation of the night view of Jiangnan water town and his inner sadness.

Brief introduction and life of the author

1, author profile

Zhang Ji, a famous poet in Tang Dynasty, was born in 7 18 and died in 779. He was born in Fanyang (now Dingzhou City, Hebei Province). He lived in the prosperous Tang Dynasty and was an important writer in the history of Tang literature.

Zhang Ji's poetry creation is mainly about scenery description and lyricism, and his poetry style is fresh and natural, which has high artistic value. His poems are widely circulated, among which a night-mooring near maple bridge is one of his representative works. In addition, he also wrote a poem for Taoist hermit Chuanjiao Mountain, Delighting in Rain on a Spring Night and other famous works.

2. The author's life

Zhang Ji is knowledgeable, good at talking, and knows how to govern the country. In the twelfth year of Tianbao (about 753 AD), he was a scholar, but he chose to land and return home. In the early years of Dali, he was appointed Yuan Wailang and sent to Xifu. Since then, he has abandoned his pen and joined the army. Later, he served as Yuan Wailang, the ancestor of the school, a doctor of the school, and a judge of salt and iron. And distribute the wealth to Hongzhou.

Zhang Ji's poems are hearty, vigorous, uncut, profound and meaningful, which have a great influence on later generations. At the end of the Dali period, he died in Hongzhou, and his friend Liu Changqing wrote a mourning poem "Mourning Zhang Waiji" for him.