The Yellow Crane's Flying uses an exaggerated expression technique; the ape's desire to overcome sorrow and its climbing use an anthropomorphic expression technique.
Benefits: This description allows readers to more easily understand the difficulty of the Shu Road through comparison (compared with the flying ability of the Yellow Crane and the climbing ability of the Ape).
Source: "The Road to Shu is Difficult" by Li Bai, a poet of the Tang Dynasty.
"The Difficult Road to Shu" is the representative work of Li Bai, the great poet of the Tang Dynasty in China. This poem follows the old title of Yuefu, uses romanticism to develop rich imagination, and artistically reproduces the majestic, breathtaking and unsurpassable majesty of the Shu road, such as the steepness, abruptness, strength, and ruggedness, so as to sing the praises of the mountains and rivers of Shu. The majesty of the poem shows the majesty of the mountains and rivers of the motherland, and fully demonstrates the poet's romantic temperament and love for nature.
The whole poem has 294 words, using a mixture of rhythm and prose, with uneven sentences, vertical and horizontal writing, bold and unrestrained, strong emotions, and three sighs in one song. Many scenes in the poem appear one after another. Whether it is the height of the mountains, the rush of the water, the changes in the rivers and mountains, the desolation of the trees, or the dangers of the peaks and cliffs, they are all compelling, majestic, and vast. It reflects the artistic characteristics and creative personality of Li Bai's poems.
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"The Road to Shu is Difficult" 》 is Li Bai’s use of Yuefu The ancient title unfolds rich imagination and focuses on describing the beautiful and breathtaking mountains and rivers on the road between Qin and Shu, and reveals some worries and concerns about society.
The poet generally followed the clues from ancient times to the present, from Qin to Shu, and captured the characteristics of the mountains and rivers to describe them to show the difficulty of the road to Shu.
It is a paragraph from "噫囧_" to "Then the stone stacks of the ladder to heaven are connected to each other". At the beginning of the poem, he talks about the difficulty of the road to Shu, highlighting the theme with a strong emotional aria, which sets a majestic tone for the whole poem. Following the ups and downs of emotions and changes in natural scenes, the chant "The road to Shu is as difficult as climbing to the sky" appears repeatedly, stirring the readers' heartstrings like the main melody of a piece of music.
About the author
Li Bai (701-762), also known as Taibai, also known as Qinglian Jushi. He is the most unique and greatest romantic poet after Qu Yuan. He is known as the "Immortal of Poetry" and is also known as "Li Du" together with Du Fu. His poems are mainly lyrical, showing his arrogant spirit of contempt for the powerful, expressing sympathy for the suffering of the people, and being good at describing natural scenery and expressing his love for the mountains and rivers of the motherland.
Reference:/baike.baidu.com/item/%E8%9C%80%E9%81%93%E9%9A%BE/14470?fr=aladdin#5"target="_blank "title="The Road to Shu is Difficult-Baidu Encyclopedia">The Road to Shu is Difficult-Baidu Encyclopedia