What does Tang Bohu's Peach Blossom Spring mean? 1. Song of the Peach Blossom Temple is a poem of the Peach Blossom Temple. Taohuaan: Tang Yin built a house in Taohuawu and named it Taohuaan.
2. The Song of Peach Blossom Temple is a seven-character ancient poem by Tang Yin, a painter, writer and poet in Ming Dynasty. In this poem, the poet pretends to be the Peach Blossom Fairy, and refers to two completely different lifestyles by "drinking from old age" and "bowing before riding a horse" respectively, which forms a sharp contrast between the rich and the poor, and shows his true heart in ordinary reality with vulgar negative side and cynical spirit.
3. Original work: Taohuawu Taohuaan, the Taohuaan under the Peach Blossom Fairy. Peach Fairy cultivates peach trees, picks them and drinks them. When you wake up, you just sit in front of the flowers, and when you are drunk, you come to sleep under the flowers. Half drunk and half awake day after day, flowers bloom year after year. I hope I die of old age. I don't want to bow my head in front of horses and chariots. Cars and horses are rich and interesting, and hops are poor. If wealth is better than poverty, one is underground and the other is in heaven. If you compare poverty to horses and chariots, he will have to drive away my leisure. Others laugh at me for being crazy, and I laugh at others for not being able to see through it. There are no graves of Hao Jie in Wuling, no flowers, no wine, and no hoes to plow the fields.
There is a Peach Blossom Temple in Taohuawu, and there is a Peach Blossom Fairy in the Peach Blossom Temple. The Peach Fairy planted many peach trees, and he picked them for wine. Sit quietly in the flowers when you wake up, and sleep under the flowers when you are drunk. Half awake and half drunk, day after day, year after year. I just want to die of old age in the peach blossom wine room, and I don't want to bow before the horses and chariots of dignitaries. Flow is the interest of nobles, and wine glasses and flowers are the fate and hobbies of poor people like me. If you compare the wealth of others with my poverty, one is in the sky and the other is in the ground. If I compare my poverty to the horses and chariots of the powerful, they work for the powerful, but I get the pleasure of leisure. Others laugh that I am crazy, but I laugh that others can't see through the world. You haven't seen those rich families once brilliant, but now you can't see their graves, just for farmland.
The above is an introduction to the meaning of Tang Bohu's Song of the Peach Blossom Temple.