one
The Lord is like the sky, everything is spring, and the little minister dies secretly.
It's even more tiring to pay off debts after a hundred years.
Buried bones are green hills, and rain alone hurts the body.
It is more important to be brothers with you for life.
Secondly,
The frosty night in Baitai is bleak, and the wind is low.
The dream is like a deer around Yunshan, and the soul is like a chicken.
The rhinoceros horn is really my son in my eyes, and the cow behind me is a shame to my wife.
Where will centenarians wander? Tongxiang knows where western Zhejiang is buried.
Two Poems to Send a Son to Prison are two poems written by Su Shi to his younger brother Su Zhe in Song Dynasty, which strongly express the poet's deep attachment to his family. Among them, the preface "The gift is that the jailer of Yushitai can't die when he sees the prison."
These two poems are Su Shi's "desperate poems" in prison. They come from the heart and have no time to carve them, but they have their own moving power. Su Shi's opposition to the new law is the limitation of his understanding. However, even at that time, it was considered unfair by ordinary people that the rulers imposed a literary prison on people with different opinions.
The Wutai Poetry Case brought obvious negative consequences to the political situation in the late Northern Song Dynasty. Scholar-officials were sympathetic to people's lives, kept silent on state affairs and protected themselves, resulting in Yuan You (1086- 1094) and Shao Sheng (1094- 1098). Su Shi's two poems are vivid testimony to this historical tragedy.