"There are trees in the south" comes from - "The Book of Songs? National Style? Zhou Nan? Han Guang".
There are trees in the south, don’t stop thinking about them. There are wandering girls in the Han Dynasty, so don’t ask for them.
The Han Dynasty is so vast that it is impossible to think about it. The river will last forever and cannot be imagined.
The wrong salary is raised, and the Chu is cut off. When his son returned home, he said that he wanted to build his horse.
The Han Dynasty is so vast that it is impossible to think about it. The river will last forever and cannot be imagined.
The wrong salary is raised, and the grass is cut off. The son returned home. Talking about the horse's strength.
The Han Dynasty is so vast that it is impossible to think about it. The river will last forever and cannot be imagined.
Notes:
A love song about a poet who pursues a girl wandering the Han River but is finally disappointed. This is a love poem. The lyrical protagonist is a young woodcutter. He fell in love with a beautiful girl, but he never got what he wanted. Tangled with emotions and unable to escape, facing the vast river, he sang this moving poem and poured out his melancholy.
Extended information:
Chen Qiyuan's "Ancient Collection of Mao Shi Ji" summarizes the poetic realm of "Han Guang" as "visible but not sought". This is the so-called "situation of yearning" in Western romanticism, which means that the object of desire is far away and on the other side. It can be seen with the eyes but cannot be touched with the body. It can always be yearned for but can never be reached. realm.
There are no specific events or scenes in "Jianjia", and it is difficult to identify whether the owner is male or female. The poet deliberately exaggerates a mood of pursuing longing but being elusive and elusive.
Reference materials: Guofeng·Zhou Nan·Han Guang - Baidu Encyclopedia