How to recite Li Bai's Shu Dao?

Li Bai's Shu Dao is difficult to recite. The specific method is as follows:

Read through the article and solve the new words. Then cut the article sentence by sentence and make a group of several sentences. The full text is divided into 4 groups and 22 sentences. Remember sentence by sentence, read it 3-5 times, and you can basically recite the first word. Even if you pass it, you don't need to be skilled. Review in groups.

Shu Dao Nan is the masterpiece of Li Bai, a great poet in China in the Tang Dynasty.

This poem imitates the theme of the old Yuefu, develops rich imagination in a romantic way, and artistically reproduces the spectacular, abrupt, tough, rugged Sichuan road and the incomparable majestic momentum, thus praising the magnificent scenery of Sichuan mountains and rivers, showing the magnificent mountains and rivers of the motherland, and fully expressing the poet's romantic temperament and love for nature.

The whole poem is 294 words, mixed with prose, with uneven sentences, bold and free and easy, strong feelings and sighing songs. There are many obscure pictures in the poem, whether it is the height of mountains, the urgency of water, the danger of cliffs, the improvement of rivers and mountains, the desolation of trees, all of which are magnificent, meteorological and broad, reflecting the artistic characteristics and creative personality of Li Bai's poems, and are well received by literati.

This poem was first seen in He Yueling Photo Album compiled by Yin Kun in the 12th year of Tianbao of Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang Dynasty (753). It can be seen that the writing age of Li Bai's poem should be before the compilation of He Yueling Photo Album at the latest.

At that time, the Anshi Rebellion had not happened, Emperor Xuanzong of Tang lived in Chang 'an, and Fang Dao and Du Fu had not yet entered Sichuan, so the two statements of A and B were obviously wrong. As for the satire of Zhang Qiu and Joan, judging from the relevant records in some historical books, it is also unfounded. Zhang Qiu and Joan have always wanted to be an official in Chang 'an. Relatively speaking, the last statement is more objective and closer to the actual work.