This is just a statement, not a compliment.
It is from You Cao Lan, also known as Yi Lan Cao, and it is said that it was first written by Confucius. The piano music is like crying and complaining, expressing Confucius' inner world at this moment incisively and vividly, and pinning all his thoughts and feelings on Lan. This is a beautiful orchid poem and a sad lyric poem. This sentence was added by Han Yu.
Song:
The valley came quickly and fiercely, with dark clouds and heavy rain. My sister married in the country today.
It's heaven, not its place. Happy Kyushu, no fixed abode.
The world is cold, and I don't know sages. As you get older, you will get older. (Quoted from Cao Qin Cai Yong)
Orchids are fragrant. If you don't accept it, you will be hurt.
Today's rotation is natural. I travel everywhere, day after day, year after year.
Ice and snow trade, wheat prosperity. If the child doesn't hurt, I won't die.
Wild oats are lush, and wild oats are here. A gentleman hurts it, but a gentleman prevents it. (Han Yubu's anecdote)
Extended data
The ancient poem You Cao Lan is a masterpiece of Confucius who is good at piano. Han Yu, a famous poet in the Tang Dynasty, once wrote a work of the same name to praise Confucius. The lyrics of the theme song of the movie Confucius are adapted from Han Yu's immortal poems.
You Cao Lan has only sixty-four short words, but it is full of charm. It absorbs the vast temperament of epic and the legend of heroes, and has the indifferent beauty of orchids, but it also tells the changes and eternity of life.
Han Yu (768 ~ 824), a writer, philosopher and thinker in the Tang Dynasty, was born in Heyang (now mengzhou city, Jiaozuo, Henan) and was of the Han nationality. Originally from Changli, Hebei Province, he was known as Han Changli in the world. In his later years, he served as assistant minister of the official department, also known as the Korean official department. Posthumous title "Wen", also known as Han Wengong.
He and Liu Zongyuan were both advocates of the ancient prose movement in the Tang Dynasty, who advocated learning the prose language of the pre-Qin and Han dynasties, breaking parallel prose and expanding the expressive function of classical Chinese. In the Song Dynasty, Su Shi called him "the decline of eight generations of literature", and in the Ming Dynasty, he was regarded as the head of the eight masters in Tang and Song Dynasties, and was also called "Liu Han" with Liu Zongyuan. Known as "a great man of literate Sect" and "a hundred schools of literature", all his works are included in Mr. Changli's anthology.
Han Yu is the founder of China's "orthodoxy" concept and a symbolic figure who respects Confucianism and opposes Buddhism.