The light of the mountain pleases the nature of the birds, and the shadow of the Tan shadow empties the hearts of the people. All sounds are silent, except for the sound of bells and chimes. "Ti Po Shan Temple Hou Zen Yuan" was built regularly.
"Inscribed on the Zen Garden Behind Poshan Temple" is a wall poem written by Chang Jian, a poet of the Tang Dynasty. It was once selected into "Three Hundred Tang Poems".
This poem expresses the impression of the Zen courtyard after visiting the temple in the early morning. It describes a unique, deep and quiet realm with concise and concise strokes. It expresses the poet's joy of visiting famous places and his strong pursuit of a lofty realm. The whole poem has a simple style, distinct layers, profound imagery, a harmonious artistic conception, simplicity, clarity, strong appeal, and artistic integrity. It is a unique masterpiece among the landscape poems of the Tang Dynasty.
The agreement between life and death is broad, and you will be happy with your son. Hold your son's hand and grow old together.
The Book of Songs is the beginning of ancient Chinese poetry and the earliest poetry collection. It collects poems from the early Western Zhou Dynasty to the middle of the Spring and Autumn Period (11th century BC to 6th century BC), with 311 poems. , six of them are Sheng poems, that is, they only have titles and no content, and are called the six Sheng poems ("Nanmei", "Baihua", "Huashui", "Yougeng", "Chongqiu" and "Youyi"), which reflects the The social outlook of about five hundred years from the early Zhou Dynasty to the late Zhou Dynasty.
Confucius once summarized the purpose of the "Book of Songs" as "innocence" and taught his disciples to read the "Book of Songs" as the standard for speech and action. Among the pre-Qin scholars, many quoted the Book of Songs.
For example, Mencius, Xunzi, Mozi, Zhuangzi, Han Feizi and others often quoted sentences from the Book of Songs to enhance their persuasiveness when reasoning and demonstrating. By the time of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty, the Book of Songs was regarded as a classic by Confucianists and became one of the Six Classics and the Five Classics.