What's so good about Li Qiao's poem "Wind" in Tang Dynasty?

The full text of Tang Liqiao's Wind.

It can blow off the golden leaves in autumn and bloom beautiful flowers in spring.

Scraping the river surface can set off several huge waves in thousands of feet, and blowing bamboo can make tens of thousands of poles tilt.

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Sanqiu: Late autumn refers to the ninth month of the lunar calendar.

February: early spring, February in the lunar calendar.

Creation background

The age of this poem has not been confirmed. Some people think that Li Qiao, Su Wei Dao and Du traveled together in Lufeng Mountain in spring. The scenery on the mountain is beautiful and lush. At the peak, a breeze blew, and Li Qiao was so excited that he recited the poem casually.

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It is a poem describing the wind and a dynamic interpretation and understanding of the wind.

This poem shows the power of the wind: leaves can fall in late autumn, flowers can be pushed in early spring and February, huge waves in thousands of feet can be set off when crossing the river, and 10,000 bamboos can be blown into the bamboo forest.

This poem doesn't mention a word "wind", but it is written everywhere.

The wind is invisible and intangible, but it is hidden in the leaves blown down in late autumn, in the flowers in full bloom in early spring, in the monstrous waves set off by the river, and in the bamboo forest with ten thousand poles.

The whole poem consists of four sentences in pairs, and the numbers of "three", "two", "thousand" and "ten thousand" are arranged in pairs to show the power of the wind and express the poet's awe of nature.