The original introduction of this poem:
Pai Piao Xiucai from the Tang Dynasty went to Shu: Get on the horse and watch you win. I'm a newcomer, wearing old clothes. There are few pedestrians in Hanshui and few guest houses in Bashan. The south wind will be warm, and spring will be seen in the twelfth month.
Sending Park Xiucai to Shu is a Tang poem by Cen Can, a great poet in the Tang Dynasty. A household name, spread through the ages, has now been included in Tang poetry and Song poetry. Cen Can, a frontier poet in the Tang Dynasty, was born in Jiangling, Jingzhou (now Jiangling, Hubei). He was the great-grandson of Cen Wenben, the hero of Emperor Taizong, and later moved to Jiangling. Cen Can was lonely and poor in his early years. He learns from his brother and reads history books.
Tang Xuanzong was a scholar in Tianbao three years (744). At the beginning, he led the government soldier Cao to join the army. After joining the army twice, he first served as the secretary of the shogunate of Gao Xianzhi in Anxi. At the end of Tianbao, Feng Changqing was the judge of the shogunate when he was the minister of Anxi North Hospital. During the reign of Emperor Zong, Zeng Guan was the secretariat of History (now Leshan, Sichuan), which was called "Cen Jiazhou". He died in Chengdu in the fifth year of Dali (770).
Cen Can's poems are full of romantic features, magnificent, imaginative, colorful and passionate, especially good at seven-character quatrains. There are 403 existing poems, more than 70 frontier poems, a sense of old age, a Zhao Bei Hakka and two epitaphs.
Cen Can's works are mainly frontier poems. Since the frontier fortress, in the new world of Anxi and Beiting, and in the dusty life of pommel horse, his poetic realm has been expanded unprecedentedly, and his interest in novelty has been further developed in his creation, which has become the main style of his frontier fortress poems with magnificent romantic colors.