Rongrong: The appearance of lush vegetation. Six Dynasties: In history, Wu, Eastern Jin, Song, Qi, Liang and Chen Dou built Nanjing, so Nanjing is called "the ancient capital of the Six Dynasties". Nanpu: generally refers to the waterfront, and later it is often used to refer to the farewell place. Song fan: A fan used for singing and dancing.
This poem was written by the author in Nanjing. Seeing the harmonious spring scenery aroused the author's meditation on the meaning of life, leaving no trace.
"Tenderness and fragrance are far thick, and spring is everywhere." The first couplet starts from reality. Spring has come, and green grass is everywhere, emitting a fragrance. From a distance, "Go further and live more wonderfully." Seeing the spring grass immediately aroused the poet's endless feelings: "The Six Dynasties hated the setting sun, and Nanpu was worried about the drizzle." What's he worried about? It turns out that the old hatred of the Six Dynasties and the new sorrow of Nanpu, one mourned the past and the other left sadly, for different reasons.
"I want to be fascinated by fans near the water, and the flowers are lined with red skirts." Back to the spring scene, in the blurred grass color, spring grass and wild flowers have become old fans and dance skirts. Where did the prosperity of "dancing in the willow floor and singing at the bottom of the peach blossom fan" go? "Ten miles in the evening, countless cattle and sheep flute." The old dream of the Six Dynasties has completely passed away, and it has been replaced by the idyllic scenery like "fishing boats sing late": ten miles are plain, cattle and sheep return at dusk, leisurely shepherds and melodious flutes. "How many things have been destroyed in the Six Dynasties, gossip is quite suitable for this situation. All kinds of old haters and new worries have vanished.
Spring grass is the messenger of spring, and it is also the homesickness and parting feeling entrusted to him by the poet. Spring grass poetry wins purely by things, and even if there is a little lyricism in the poem, it also expresses a trace of leisure.
Yang Ji (1326— 1378) was born in Jiazhou and Wuzhong (now Wuxian, Jiangsu). At the age of nine, he could recite the Six Classics. Later, together with Gao Qi, Changyu and Xu, they were called "Four Masters of Wuzhong". In the early years of Hongwu, he was appointed as the magistrate of Yang Rong and later became a judge of Shaanxi Province. He was dismissed, punished with hard labor, and died in a relegated house. The poem is clear and steep. There is "Mei An Ji".