Don Hu Lingneng
A unkempt little boy learned to bow,
Sit by the raspberry moss.
Passers-by ask and wave,
Frightened fish should not be surprised.
Precautions:
1, youngest child: a young child;
2, hanging down: fishing; Nylon: silk thread for fishing;
3. Berry: a kind of grass;
4. Bryophytes: bryophytes;
5. Excuse me: ask people;
6, should: ignore;
7. remoteness: remoteness;
8 fear: fear
The fish was afraid: the fish was afraid and ran away.
A slovenly child learns to fish like an adult. Sitting sideways on the grass moss, the figure is hidden in the weeds. Hearing passers-by asking for directions, he waved at a distance. Afraid of disturbing the fish, I dare not answer.
The author introduces:
Hu Lingneng, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, lived in seclusion in Putian. The dreamer cuts open his belly and puts it in the book, so he can recite the scriptures. The far and near number is Hu Pin Hinge. Four poems, all vivid and exquisite, are worthy of donation by immortals. "Children Fishing" (selected from "All Tang Poems") describes a "unkempt teenager" learning to fish, "sitting on his side, raspberry moss reflects himself". Passers-by waved to him and wanted to know something, but the child "scared the fish out of their wits" (he didn't say a word), which was really vivid and lifelike, and his artistic achievement was no less than that of Du Mu's masterpiece Qingming.