Poem title: "Ti Liu·Thousands of Willow Silks Facing the Face". Real name: Wen Tingyun. Nicknames: Wen Qi, Wen Tingyun, Wen Tingyun, Wen Bacha, Wen Bayin. Font size: Zi Feiqing. Era: Tang Dynasty. Ethnic group: Han. Birthplace: Qi, Taiyuan (now Qi County, Shanxi). Time of birth: approximately 812 (or 824). Time of death: approximately 866 (or 882). Main works: "Passing Chen Lin's Tomb", "Returning Ballad", "River God", "Returning Ballad", "Resentment of Tibetan Women", etc. Main achievements: poetry creation.
We provide you with a detailed introduction to "Thousands of Willow Face-Flowing Silk" from the following aspects:
1. The full text of "Ti Liu·Thousand Willow Face-Flowing Silk" Click here to view the detailed content of "Ti Liu·Thousands of willow silk threads blowing on the face"
Thousands of willow silk threads blowing on the face, with green smoke and golden ears blowing.
The fragrance rises with the quiet and graceful songs, and the shadows accompany the delicate dancing sleeves.
Wherever the Qiang pipe sings, the flowing oriole sings its hundred songs on the highest branch.
Thousands of gates and nine streets are filled with flowers like snow. They fly over the palace wall and know themselves.
2. Other poems by Wen Tingyun
"Morning Journey to Shangshan", "Luoyang", "Lotus", "Gengluzi", and "Sending People Back East". 3. Notes
Green smoke: refers to the lush smoke-like branches of willows.
Golden ears: golden twigs.
Blow: a work "shift".
Jingwan: Zhang Jingwan, the favored concubine of Yang Kan in the Southern Dynasties, was good at singing and dancing.
Ge Chen Qi: Describes the beautiful singing voice, the lingering sound lingering around the beams, startling Liang Chen.
Jiaorao: One work "Jiaorao", that is, Dong Jiaorao, is the beauty sung in the poem "Dong Jiaorao" by Song Zihou of the Eastern Han Dynasty.
Qiang Guan: One book is "Qiang Flute". In ancient times, there was a song called "Folding Willows" played by the Qiang flute.
Music: One work is "Flute".
Mo: One book is "Qu".
From: One work "No".
4. Appreciation
The person who "inscribed Liu" should be Fei Qing himself. Inscribing or chanting Liu was not his original intention. As Mr. Liu Xuekai said, it should be for some sustenance. of. The overall style of this poem is soft and charming, and Zhang Jingwan and Dong Jiaorao are introduced in three or four sentences, so the main theme is related to women. However, the music played in "Where Does the Qiang Pipe Sound?" is not necessarily related to "Willow Branches". Fei Qing may just use the sad sound and color of the Qiang flute to convey a sad mood. What flew into the thousand gates, nine streets and palace walls must not only be flowers like snow, but also the plaintive sounds played by Fei Qing. The two protagonists of "Two Self-Knowledges" should be Feiqing and a certain woman who is good at singing and dancing within the palace wall. The two may have a relationship, but now they are blocked by the palace wall. So Feiqing wrote about willow trees and played the flute to convey his melancholy and sad thoughts.
Poems of the same dynasty
"Sangu Stone", "Warm Cui", "Farewell to Xu Kan", "Poems of Hate", "Inscription on Jiadao Tomb", " "Tiantai Chanyuan Couplet", "Song of Everlasting Sorrow", "Recalling the South of the Yangtze River", "Spring Journey to Qiantang Lake", "Ode to the Dusk River".
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