Who is the author of at heron lodge?

at heron lodge is written by Wang Zhihuan.

Brief introduction of Wang Zhihuan:

Wang Zhihuan (688-742) was a famous poet in the prosperous Tang Dynasty, whose name was Ji Ling, Han nationality, and was born in Jiangzhou (now Xinjiang County, Shanxi Province). Bold and uninhibited, he often mourns fencing, and his poems were mostly sung by musicians at that time. At that time, he often sang with Gao Shi and Wang Changling, and was famous for describing the frontier fortress scenery. His representative works include at heron lodge, Liangzhou Ci and other

literary achievements:

Wang Zhihuan is a famous poet in the prosperous Tang Dynasty. His poems about northwest scenery are quite distinctive, magnificent, open-minded, enthusiastic, beautiful in rhyme, catchy and widely praised. The words in his poems are very simple, but the creation is extremely far-reaching, which makes people wrapped in poems and have endless aftertaste. He was one of the frontier poets in the prosperous Tang Dynasty. "The Yellow River is far above the white clouds", only seven words, the magnificent scenery of the motherland is vividly on the paper.

It's a pity that his poems are seriously lost, and only six of them have been handed down from generation to generation, and they are included in The Complete Poems of Tang Dynasty. Although there are only six poems left in Wang Zhihuan today, two of his poems are very famous. One is "at heron lodge", which has a magnificent artistic conception and high momentum. In which "but you widen your view three hundred miles, by going up one flight of stairs." It is also a well-known aphorism for thousands of years.

at heron lodge's original text and appreciation:

1. Original text:

mountains cover the white sun, and oceans drain the golden river. to ascend another storey to see a thousand miles further

2. Appreciation:

Wang Zhihuan's poem "at heron lodge" is coherent in momentum, heavy and powerful, full of reality and reality, and full of artistic conception. It is an immortal work in Tang poetry to write the magnificent scenery of nature with a summary pen, express a profound understanding of life and express positive feelings of prosperity in Tang Dynasty. The poem seems to describe the process of climbing the stairs in a straightforward way, but its meaning is far-reaching and people can explore it.

"a thousand miles" and "one floor" are imaginary numbers, which are both vertical and horizontal spaces in the poet's imagination. The words "to be poor" and "to be better" contain many hopes and longings. These two poems are not only innovative and unexpected, but also very natural and close to the first two poems about scenery, thus pushing the poem into a higher realm and showing readers a wider field of vision.

It is precisely because of this that these two sentences, which contain simple philosophical arguments, have become famous sentences that have been recited through the ages, and this poem has also become a swan song through the ages.