Lu Guimeng, born in Changzhou (now Suzhou, Jiangsu), was a poet and agronomist in the Tang Dynasty.
Lu Guimeng is a great scholar, who once served as a secretariat in Hu and Suzhou. Later, he lived in seclusion in Songjiang Mansion (now Luzhi, Wuxian County, Jiangsu Province). About the first year of AD (88 1), Lu Guimeng died. In the third year of Guanghua (900), Tang Zhaozong wrote a letter and was posthumously granted the right to fill the vacancy.
Literary influence:
The strangeness of Lu Guimeng's poems is mainly manifested in the way of communication, the momentum of horizontal and vertical coordination, the precipitous and peculiar realm, the use of strange words and expressions, and the dangerous rhyme.
It is a common technique to spread the story and recite it, and it is an innovation of the Tang Dynasty to move it into poetry. Han Yu, a famous poet in the middle Tang Dynasty, is a representative poet in this field, and Lu Guimeng obviously intends to do it in his poems.
For example, the description of Lin Yu in "A Hundred Rhymes of Suffering Rain in Wuzhong", an ancestor who offered a reward to attack the United States, was repeatedly portrayed by the poet from the aspects of shape, sound and potential with the help of imagination, exaggeration and metaphor, making it magnificent and shocking. In addition, the narrative of illness and resentment in the poem is also full of pen and ink, with incisive characteristics.