Kè, niàn, fēn, wú, jí, I miss Wuji, chūn, lèi, bèi, chéng, háng. Tears multiply in spring. J and n, cháo, huā, shù, xià, under the current flower tree, bú, Ji à, liàn, nián, guāng. I don't like young people.
I can't stop thinking about my trip. My tears doubled during the spring outing. Today, under the red flowers and green trees, I don't feel that I have cherished my youthful years when I should have made a difference. The first two paragraphs of this poem show the confusion of one's true thoughts, and tears flow down in rows, while the last two sentences explain the reasons for the tears in the first two sentences, which stem from the passing of youth in mediocrity, and the inner anxiety and sadness are heartbreaking.
Just looking at the topic of "spring outing" gives people a sense of pleasure. However, after reading the content, I found that the author did the opposite, writing what should have been happy into a sad feeling, leaving readers room for thinking. This poem expresses deep homesickness by writing scenes, and its language is unpretentious, giving people an imaginary world. The sense of historical vicissitudes goes without saying, with profound implications and high self-evaluation.
About the author:
Wang Bo (650 -676), a native of Longmen, Gujiang County (now Hejin, Shanxi Province), was a writer in the Tang Dynasty and the first of the "four outstanding figures in the early Tang Dynasty". Wang Bo was smart and studious since he was a child. He was able to write articles at the age of six and was known as a "child prodigy". At the age of nine, I read Yan Shigu's Notes on Hanshu and wrote ten volumes of Finger Defects to correct my mistakes. At the age of sixteen, he was appointed Saburo at the request of Su You Branch. He was expelled from Pei Wang Fu for "cockfighting". After seeking compensation, Zhou joined the army and was demoted for the second time when he joined the army.
In August of the third year of Shangyuan (676), he drowned crossing the sea at the age of 27. Wang Bo is good at the Five Laws and Five Exquisites, and his main literary achievement is parallel prose. His representative works include "Farewell to Du Fu's Post in Sichuan" and "Preface to Wang Tengting".
Wang Bo wrote more than 80 poems, including fu and preface, table, tablet and fu, and more than 90 poems. There are 65,438+06 volumes of Wang Zian Collection, 65,438+00 volumes of Han Shu Magistrate, 5 volumes of Zhouyi Play, 65,438+00 volumes of The Analects of Confucius, and a preface written on the ship.