The epiphyllum blooms in the courtyard late at night, and it is suspected that the Fairy Fairy came with her. Which poem is it from?

“The epiphyllum blooms in the courtyard late at night, and it is suspected that the immortal concubine is here with her” comes from “One of Three Poems on Epiphyllum” written by Li He, a famous poet of the Tang Dynasty.

Explanation: The epiphyllum bloomed quietly in the yard late at night. It was suspected that the fairies from the sky came down to play.

Original text:

The epiphyllum blooms in the courtyard late at night, and it is suspected that the Fairy Fairy came with her.

The jade and pure ice are spotless, and the romantic poet wanders alone.

Translation: The epiphyllum bloomed quietly in the yard late at night, and I suspected that the fairies from the sky came down to play. With a pure and pure appearance, he is not polluted by the surrounding environment, only the romantic poet is wandering alone.

Capital expansion information:

Author introduction:

Li He (about 791 AD - about 817 AD), courtesy name Changji, Han nationality, Henan in the Tang Dynasty A native of Fuchang (now Yiyang County, Luoyang, Henan), he lived in Changgu, Fuchang, which was later called Li Changgu. He was a descendant of Li Liang, Prince Zheng of the Tang Dynasty. Known as the "Poetry Ghost", he is a famous poet in the Tang Dynasty who is as famous as the "Poetry Sage" Du Fu, the "Poetry Immortal" Li Bai and the "Poetry Buddha" Wang Wei.

There are famous works such as "Yanmen Prefect's Journey" and "Li Ping Konghou Yin". He is the author of "Changgu Collection".

Li He was a romantic poet in the mid-Tang Dynasty. Together with Li Bai and Li Shangyin, they were called the Three Lis of the Tang Dynasty. He is a representative of the transition period from the mid-Tang Dynasty to the late Tang Dynasty. Most of the poems he wrote lamented his untimely birth and inner depression, and expressed his pursuit of ideals and ambitions.

Li He is another representative of the transition period from the mid-Tang Dynasty to the late Tang Dynasty. Most of the poems he wrote lamented his untimely birth and inner depression, and expressed his pursuit of ideals and ambitions; they also reflected the separatist rule of feudal towns, the dictatorship of eunuchs, and the cruel exploitation of the people at that time.

Li He is a descendant of Li Liang, Prince Zheng of the Tang Dynasty, but he is from a distant branch and has become estranged from the royal family. His father, Jin Su, had a low official position and his family was not wealthy. He was "slender with thick eyebrows and long fingers and claws". He was able to write poems in childhood. When he was 15 or 16 years old, he was as famous as his ancestor Li Yi for his Gongyuefu poems.

In the third and fourth years of Yuanhe, Han Yu was in Luoyang, and Li He went to visit him. It is said that Han Yu and Huangfu Shi paid a return visit together, and Li He wrote the famous poem "Gaoxuan Guo".

Li He was frail and sick all his life and died at the age of twenty-seven. Due to the failure of his official career, Li He was depressed throughout his life, so he devoted all his energy to writing poetry. His poetry creation was full of deep depression.

In memory of Li He, it is said that when Li He was about to die, the Emperor of Heaven sent a messenger in scarlet clothes to summon him to the White Jade Tower in the sky to write a memorial. It is also said that his mother dreamed of Li He one night and said that he was He wrote an inscription on Bai Yao Palace for the Emperor of Heaven. During the reign of Emperor Zhaozong, Wei Zhuang petitioned Li He to posthumously grant him the rank of Jinshi and the official post of Supplementary Que and Collecting Relics. However, due to incidents in the palace, the performance was shelved. Li He once compiled his own collection. There is "Collected Notes on Li He's Poems".