Cao Zhi used to praise poems describing Zhenji.

The work that Cao Zhi used to praise Zhen Ji was "Ode to Luoshen".

Luo Shen Fu is a masterpiece of Cao Zhi, a writer of Cao Wei in the Three Kingdoms period. This poem fictionalizes the author's own meeting with Luo Shen and their yearning and love for each other. The image of Luo Shen is absolutely beautiful, and the love between man and god is vague, but it can't be combined because of the different ways of man and god, and finally expresses infinite sadness and disappointment.

The whole article can be roughly divided into six paragraphs:

In the first paragraph, when the writer returned from Luoyang to the fief, he saw Luo Shen standing on the cliff, lost in thought;

The second paragraph writes about the beauty of Luo Shen's dress;

In the third paragraph, the author worships Luo Shen, who knows etiquette and is good at words. Although they give each other answers, they are worried that the encounter will be blocked.

The fourth paragraph describes Luo Shen's sincere feelings for "Wang" and his future situation and actions;

In the fifth paragraph, I wrote that Luo Shen had many followers and finally left with hatred.

The sixth paragraph describes the author's deep affection for Gu Wang after Luo Shen left. All the poems are colorful, delicate in description, rich in imagination, full of emotions, and full of sustenance.

Creative background:

According to the Preface, Cao Zhi's Fu was written in the year of Huang San (222). After he entered Luoyang, the capital city, he passed through Luoshui and returned to Juancheng, a fief, "feeling Song Yu's worries about Chu women". Shortly after Cao Pi proclaimed himself emperor, he killed Cao Zhi's close friends Ding Yi and Ding Kuang. After going abroad, Cao Zhi himself played "Drunk and Slow, Robbed the Messenger of Danger" for the country, and was demoted as the Hou of Anxiang, later renamed as the Hou of Juancheng, and then established the King of Juancheng (for details, see The History of the Three Kingdoms, Chen Sichuan). These are undoubtedly a heavy blow to Cao Zhi, who is determined to "serve the country faithfully, benefit the people, make contributions and make a lasting legacy" (a book with Yang Dezu), and his depression and anguish can be imagined.