"Parrot" written by Fang Xiaoru in Ming Dynasty: "The monarch bird will sing good news, and the jade will carve Wan Li's heart. Just to understand the past, I can't spend half my life in the mountains. "
Quiet parrots still make sweet calls. If there is grace in the carved cage, Wan Li will fly high. Just because I used to be able to speak and understand people's words, I can't live freely in the mountains for half my life.
Parrot is an object-chanting poem written by Luo Yin, a poet in the late Tang and Five Dynasties. This poem is different from the general metaphor, but by persuading parrots to confide in their hearts. It is the author's own comparison to say that parrots parrot; The author expresses his inner sadness by persuading parrots, and expresses his depression of relying on others because of fear and ridicule.
About the author:
Luo Yin (833-909), whose real name was Zhao Jian, was born in Yuhang (now Zhejiang) and Xincheng (now Dengxin Town, Fuyang City, Zhejiang Province). He was a Taoist scholar and poet in the late Tang Dynasty and the Five Dynasties. His real name was Heng, but he failed in the Jinshi exam ten times, which was called "ten misses" in history, so he changed his name to Yin. After the navy entered the city, it screwed up the money, moved the judges and gave middle-level jobs.
Luo Yin's writings are rich, but they are seriously lost. There are only about 500 existing poems, including poetry anthologies A and B, five volumes of 60 masterpieces of prose (two are incomplete), two volumes of masterpieces of philosophy (10), novels "The Records of Guangling Medicine" and "Biography of Zhongyuan".