Translation: I look at the clouds every day, but I can't bear to look back on the past. I don't care much about things, and I don't seem to have any talent. Self-pity is really a piece of beautiful jade. Unfortunately, without the clear sky in Wan Li and the bright sunshine, how can the brilliance of beautiful jade be distributed, discovered and seen?
from: Tang Du Mu's Cloud
The original poem:
Cloud (a poem written by Chu Zai)
Tang Dynasty: Du Mu
looks at the cloud head all day and never looks back, but he seems to have no talent without heart.
poor glory-Pian Yu, where does Wan Li get sunny?
Expanding information
Theme:
This poem by Du Mu, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, expresses the poet's regret for the past and expresses his resentful thoughts and feelings.
Author's achievements:
Du Mu's literary creation has many achievements. His poems, poems and ancient prose all take advantage of famous artists and like Taoism of Laozi and Zhuangzi. Du Mu advocates that all works should be based on meaning, supplemented by qi, and defended by diction, and has a correct understanding of the relationship between content and form of works. And can absorb and melt the strengths of predecessors to form their own special style.
Du Mu's classical poems are influenced by Du Fu and Han Yu, with broad themes and strong brushwork. Du Mu's modern poems are famous for their beautiful words and ups and downs of emotion. Influenced by Du Fu and Han Yu, his classical poems are broad in subject matter and vigorous in brushwork. His modern poetry is known for its beautiful words and ups and downs of emotion.
There are a considerable number of Du Mu's metrical poems, including more than 1 in Fan Chuan's Collected Works, and about 16 or 7 in addition to Fan Chuan's Collected Works and Other Collected Works. His regular poems occupy an important position in all his poems, and his artistic achievements are also very high, especially the seven laws. The style of Du Mu's poems is handsome, cool, vigorous and heroic, which is the most prominent in his regular poems. Later generations of poetry critics have pointed out that "steep" is the characteristic of Du Mu's regular poems.