"Appreciating a garden means understanding the life of a poet." Twenty-year-old Wang Wei came to Qujiangchi, where he was a new scholar and a teenager. I never thought that the An Shi Rebellion, an important turning point in China's history, affected his life. When the rebels invaded Chang 'an, Wang Wei was forced to work in the rebels. His friend Patty came to visit him and told Lei Haiqing that he was dismembered because of his resistance. Hearing this, Wang Wei was both sad and angry, and wrote: "Every family is sad and wild, and a hundred officials will go to heaven again." He expressed his feelings of national subjugation and grief. From then on, we can also know that after Wang Wei was trapped in a thief and imprisoned, the paradise he worked hard for vanished, and he expressed his indignation at the war with his remaining pen power.
Everyone has a garden in his heart. When we return to the garden that month, our hearts will return to peace. Inner peace is to find inner beauty, and inner beauty is to explore and pursue a better future. Wang Wei's garden is forty or fifty kilometers away from Chang 'an, far away from the hubbub. In his later years, he repeatedly condemned himself and made unremitting efforts to redeem himself. He put down the pursuit of secularity, a garden, and turned him into a butterfly. Wang Wei's frustrated and forced choice has become the artistic conception pursued by many people in modern times. His reclusive poems and his garden thoughts will also be handed down, and his ideology and culture will affect generation after generation.