A Brief Introduction to Wang Lu Lou and Wang Lu Shan Waterfall
In the Lodge of the Heron is a five-character quatrain written by Wang Zhihuan, a frontier poet. When he climbed the stork tower and looked out, he couldn't help but express his philosophy of life of "going up a flight of stairs and broadening his vision of three hundred miles" and expressed his positive thoughts and ambitions.
Although this poem has only twenty crosses, it depicts the majestic momentum and magnificent scene of the rivers and mountains in the north. It is magnificent and far-reaching in artistic conception, and has been inspiring the Chinese nation for thousands of years. In particular, the last two sentences are often quoted to express a positive exploration and unlimited enterprising attitude towards life. Today, this poem appears in important political and diplomatic occasions in China countries from time to time.
Looking at Lushan Waterfall is a seven-character quatrain written by Li Bai when he visited Lushan Mountain. This poem uses rhetorical devices of exaggeration and metaphor to describe the magnificence of Lushan Waterfall, express the poet's praise for nature and reflect the poet's romantic feelings.
Due to the lack of space, the poet raised the scenery to a higher level with exaggerated metaphors, reaching the extreme of writing waterfalls, which is extremely exaggerated, but fresh and natural, simple and vivid, and at the same time has the momentum of turbulence, flying and flowing, jumping and swaying, and the momentum and characteristics of singing.