Frontier fortress Liangzhou is magnificent, desolate and lonely. The yellow sand rolled up by the wind seems to be connected with white clouds, and Yumenguan stands alone in the mountains, looking lonely and cold. Why do you want to use the Qiangdi to play the plaintive tune "Folding Willow" to complain about the delay of spring? It turns out that the spring breeze around Yumenguan can't blow!
2. The attached original text is as follows:
Liangzhou song
(Tang) Wang Zhihuan
The Yellow River is far above the white clouds.
Wan Ren is an isolated city.
Why should a strong brother complain about Liu?
The spring breeze does not pass through Yumen Pass.
Three. About the author:
Wang Zhihuan (688-742) was born in Jinyang (now Taiyuan, Shanxi) and moved to Jiangzhou (now Xinjiang, Shanxi). He used to be the main book of Hengshui, Jizhou, and lived at home for fifteen years because of slander. In his later years, he became a lieutenant in Wen 'an County (now Hebei Province) and died in the official residence. He is generous and broad-minded and good at writing frontier poems. He once sang with Gao Shi, Wang Changling, Cui and others, and became famous for a while. Jin Neng, as an epitaph, called it "Songs from the army, songs from outside the fort, thinking of the bright moon, the cold wind sound of Xiao Xi, spread the movement and spread it to the people." There are six quatrains in the whole Tang poetry, all of which are well-known works.