Chang'an Spring View
Lulun
The east wind blows the rain across the green mountains, but the grass is green and green.
When will the home arrive in the dream? How many people will return to the Spring River?
Outside the floating clouds in Kawahara, the palace palaces are scattered and illuminated.
Whoever wants to be a Confucian will encounter difficulties in the world, and will only be a guest at Qinguan.
Spring arrives, everything revives and flowers bloom. A white-haired, impoverished poet wanders alone in the remote Qin Pass. Home is like in a dream, looking at the white cloud-shrouded hometown in the distance, when will I be able to fully enjoy its warmth! And the scattered palaces in the setting sun make people lament endlessly: The country is declining day by day, who can return to the prime of life!
Appreciation:
Shaoling's "Spring View" writes about Chang'an when the country is broken, while Yun Yan's "Spring View" writes about Chang'an when the world is in trouble; Shaoling controls the scenery with emotion, and Yun Yan The words blend with the scenery; Shaoling is gloomy and melancholy, allowing the words to be contained, each achieving its own beauty. "The grass is leisurely" describes both a spring city and an empty city. The beauty is that it can be obtained and both are used to pave the way for the world's regrets. They are natural and skillful. Wu Yao's "Selected Interpretations of Tang Poems" says: "The last sentence conveys the sentiment of looking forward to the spring. It is quite sad to encounter such difficulties as a Confucian scholar. It is better to mourn for the loss of the guest!" His sorrow is real! In order to aggravate the sorrow of the world's troubles, Shaoling's "Spring Hope" lamented the family's letters, which actually aggravated the sorrow of the country's collapse.