Almost no one in China does not know Li Bai, because Li Bai was a great poet who stood at the pinnacle of the poetry world in the prosperous Tang Dynasty. He had an important position and far-reaching influence in the history of the development of Chinese poetry. He can be called the first person in Chinese poetry. The following is the complete collection of Li Bai's poems that I will introduce to you. You are welcome to read and refer to it. Let's take a look!
1. Introduction to Li Bai
Li Bai (701-762), courtesy name Taibai , named Qinglian Jushi, a romantic poet of the Tang Dynasty, who was hailed as the "Immortal of Poetry" by later generations. Together with Du Fu, he is called "Li Du". Han nationality, ancestral home in Longxi Chengji. One theory is that he was born in Suiye City (then part of the Tang Dynasty, now part of Kyrgyzstan), and moved to Mianzhou, Jiannan Road with his father when he was 4 years old. It is said that he was born in Changlong, Mianzhou (now Jiangyou, Sichuan). Li Bai has more than a thousand poems and essays in existence, and the "Collection of Li Taibai" has been handed down to the world. He died of illness in 762 at the age of 61. His tomb is in Dangtu, Anhui today, and there are memorial halls in Jiangyou, Sichuan, and Anlu, Hubei. Li Bai was deeply influenced by the thoughts of Huang Lao Liezhuang. There is a "Collection of Li Taibai" handed down to the world. Most of his poems were written when he was drunk. His representative works include "Looking at the Waterfall of Mount Lu", "The Road is Difficult", "The Road to Shu is Difficult", "The Wine Will Be Entered" ", "Liang Fu Yin", "Early Departure from Baidi City" and many other songs.
2. Introduction to the complete collection of Li Bai’s poems
There are more than 990 poems by Li Bai in existence. There are a large number of political lyric poems, which fully express the poet's extraordinary ambition, unrestrained passion, and heroic spirit. They also represent the typical tone of high-spirited poetry in the prosperous Tang Dynasty. Li Bai had a strong self-awareness and compared himself with the Dapeng many times. "The Dapeng rises with the wind in one day, and its fortunes rise ninety thousand miles" in "Li Yong". However, Li Bai's frustrated return from Chang'an for three years caused his passionate political enthusiasm to be collided with reality, and it turned into a sad and angry song of unrecognized talent, spewing out of his chest: "The road is like the blue sky, I alone can't reach it, I am ashamed to drive away." "In the middle of Chang'an society, red chickens and white dogs play for pears and chestnuts, they play swords and sing songs and make bitter sounds, and they drag their trains to the royal family, which is not suitable for them." Li Bai also wrote joyful drinking poems to relieve the sorrow of not being able to realize his talent. "About to Enter the Wine": "If you are happy in life, you must have all the fun. Don't let the gold bottle stand empty against the moon. I am born with talents that will be useful. I will come back after all the gold is spent. I have fun cooking sheep and slaughtering cattle. I will drink three hundred cups at a time." In line with this bold and unrestrained emotional momentum, the distinctive features of Li Bai's poetry in terms of artistic techniques are: magical imagination, unprovoked changes, vertical and horizontal structure jumps, and scattered sentence lengths, forming a majestic and elegant poem. style. "Sleepwalking Tianmu chants and leaves behind":
"Tianmu reaches the sky and stretches across the sky, pulling up the five mountains to cover Chicheng. The rooftop is 48,000 feet long, and it wants to fall to the southeast. I want to dream of Wuyue because of it, Flying across the Jinghu Lake all night, the moon shines on me and sends me to the Yan River. The place where Xie Gong stayed is still there, and the clear apes are singing in the water. There are chickens in the air. The road is uncertain in the thousands of rocks, and the rocks are suddenly dim. The roaring bears and dragons sing in the Yinyan Spring, the clouds are green and green, and the water is full of thunder. , Qiu Luan collapsed, the stone fan of the cave suddenly opened, the blue sky was vast and bottomless, the sun and the moon shone on the gold and silver platform, the clouds came and fell one after another, and the tigers and drums played. Luan returns to the carriage. Immortals are lined up like hemp." And when I first wake up from the dream, the illusion disappears, which leads to my feelings about life and the world: "The same is true for happiness in the world. From ancient times, everything will flow in the east." It makes me unhappy to bow down and serve the powerful.” Li Bai's characteristic of thinking beyond the world greatly developed Zhuangzi's fables. Qu Yuan's first romantic spirit and expression techniques also integrated Taoist immortal imagery, which has amazing artistic charm and won the praise of a generation of "poetry immortals". praise.
The themes of Li Bai's poems are diverse. His seven-character ancient poems ("The Road to Shu is Difficult", "Dream Wandering Tianmu's Song of Farewell", "About to Enter the Wine", "Liang Fu Yin", etc.); five-character ancient poems (59 "Ancient Style"); there is a Yuefu folk song of the Han, Wei and Six Dynasties The unique "Changganxing", "Midnight Wu Ge", etc., and the seven-character quatrains ("Wanglu Mountain Waterfall", "Wangtianmen Mountain", "Early Departure from Baidi City", etc.) have become famous works in the prosperous Tang Dynasty. Li Bai was already famous in the Tang Dynasty. His poems "are not collected in a fixed volume, but every family has them." He is the first person in the Chinese poetry circle.
3. Table of contents of the complete collection of Li Bai's poems
The complete collection of Li Bai's poems, Volume 1 (Fifty-nine ancient poems), The Complete Collection of Li Bai's poems, Volume 2 (Thirty Yuefu poems), The Complete Collection of Li Bai's poems, Volume 3 (Yuefu poems) Thirty-seven poems) Volume 4 of the complete collection of Li Bai's poems (forty-four Yuefu poems) Volume 5 of the complete collection of Li Bai's poems (thirty-eight Yuefu poems) Volume 6 of the complete collection of Li Bai's poems (twenty-eight ancient and modern poems) Volume 7 of the complete collection of Li Bai's poems (ancient and modern poems Fifty-three poems) Volume 8 of the complete collection of Li Bai's poems (forty-three ancient and modern poems) Volume 9 of the complete collection of Li Bai's poems (twenty-four ancient and modern poems) Volume 10 of the complete collection of Li Bai's poems (thirty-two ancient and modern poems) Volume 11 of the complete collection of Li Bai's poems (Twenty-five ancient and modern poems) Volume 12 of the complete collection of Li Bai's poems (Twenty-five ancient and modern poems) Volume 13 of the complete collection of Li Bai's poems (twenty-six ancient and modern poems) Volume 14 of the electronic version of the complete collection of Li Bai's poems (Thirty-four ancient and modern poems) First) Volume 15 of the Complete Collection of Li Bai's Poems (twenty-one ancient and modern poems) Volume Sixteen of the Complete Collection of Li Bai's Poems (forty-four ancient and modern poems) Electronic version of the Complete Collection of Li Bai's Poems Volume 17 (thirty-three ancient and modern poems)) Electronic version of Li Bai's Complete Poems The electronic version of the complete collection of Li Bai's poems, volume 18 (thirty-two ancient and modern poems) The electronic version of the complete collection of Li Bai's poems, volume 19 (sixty ancient and modern poems) The electronic version of the complete collection of Li Bai's poems, volume 20 (thirty-six ancient and modern poems) The electronic version of the complete collection of Li Bai's poems, volume 20 Volume 21 (58 ancient and modern poems) Electronic version of the complete collection of Li Bai's poems Volume 22 (47 ancient and modern poems) Electronic version of the complete collection of Li Bai's poems Volume 23 (63 ancient and modern poems) Electronic version of the complete collection of Li Bai's poems Volume 24 (eighty-eight ancient and modern poems) Electronic version of Li Bai's complete poems Volume 25 (supplement)