Use intertextual verse

In poetry, intertextuality is sometimes used to express the author's feelings, thoughts and cultural connotations, and to enhance the expressive force and charm of poetry.

The following is a set of poems using intertextuality:

"

There is a lot of silk in the sky above the avenue, which is as delicate and moist as butter. The grass is vaguely connected in the distance, but it looks sparse in the near future. This is the most beautiful season of the year, far better than the late spring of the green willow. "

This is a poem written by Bai Juyi, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. In the poem, "The grass looks far away and things are near" borrows the phrase "Looking at the mountain from a distance and listening to the water silently" from the Lushan ballad, forming an intertextual effect, and at the same time expressing the sadness of parting and thinking about the passage of time. ?

The application of intertextuality can not only enhance the expressive force and depth of the works, but also enrich the cultural connotation and arouse readers' or viewers' thinking.

Intertextual poetry