From the South Pavilion by Xu Hun in the Tang Dynasty.
The water in the city is connected, and the tide is surging wild boats.
The bird is surprised, the fruit falls, and the turtle is green.
A thousand rolls of white paper and a glass of cinnabar wine.
Nanxuan shed tears, not looking at Yantai.
Translation:
The South Pavilion at the gate is surrounded by green water, and several idle boats are washed away by the tide from time to time. The tortoise paddled in the water to separate the green duckweed, and the mountain bird flew up and startled the wild fruit on the tree.
My hair turned white when I read thousands of books, so why not raise a glass and get drunk here? I can't help crying at the thought of my talent, but I can't display it. Unfortunately, Nanxuan is not a lookout platform for recruiting talents.
Role experience:
Xu Hun (about 79 1 ~ about 858) was born in Anlu, Anzhou (now Anlu, Hubei) and lived in Runzhou (now Danyang, Jiangsu), a poet in the Tang Dynasty.
Sun Xu VI, Prime Minister of Wuhou State. In the sixth year of Emperor Wenzong Daiwa (832), he was a scholar, and went to the South China Sea Shogunate at the invitation of Lu Junzhi in the first year of Kaicheng. Later, he served as a pawn and a Taiping order, avoiding illness. During the middle-aged and elderly period, he joined the empire and asked for help because of illness. Later, he returned to his official position as Runzhou Sima. Li Yu transferred Yuan Wailang to Mu and Ying as the secretariat.
In his later years, he returned to Dingmaoqiao in Runzhou to live in seclusion and wrote a collection of poems, Ding Maoji. His poems are all close to the style, especially the five-seven rhythm, which is mature and steady in syntax and plain and unique in tone, and is called "Ding Mao Style". Poems often write "water", so it is called "Xu Hun's thousand wet poems".