How to appreciate chanting poems

Poetry about objects is a way to express love for nature. Through the description and expression of natural scenery, the poet's feelings and thoughts on all things in nature are displayed. Appreciation of chanting poems should pay attention to the following aspects:

1. Observe the details. Poems about objects often show details such as the shape, color, texture and smell of objects through vivid descriptions, which are important factors that viewers should pay attention to. You need to savor carefully what each word describes.

2. Feel the cultural background. Many poems about objects contain profound cultural connotations. Readers need to understand the feelings and meanings expressed through historical context and images. For example, The Falling Flowers Meet the King in the Tang Dynasty, by describing the unsustainable prosperity of spring, implies the transience and impermanence of love in the poet's heart, and also reflects the literati's recognition of traditional aesthetics in the Tang Dynasty.

3. Taste the rhyme and artistic conception. The words used in object-chanting poems are very rhythmic, especially in classical object-chanting poems, which create the aesthetic feeling of rhythm and rhythm through rhetorical devices such as rhythm and rhyme. To taste chanting poems, we need to read artistic conception, emotions and enjoy catchy and pleasant sounds.

4. Explore the author's intention. Most of the poems about objects express their love and respect for all things in nature, praise the magical and colorful natural beauty, and deeply attract the feelings of poets, making them pursue the mysterious feeling of nature. When appreciating the poems about objects, we can notice the feelings and times expressed by the poets, which reflects their understanding and experience of the beauty of nature.

As follows:

Poems about objects are poems that express feelings with objects, and embody humanistic thoughts through poems about objects. The "things" chanted in poems about things are often the author's own situation, which is completely integrated with the poet's self-image, and the author places certain feelings on describing things.

In poetry, the author either reveals his attitude towards life, or expresses his good wishes, or contains philosophy of life, or expresses the author's interest in life. The ancients liked to recite things. According to statistics, there are 6,262 object-chanting poems in Complete Tang Poetry alone, including 504 poems in the early Tang Dynasty, 746 poems in the prosperous Tang Dynasty, 455 poems in the middle Tang Dynasty/KLOC-0 and 3,557 poems in the late Tang Dynasty. The most object-chanting poems are in the late Tang Dynasty.