Classics often talk about how to write the Book of Songs after reading it.

Classics often talk about the Book of Songs, which is written like this:

"Guan Guanluo dove, in Hezhou. My fair lady, a gentleman is good. " This is the first sentence I read in The Book of Songs. At that time, when I was studying Guanju, I didn't know anything. I could only listen to the teacher tell us about the various writing methods it used and the meaning it expressed.

Now, I have forgotten everything the teacher said. The only thing I remember is the full affection and the deep helplessness that teenagers can't wait for. I am no longer just "listening to the teacher" as before. I can understand independently from my own point of view, and no longer rely entirely on the teacher's explanation.

If you feel hesitant and uneasy, The Book of Songs can give you comfort like a breeze. If you feel lonely and helpless, the Book of Songs can give you sunshine comfort. If you are confused, the Book of Songs can guide you in the fog like a lighthouse. Reading The Book of Songs is not about how much you read, but about how much you know. ...

Introduction to The Book of Songs;

The Book of Songs is the earliest collection of poems and the beginning of China's ancient poems. Collected poems from the early years of the Western Zhou Dynasty to the middle of the Spring and Autumn Period (1 1 century to the 6th century), with ***3 1 1 first.

Six of them are Sheng poems, that is, they have only titles but no contents, and they are collectively called six Sheng poems (Nan Chang, Bai Hua, Shu Hua, You Geng, Qiu Chong and You Yi), which reflect the social outlook of about 500 years from the beginning of the Zhou Dynasty to the weekend.

The Book of Songs is rich in content, reflecting labor and love, war and corvee, oppression and resistance, customs and marriage, ancestor worship and feasting, and even astronomical phenomena, landforms, animals and plants. It is a mirror of the social life of the Zhou Dynasty.