What are Li Bai's poems that satirize the present from the past?

1, the answer: Li Shangyong: Fu Xuan can still fear the afterlife, and her husband can't be young. Li Bai satirizes the present with the old saying.

2. Original: Li Shangyong

Dapeng rose with the wind one day and rocked to Wan Li. If the wind weakens,

It can still lift away the turbulent water. When the world saw my unchanging tone, it sneered at all my big words.

Fu Xuan can still fear the afterlife, but her husband can't be young.

It's windy in Dapeng one day, soaring nine times the height of Wan Li. If you stop when the wind stops, it will have enough power to lift the sea water out of the sea. When people see that I like to say strange things, they all laugh at my big talk. Confucius also said that man is born to be feared, and a gentleman cannot despise young people!

4. Appreciation: Li Shangyong is the work of Li Bai, a great poet in the Tang Dynasty, when he was young. By depicting and praising the image of Dapeng, this poem expresses Li Bai's great ambition and strong desire to use the world, and is very dissatisfied with Li Yong's attitude of looking down on young people, showing Li Bai's spirit of being brave in pursuit, confident and conceited, and not afraid of vulgarity. Young Li Bai dared to challenge big shots, and when he first debuted, he was full of the spirit of not being afraid of tigers. Later generations often say, "Fu Xuan can still fear the afterlife, but his husband can't be young." To satirize those who are short-sighted.