Of course, he wrote many love stories about women, which was very famous, that is, poems written from the perspective of women, which were very popular at that time.
Liu Xiyi, a poet in the early Tang Dynasty. Compared with Wen, Mi, Liu and Tang. We can probably know what kind of person he is. When I was a teenager, I became famous. I was beautiful. I could talk and laugh, play the pipa and drink. It was not until he had a few fights that he was drunk, down and out, and covered in the habits of celebrities. Orthodox people can't help but classify him as a frivolous child who is determined not to repair. He is good at military affairs and boudoir love, but his works such as Joining the Army and Journey of the General are hardly mentioned, while his boudoir love works such as Grieving for the Past and the Journey of the Childe are generally popular.
Liu Xiyi
Liu Xiyi Ting, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, was born in Ruzhou. Little mandarin, down and out, and later hurt by others. Love poems that hope to be good for the army have beautiful words, but sad meanings and are not important to others. Sun Yu's Zheng Sheng Ji is the most concentrated poem of Yi Xi, and it is praised by people for its greatness. Representative works include Joining the Army, Picking Mulberry, Song of Spring, Woman's Journey in Spring, Mowing Clothes, Mourning for Pulsatilla, and Nostalgia in Luochuan. Among them, the poem "Pulsatilla Daibei" writes that flowers bloom and fall, and time throws people; Once a beautiful teenager, he has now become a half-dead Chinese Pulsatilla, sending out the feelings that "flowers are similar year after year, people are different year after year" and "when will it be possible to make eyes at each other and the cranes will be in a hurry?" His words and sentences are exactly the same as Zhen's comments on the good songs of lame Taoist priests in A Dream of Red Mansions: "The humble room is empty, and the bed is covered with weeds and dead trees. It used to be a ballroom. . . "The words and artistic conception in Daiyu's poems about burying flowers are similar, but their rhetoric is not weaker than the latter, and they are hundreds of years earlier, which shows Yi Xi's profound insight into the world and high literary attainments. As the saying goes, it is difficult for Ikezawa giants to measure the size of rivers and seas. No wonder Yi Xi was ignored at first. There are ten volumes in total, and one volume of poetry is compiled today (Volume 82 of Complete Tang Poetry).