Guo Feng Feng Wang Li Shu is a poem in The Book of Songs, the first collection of poems in ancient China. This is a folk song around Luoyi, the capital of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty, and it is a poem with feelings of the rise and fall of the country.
The whole poem consists of three chapters, with ten sentences in each chapter. This poem is composed of things and feelings, with feelings in the scene and scenery in harmony. It conveys the people's feelings in the ethereal abstraction, and contains the hero's endless yearning and sad feelings for the old country.
Its main feature is to use overlapping words and sing back and forth repeatedly to express the melancholy of the protagonist.
Regarding the background of the poem Li Shu, the preface says: "It was written for Min. As for Zhou, Dr. Chow went to the Imperial Palace's ancestral temple, which was full of whole grains. "The subversion of Min Zhou's room made me hesitate to go, but it was a poem."
In fact, except Xiaomi and Xiaomi, poetry is an ethereal and abstract situation, and the lyrical subject "I" has strong uncertainty. On this basis, the appreciator can find the emotional singing point that fits the soul according to his different experiences.
The feeling that things are different, the regret that bosom friends are hard to find, and the sigh of vicissitudes of life can't be vented. The concreteness provided by this poem shows a lonely thinker's infinite worries about the future of human beings who are pretentious but unable to grasp their own destiny in the face of vibrant but spiritually-less nature.
This kind of worry can only be understood by someone who knows me, but what kind of person is this person who knows me? "Who is this?" This sound is full of disappointment, just like the poet "Chen Ziang" sang on the Youzhou rostrum.
"Before me, where was the past era? Behind me, where are the future generations? I think of heaven and earth, there is no limit, there is no end, I am alone, tears fall! " Chen Ziang's concern about the fate of mankind is incomprehensible to the world.