Why do so many people read Wei's poems?

The front row in Wang Wei's poems, the red beans in Wang Wei's poems, the ice cream in Wang Wei's poems and so on all express the same meaning, that is, this is not ordinary, but special, indicating that something/something is unusual.

The original sentence of this word is: "This is no ordinary red bean, this is the red bean in Wang Wei's poems", which comes from an episode of Guo Man's China Singing Class. In this sentence, ordinary red beans suddenly became taller.

This sentence became popular again after being used by the hot boy at the bottom of the vibrato short video blogger as the dubbing BGM of the cross-talk video, which caused many people to imitate it. Imitation is not the norm of modern netizens, so it was quickly adapted into new paragraphs by netizens, such as: this is not ordinary milk tea, this is milk tea in Wang Wei's poems. In short, you can apply this sentence to ordinary things and make them look unusual, especially literary.

The Significance of Wang Weiyuan's Poem Acacia

Acacia is a poem written by Wang Wei, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. This poem is about acacia, but the whole article is inseparable from red beans, and everyone is using it in the name of acacia.

The first sentence is about the origin of red beans; The second sentence asks "how many branches to send", which is very simple and vivid. If you ask nature, you will tease your feelings. Three sentences mean that friends "pick more", and the words are here and there.

The last paragraph clearly shows its acacia nature. If you push it to the extreme with the word "most", then the reason for "picking more" is self-evident, and its meaning is also deeply contained. The whole poem is lively, but euphemistic and implicit, and shallow and affectionate. According to legend, he composed and sang for people at that time, which was popular in Jiangnan.