The three most commonly used images in Li Bai's poems are

The three most commonly used images in Li Bai's poems are "wine", "moon" and "sword". According to statistics, the word "sword" in Li Bai's poems appeared 1 18 times, distributed in his 106 poems. Li Bai likes writing swords so much. What about his swordsmanship?

Some people say that his swordsmanship master is Pei Minzhi, who won the first prize in the Tang Dynasty. Later, both Wang Wei and Yan Zhenqing wrote a poem "Dedicated to General Pei" to praise his swordsmanship. But it is not recorded in the official history, so this statement remains to be verified.

Li Bai is no less obsessed with swords than with wine. Today, let's talk about his most domineering poem "Chivalrous Man":

The swordsmen of Zhao are dotted with tassels at will, and their swords are as bright as Shuang Shuang.

The silver saddle and the white horse set each other off and galloped.

Within ten steps, kill one person, cross a thousand miles, leave no one behind.

After you finish, brush off your clothes, don't show any sound, and hide in the depths.

Sometimes when I'm free, I walk through the county town, have a drink, and cross my sword over my knees.

Eat meat with the sea and drink with Hou Ying in a big bowl.

Three cups of spit, five mountains are light.

After drinking, my eyes were dizzy and energetic, and the rainbow was swallowed up by the air.

When Zhao was captured, the soldiers and civilians in the city were frightened.

Hai and Hou Yingcai are real warriors of the second century, and they are famous in the whole city.

As a knight, the death of chivalrous bone is also fragrant, and it is worthy of being a hero.

Who can learn Confucian scholars, stay in books all his life, have white hair, and still write the Xuanjing? .

Speaking of swords, Li Bai has a deep relationship with swords. No matter where Li Bai's swordsmen came from, it is said that his record in the Book of the New Tang Dynasty is: "He likes swordsmanship vertically and horizontally, and he is Ren Xia", saying that he likes swordsmanship and acts like a ranger.

He himself has a self-report: "Fifteen good swordsmanship, all dry princes", which means that he loved swordsmanship at the age of fifteen and visited famous ministers from all walks of life. But his fencing is really not so good. This is not what I said, but what he said himself: "Inviting to cover up the organization, oh, terrible and painful. I am eager to clear the constitutional program, except for the North Gate. " Several gangsters have to ask someone to clear the way, and this fencing may not be very good.

However, Li Bai's heroism is by no means comparable to that of anyone. We can know his heroism from the first sentence "Zhao Ke Hu Manying, Wu Gou Shuang Xueming".

Zhao is a chivalrous man in Zhao Yan. When Han Yu was writing "Preface to Send Dong Shaonan to Hebei", the first sentence at the beginning was: "Zhao Yan was called a generous and sad person in ancient times." In Li Bai's view, what he worships most is chivalry. What is chivalry? Whoever draws his sword makes him furious.

Wu Gou is a treasure knife. Since ancient times, heroes have made a treasure knife, and chivalrous people have made heroes. Naturally, he carries a nod. Wang Changling said that "husbands wear Wu Gou", and only gentlemen can wear it.

We write a thing in two forms, one is a positive description and the other is a profile description. When expressing the image of a knight-errant, Li Bai doesn't directly write what a knight-errant looks like, but starts with his accessories, saying that he wears a samurai tassel and wears a treasure knife around his waist.