Entrusting objects to express aspirations and expressing feelings express the hardships of the poet's official career and his longing for his wife.
The first couplet, "Sooner or later, I leave the desert, and come south to fly everywhere." The opening chapter presents a vast desert in front of the reader, a desolate and desolate land, and under the gray sky, a group of geese flap their wings and fly towards the south. . Where is the south? It's so far away that I don't know the limit. The vast space between heaven and earth suddenly leaves readers with endless imagination.
In the couplet, the poet added his own emotions and expressed his thoughts with concern: "There is a lot of rain and snow in the mountains, and the feng shui damages the sweaters." There are many mountains, frequent rain and snow, and raging wind, rain, and snowstorms. Will ruthlessly damage the feathers of the wild geese. He was worried and worried about Yanzi's fate. At the same time, he also used Yanzi's wandering and dangerous mountains as a metaphor for his arduous experience in the officialdom.
The neck couplet "The soul in the blue sea should be broken, and the letter in the red building is sparse," once again expresses my feelings directly from the heart, gushing out: When I think of the wild geese flying south, the journey is long, and when will it end, my soul is almost sad. Broken. What makes me even more sad is that the lonely lady who is waiting in the red building will wait for the love letter from Yanzi! The fate of the wild goose is difficult to save, and the love for his wife is so embarrassing, which deeply expresses the author's yearning for beautiful love.
The last couplet, "I don't know how to hand it over, leaving a few lines to return home," even more implies that the wild geese are in danger of being shot by hunters and rarely return safely, implying a sinister official career. This expresses the many unfavorable conditions in the author's environment, and a feeling of being overwhelmed by the cold at high places.
This poem leaves suspense at the beginning, using the wild geese flying south as a lead to bring out many elements of the rain and snow in Guanshan and the rarity of the red building, and cleverly expresses the hardships of his official career and his emotions of missing his wife. The last two lines of the poem are connected at the beginning, and explain the opening verse, which seems to be full of charm and profound meaning.
The whole poem seems to be about Yanzi, but in fact it is about people. It can also be said that it is about oneself. If viewed from a larger perspective, it is about the official career phenomenon at that time. Even so, through poetry, the poet expresses more of a desire for a precious love in the ups and downs of officialdom. Perhaps this is the highlight of this poem and the poetic eye of the whole poem. At the same time, it also has a different poetic sentiment from previous dynasty poems about chanting wild geese.