Autumn wind leaves Xianyang

Autumn wind comes out of Xianyang, and the last sentence is bow and sword flash.

1, this sentence comes from the four chapters of A Young Man's Journey written by the Tang Dynasty poet Ling Huchu.

This little poem full of patriotic enthusiasm expresses the great ambition of the poet to serve the country with his own body. This poem greatly exaggerates the heroic spirit of the poet when he was young. Bows and arrows shine in the morning glow, swords shine in the frost, and in the chilly autumn wind, the poet rode out of Beijing and went to the battlefield to serve the motherland.

3. The poet's self-image is distinct, and his great ambition to serve the country is fully demonstrated. At the end of this poem, the author expressed his determination in the language of the poem, saying that as long as the country's river territory is not recovered, it will not look back at its hometown. This is better than Huo Qubing's sentence, "How can you be at home when you are a slave?" .

About the author:

1, Ling Huchu (766 or 768—8371213), a shell scholar, was named Baiyun Ruzi. Yizhou Huayuan (now Yaozhou District, Tongchuan City, Shaanxi Province) was born in Dunhuang (now Gansu Province). Prime Minister and Writer of Tang Dynasty.

2. Ling Huchu was an important political figure in the middle Tang Dynasty, closely related to many major political events at that time, and also a famous parallel prose writer and poet. Ling Huchu is brilliant, especially good at parallel prose. He often sings with Liu Yuxi, Bai Juyi and others. His poems are "profound", especially quatrains.

3. Linghu Chu's parallel prose, Han Yu's ancient prose, and Du Fu's poetry were recognized as the three musts at that time. Ling Huchu wrote 130 volumes of lacquer collection and edited Yuan Lan's poems.