The original text of Looking for Li Bai

Original text:

I still have those proud boots.

Gao Lishi raised his hand in shame and indignation, and everyone left.

Place refugees and wounded soldiers everywhere.

Practice the rhythm of Huma and Qiangdi

Leave it to Toure to lament carefully.

Since that year, he has been fascinated by Zhang Zhi.

Recognizing you as a fallen fairy makes you more pretentious.

Put a spell on a small hip flask.

Hide yourself, even your wife can't find you.

Complain that Chang' an is small and the pot is long.

In all the poems, you predicted.

It will suddenly run away, maybe tomorrow.

Only when the ship breaks the waves is the wind.

Now, sure enough, you are gone.

Make enemies like a forest, everyone wants to kill.

How can cirrhosis kill you?

Wine enters the intestines, and seven points enter the moonlight.

The remaining three points into a firm but gentle roar.

Embroidered mouth spit, half a prosperous Tang Dynasty.

From Kaiyuan to Tianbao, from Luoyang to Xianyang

The noise of a car riding a crown running all over the road

Not as good as a song you wrote a thousand years later.

Crystal quatrains tap my forehead.

Echo caused by local bombs

Enough to degrade the world.

It would be embarrassing to let Yelang go again.

So far, your birthplace is still a mystery.

Longxi or Shandong, Qinglian Township or Broken Leaf City?

Why don't you go back to your hometown?

Source: Looking for Li Bai, a free poem by Yu Guangzhong, a famous contemporary writer and poet.

Extended data:

Li Bai (70 1-762), whose real name is Taibai, also known as "purple laity" and "fallen fairy", was a great romantic poet in the Tang Dynasty, and was praised as "poetic fairy" by later generations, and was also called "Du Li" with Du Fu. In order to distinguish himself from two other poets, Li Shangyin and Du Mu, that is, "Little Du Li", Du Fu and Li Bai merged again. According to the Book of the New Tang Dynasty, Li Bai is the ninth grandson of Gui Li, the king of Liang, and he is a descendant of all kings. He is cheerful and generous, loves to drink and write poems, and likes to make friends.

Li Bai was deeply influenced by Huang Lao's idea of sorting out villages. Li Taibai's poems have been handed down from generation to generation, and most of his poems were written when he was drunk. His representative works include Looking at Lushan Waterfall, it is hard to go, Difficult Road to Shu, Entering Wine, Liang, The First Building of Baidicheng, etc.

There were biographies of Li Bai's Ci and Fu in the Song Dynasty (such as Wen Ying's Xiang Ji). As far as its pioneering significance and artistic achievements are concerned, Li Bai's Ci Fu enjoys a high status.