Farewell poems for leaders’ promotion

1. "Traveling is Difficult", there will be strong winds and waves, and sails are hung directly across the sea, source: "Traveling is Difficult·Part 1", author: Li Bai, Tang Dynasty.

Interpretation: It means that although there are many obstacles in the road ahead, one day you will ride on the wind and break through thousands of miles of waves, hang up your cloud sails, cross the sea, and reach the ideal other shore.

2. "Xiaoyaoyou", soaring thirty thousand miles, rising to the nine heavens, source: King Huainan, author: Zhuang Zhou during the Warring States period.

Interpretation: It means that one day it will be powerful, turn into a dragon, and be out of control, (metaphorically, it has the ability) and it can soar to an altitude of 90,000 miles. That is one day.

3. "Climbing the Stork Tower", if you want to see a thousand miles away, reach a higher level, source: "Complete Poems of the Tang Dynasty", author: Wang Zhihuan of the Tang Dynasty.

Explanation: If you want to see enough of the thousands of miles of scenery, you have to climb to a higher tower.

Extended information:

"Climbing the Stork Tower" is a poem written by Wang Zhihuan, a poet in the prosperous Tang Dynasty. The first two lines of this poem describe the natural scenery, but at the beginning of the stroke, they are reduced to ten thousand miles away, making the distance ten thousand miles away. The last two lines are freehand and unexpected, and the philosophy, scenery and situation are seamlessly melted into a stork tower. An immortal swan song.

The poet's soul was shocked by nature, and what he realized was a simple and profound philosophy, which can urge people to abandon their self-sufficient and ignorant knowledge, climb high and take a broad view, and constantly explore new and better realms. Poetry critics of the Qing Dynasty also believed: "Wang's poem is only twenty characters long. The first cross has the general idea, and the last cross has the potential to span a thousand miles." This poem is the masterpiece of five-character poetry in the Tang Dynasty. Wang Zhihuan was praised for this five-character poem. The quatrains are famous throughout the ages, and the Stork Tower is also famous in China for this poem.

Although this poem only has twenty characters, it uses thousands of huge rafters to depict the majestic momentum and magnificent scenery of the northern country's rivers and mountains. Its majestic momentum and profound artistic conception have been inspiring the Chinese nation for thousands of years. up. Especially the last two sentences are often quoted to express a life attitude of active exploration and unlimited enterprising. To this day, this poem has appeared several times on major political and diplomatic occasions in China.