"Dē n ɡɡ uà n Kuluo?
At Helen's cabin.
Zu ZH ě: Wá n ɡ Zhu An
Author: Wang Zhihuan?
I'm coming.
The mountains covered the white sun,
Hu á n ɡ Heroy Liu?
The ocean drained the golden river.
yù qiónɡ qiān lǐ mù?
But you expanded your horizons by 300 miles,
By walking up a flight of stairs.
In the Heron Tower is a poem by Wang Zhihuan, a poet in the prosperous Tang Dynasty. The first two sentences of this poem are about natural scenery, but when you start writing, you will shrink Wan Li at your fingertips, so that you can have Wan Li at your fingertips. The last two sentences are freehand brushwork, written unexpectedly, which combines philosophy, scenery and situation seamlessly and becomes an immortal swan song on the stork tower.
The poet's mind, under the shock of nature, has realized a simple and profound philosophy, which can urge people to abandon their superficial knowledge, climb high and look far, and constantly open up new and better realms.
Poetry critics in the Qing Dynasty also thought: "Wang's poems lack two horizontal lines, and the front horizontal line has been exhausted, and the back horizontal line has a thousand miles." This poem is a masterpiece of five-character poems in Tang Dynasty. Wang Zhihuan is famous for this five-character quatrain, and the mirage is also famous in China.