This song should only exist in heaven, and can be heard several times in the human world
The turning of the axis and the strings are plucked three or two times, and there is emotion before the tune is formed. The big strings are as noisy as heavy rain, and the small strings are as loud as whispers. Noisy and jumbled bullets, big and small beads falling onto the jade plate.
In the meantime, Guan Ying is talking about the slippery bottom of flowers, and it is difficult to go under the ice of Youyan Spring. The ice spring is cold and the strings are condensed, and the condensation will never pass the sound for a while. Don't worry and hate yourself. Silence is better than sound at this time.
The broken jade in Kunshan screams as a phoenix, and the hibiscus weeps and the fragrant orchid smiles. Cold light melted in front of the twelve doors, and twenty-three silk threads moved the purple emperor. Where Nuwa refines stones to mend the sky, the stones break the sky and make the autumn rain startle. I dreamed of entering the sacred mountain to teach the goddess, and the old fish danced the thin dragon dance.
Source:
Du Fu's "Giving Flowers to the Queen"
[Tang Dynasty] Bai Juyi's "Pipa Play"
Tang Li He's "Li Ping Konghou" "Introduction"
Extension:
There are four sentences in the poem "Giving Flowers to the Queen". The first two sentences describe the music in a concrete way, which is real writing; the last two sentences use the fairy in the sky. Pleasure and praise are daydreams. Because of reality and virtuality, virtuality and reality complement each other, which praises the beauty of the music to the extreme. This poem has both movement and stillness, is subtle and subtle, and is thought-provoking.
The poem "Pipa Tour" describes the pipa girl's superb playing skills and her unfortunate experiences, revealing the unreasonable phenomena such as bureaucratic corruption, people's livelihood decline, and buried talents in feudal society, and expresses the poet's feelings for her. The poet's deep sympathy also expressed the poet's resentment at being demoted innocently.