The author of Guan Shanyue.

Guan Shanyue is a five-character ancient poem written by Li Bai, a great poet in the Tang Dynasty, with Yuefu as the old theme.

Li Bai (February 28, 7065438+0—February 65438+February 762), a great romantic poet in the Tang Dynasty, was called "Poet Fairy" by later generations, and was also called "Du Li" with Du Fu, in order to be as famous as the other two poets Li Shangyin and Du Mu.

The Book of Old Tang Dynasty records that Li Bai is from Shandong. According to the New Tang Book, Li Bai is the grandson of King Li Gui IX of Li Tang. He is cheerful and generous, loves to drink and write poems, and likes to make friends.

Li Baiyou's Collection of Li Taibai has 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, Difficult to Walk, Difficult to Pass the Road, Entering the Wine, Early Making Baidicheng and many others. There are 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.

Li Bai has the highest achievements in Yuefu, Gexing and Jueju. His songs completely broke all the inherent forms of poetry creation, with no one to rely on and many strokes, reaching the magical realm of vagaries and swaying. Li Bai's quatrains are natural and lively, elegant and chic, and can express endless feelings in concise and lively language. Among the poets in the prosperous Tang Dynasty, Wang Wei and Meng Haoran were good at the Five Wonders, while Wang Changling and others wrote the Seven Wonders well. Li Bai is the only one who is good at both the Five Odds and the Seven Odds.