Du Mu crossed Huaqing Palace.

Chang 'an looked back and embroidered.

There are thousands of doors open on the top of the mountain.

As soon as I ride the world of mortals and laugh,

No one knows it's litchi.

Author:

Du Mu (A.D. 803-853), born in Jingzhao Wannian (now Xi, Shaanxi), was the grandson of Prime Minister Du You. Scholar in two years, awarded to the Hong Wen Museum. He worked as a staff member in other places for many years, then as a censor and editor of the history museum, as a foreign minister in the catering department, as a secretariat in Huangzhou, Chizhou and Zhou Mu, and finally as an official in Zhongshu. An outstanding poet in the late Tang Dynasty, especially famous for his seven-character quatrains. He is good at prose, and his "Epanggong Fu" is read by later generations. He paid close attention to military affairs, wrote many military papers and annotated the Art of War by Sun Tzu. The Collected Works of Fan Chuan handed down from ancient times has twenty volumes, including four volumes of poetry, edited by his nephew Pei. There is also a volume of "Fan Chuan Waiji" and "Fan Chuan Bieji" supplemented by Song people. The Complete Tang Poetry contains eight volumes of Du Mu's poems.

Precautions:

Huaqing Palace: The name of the palace, built on Mount Li in Lintong, Shaanxi Province, is a playground for the Ming emperor and Yang Guifei.

Appreciate:

Seeing the big from the small and seeing the big from the small are the characteristics of this poem. It satirizes the luxury of Tang and Yang Guifei by describing the event of sending fresh litchi.