This poem tells the truth of playing the piano: a piece of music can not be played by a single piano player, nor by a single finger player, but also depends on people's thoughts, feelings and technical proficiency.
Piano is not difficult to master, everyone has fingers. However, due to the great differences in people's thoughts, feelings and playing techniques, whether the music played is pleasing to the ear is also very different. Two questions are used in the poem to arouse readers' thinking. In fact, this is a complex aesthetic problem: the subjective and objective relationship that produces artistic beauty.
Extended data:
Su Shi often uses poetry to explain the truth. Most of the images he chooses are simple and clear, but they can touch the subtle and unspeakable philosophy and make people think deeply. The meaning and writing of Su Shi's poems are inspired by quoting Buddhist scriptures and Wei's poems.
The first and second sentences written by the poet in the form of Buddha's thirst are both a hypothesis and a question, which means that you can't play beautiful music only by piano or dexterous fingers.
This enlightens people that the success of any cause is the result of the joint action of objective conditions and subjective initiative. This poem shows the poet's strong interest in exploring the true meaning of things, and also shows the poet's simple dialectical thought. It is naive and lively, full of interest.
Baidu Encyclopedia-Qin Poetry