It should be "The east wind is powerless and the flowers are withered" in Li Shangyin's "Untitled"
"Untitled"
Author: Li Shangyin? Era: Tang Dynasty
< p>It’s hard to say goodbye when we meet, the east wind is powerless and the flowers are withered.Spring silkworms will not run out of silk until they die, and wax torches will not dry until they turn to ashes.
When you look into the mirror at dawn, you are worried about the clouds on your temples. When you sing at night, you should feel the cold moonlight.
There is not much way to get to Pengshan, and the blue bird is diligent in visiting.
This is a deeply emotional, lingering and euphemistic poem that praises loyal love. The poet wrote about the rich hatred of parting and the lingering pain of lovesickness in a sincere and implicit way. "Spring silkworms will not lose their silk until they die, and wax torches will turn to ashes before their tears dry up." It embodies the steadfastness of love, the novel artistic conception, and the poetic flavor. It has become a famous saying that has been passed down through the ages.
Li Shangyin, whose courtesy name was Xishan and whose name was Yuxisheng, was from Hanoi, Huaizhou (now Qinyang, Henan). She was an outstanding poet in the late Tang Dynasty of my country.
His poems have a certain progressive ideological tendency. They profoundly exposed the dark reality of the division of feudal vassal towns and the eunuchs' arbitrary power and chaos at that time. They sharply satirized the debauchery and decadence of the feudal ruling class and showed the impending decline of the feudal ruling class. In the Tang Dynasty, the country was in decline and people's livelihood was obscured. Therefore, in terms of the depth and breadth of reflecting the reality, he was superior to the other poets at that time who wrote with narrow themes and despicable styles.
In poetry creation, he extensively absorbed various beneficial artistic experiences from previous poets, developed his own new style, and developed and enriched the artistic skills of Chinese classical poetry. His poems are beautiful and rich in content, especially his original "untitled" poem, which is hazy and desolate and can be called the swan song of love poetry. His literary talent is outstanding in both parallel and prose prose, and he is even more unique in parallel prose. He is known as "the golden rope of modern style and the jade rhythm of Zhang Zou". Li Shangyin's poems were deeply influenced by Li He, a famous poet in the mid-Tang Dynasty. Li He's genius died young and was regarded as a "ghost genius" in the poetry world. His poems are romantic, treacherous, and imaginative. They are unique and have been widely read by later generations.
Reference materials
Li Shangyin. Complete Works of Li Shangyin. Shanghai: Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, 1999-05