Nine Chapters and Four Ren Mei is a poem written by Qu Yuan, a poet of Chu State in the Warring States Period, and it is one of the Nine Chapters. This poem is about admiring the sages, feeling the times, encouraging the King, hoping that the King will not repeat the historical mistakes and strive to revitalize the State of Chu, expressing the author's determination to stick to moral integrity and customs.
Its basic position and starting point is to miss and love you, and to miss and love you means to hate and treat you. The whole poem takes vanilla beauty as the main image, transcends the time and space restrictions, boldly blends the earth with heaven, the world with fairyland, history with reality, and interweaves realistic figures, historical figures and mythical figures, which can be called a masterpiece of romantic literature.
Chapter 9: Chu Ci is a collection of nine prose poems written by Qu Yuan. Beauty: This is a metonymy, referring to Chu Huaiwang. One refers to the king of Chu Xiang Qing. Dry your tears. Yi, the same as "LAN", closed. You (zhù) and Chi (Chi): Stay long. You, with the "queue", stood for a long time. Time, staring straight.
Creation background
This poem should have been written by Qu Yuan when he was exiled to Jiangnan. There are two main opinions about the time when it came into being. One theory is that it was written in the period of Chu Huaiwang, when Qu Yuan was exiled to the Northern Han Dynasty. For example, Wang Yi's "Chu Zhang Ci Sentence" explains that the beauty is Chu Huaiwang, and the old note follows.
Lin Yunming's "Chu Ci Deng" said: "I will test it with its text. For example, "Xi Yong" was offended by the king's words after seeing it, but he did not let go. The second time, "Ren Mei" and "filar silk" were ignored by Wang Huai after being offended by words. Called southbound, courtiers called southerners. There is no doubt that they are located in Hanbei. "