In the twenty-sixth year of Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang Dynasty, a man who came back from the cottage with the head coach wrote a poem "Ge Yanxing" for me to read. I was deeply impressed by the frontier defense, so I wrote this song Ge Yanxing to meet him.
Preface: In the 26th year of Kaiyuan, a guest returned from Zhang Gong, an ancient imperial doctor, and wrote Ge Yanxing as a sign. I feel comfortable defending this matter, so I am very harmonious.
Ge Yanxing is a poem by Gao Shi, a poet in the Tang Dynasty.
Interest in appreciation;
This poem sums up the general frontier wars, mainly exposing the lords' arrogance, underestimating the enemy and not caring for the soldiers, which led to the failure of the war. The whole article can be roughly divided into four paragraphs. The first paragraph of the eight sentences was written by the teacher.
Among them, the first four sentences say that the dust of war began in the northeast, and the general was ordered to conquer, and the son of heaven gave him special honor. He has always been favored and arrogant, laying the groundwork for the following. The last four sentences were followed by the battle line-up, with colorful flags like clouds and horns ringing, and they went to the battlefield all the way to set off the embarrassing situation when they lost. In the second paragraph, there are eight sentences about this battle.
Among them, the first four sentences write that the enemy was fierce at the beginning of the war and Tang Jun suffered heavy casualties; The last four sentences said that the serenade was exhausted at the latest and could not be cleared. In the third paragraph, I wrote eight sentences to recruit people, thinking that the two places will face each other and meet again indefinitely. The last four sentences, the first two sentences write that soldiers are determined to die for their country when there is no hope of survival; In two sentences, the poet deeply sympathized with the tragic fate of the soldiers. The whole poem is magnificent, vigorous in brushwork, solemn and stirring, and profound in meaning.