Wang Pan obliquely inserted the apricot flowers, which was a horizontal painting. Who in Mao's poems says that rats have no teeth? But how did you bite the golden bottle rack? Water flows to the bed, and spring drags under the wall. This makes sense! Where to sue him, where to sue him, only to count the cat's scolding.
Wang Pan (1455? -153), Ming Sanqu. The word hung-chien,No. West Building, was born in Gaoyou, Jiangsu. Few talented people, good at reading, free and easy in nature, disgusted with imperial examinations, and indulged in landscape poetry and painting all his life. There is a volume of Wang Xilou Yuefu, with more than 7 short and long Sanqu, which mostly describes leisurely life, and some of them are based on social reality, attacking the phenomenon of darkness and corruption.
Emperor Chao is the name of Zhonglv Palace, also known as Qiaojinmen and Chaotian Qu. * * * Eleven sentences, the sentence pattern is: "Two. . Two. . Five. . Seven. . Five. . Four? Four. . Five. . Two. . Two. . Five. . Except that the fourth sentence can be rhymed or not, the rest need rhyme. This song rhymes with "Jia Ma". It's a humorous teasing work, which writes that a apricot blossom bottle decorated with spring in a room was bitten down by a mouse. When the master saw a scene of chaos, he was angry and helpless. Wang Pan, the author, is a famous Sanqu composer in Ming Dynasty, who pays attention to life interest and has a beautiful style. Although this theme is a trivial matter of life, the author makes the psychological changes vivid and interesting.
in the first three sentences, "Apricot flowers, when a horizontal painting" is used to sing about the beauty of apricot flower vase. The author appreciates the play with an extremely elegant mood, and thinks that its refined and meticulous beauty can be directly painted. The third to sixth sentences are written that rats are a curse, knocking over vases, biting off apricot flowers and flowing water. Quote the Book of Songs? Zhaonan? Hanglu: "Who says that rats have no teeth, why do they wear my shoes?" "and change its meaning, as if blaming the ancients, accusing the mouse, deliberately misinterpreting the interpretation of the meaning of the book of songs, showing the consternation and anger of seeing its scenery. Because of the Book of Songs? The line dew originally meant to accuse the rude man of being tyrannical. The sentence "Who was a rat without teeth in Mao's poems, but how did he bite the golden vase" was as simple as words. On the surface, it seemed that there was a grievance of cognitive error. However, when we probe into the allusions used, there are other accusations of "unreasonable" and "outrageous", hoping that the lawsuit will be brought to Zhao Gong and justice will be upheld. "Water flows to the bedside, and spring drags under the wall." When the writer saw the apricot flowers being ruined and thrown under the wall, he was reluctant. Spring has been used as a proxy for apricot blossom since ancient times. For example, Ye Shaoweng said, "It's not worthwhile to visit a garden": "Spring can't be caged in a garden, and an apricot comes out of the wall. Bai Juyi said, "Flowers have no difference in the meaning of spring, and things touch people deeply." In the minds of the scribes, the beauty symbolizing spring can't be destroyed, and the rude anger against the mouse is gradually brewing, and the anger is written to the extreme with the refusal to let it go. But when I came back to reality, I found that "where to sue him, where to sue him", so I could only "count the cat's scolding". The bad flowers have nothing to do with cats, which is the author's unreasonable responsibility and also a reasonable vent. The humor and helplessness of anger in life are fully revealed here, and the realm of "unreasonable" and "reasonable" is rich in interest and makes people smile.
Of course, some people think that this poem should be pointed out and satirized, because Wei Feng's "Master Rat" and Yan Feng's "Looking at Rat" in the Book of Songs all show anger, accusation and satire against corrupt officials or shameless people, so although Wang Pan's works take trivial matters of life, they may also have irony in them.