Poetics and Appreciation of Qiao Qi's Ancient Poems

Poetry: Begging for the Spirit is a poem by Lin Jie, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. In his poems, the poet did not specifically write out his inner wishes, but left room for imagination, expressing people's desire to pursue intelligence and happiness.

"Qiao Qi" originally watched the blue sky on Tanabata tonight, and the cowherd and the weaver girl crossed the bridge.

Every family watches the autumn moon, and every family wears HongLing.

On the night of the seventh day of the seventh lunar month, people can't help looking up at the vast sky and imagining the scene where the cowherd and the weaver girl meet at the magpie bridge. Girls in every household put nine-hole needles on the moon with colorful threads, begging for wisdom from the weaver girl, and countless colorful threads were worn out.

Qiao Qi Annotations Qiaoqi Festival: An ancient festival, on the seventh day of the seventh lunar month, also known as Qixi Festival. In the old customs, it is called begging for cleverness for women to wear needles at the night when the cowherd and the weaver girl meet and learn from the weaver girl.

Blue sky: refers to the boundless blue sky.

Thousands: There are many metaphors.

Qiao Qi appreciates the first two sentences of Qiao Qi describing the folk story of the Cowherd and the Weaver Girl. The author wrote this story into the poem, which aroused people's good wishes and rich imagination. The last two sentences of the poem are to explain the tricky things clearly and let people know what to do on this day. The whole poem is easy to understand and expresses people's good wishes for happiness at that time.