See where the deer come from when the fog rises.

When the fog rises, the deer from Li Bai.

This so-called "seeing deer when the fog rises" comes from a net article: "I see deer when the forest is deep, whales when the sea is blue, and I see you when I wake up, while I: fog rises when the forest is deep, the sea is blue, and I wake up at night. No deer, no whale, no you. Finally: the deer comes through the fog, the whale rises with the waves, and I will meet you for the rest of my life. "

The source of this online article is Li Bai's "Looking for a Taoist on the Rooftop": In the barking of dogs, peach blossoms are thick. See the deer when the tree is deep, but don't ring the bell at noon. Wild bamboos are green and misty, and flying springs hang blue peaks. No one knows where to go. I'm worried about two or three loose.

Because there are too many classics left by Li Bai, this is also related to his personal charm, and even some relatively unpopular poems have been turned out by everyone. This one is one of them. Not only that, it has also been slightly processed by people now, and finally it has become a love story spread all over the network.

Li Bai's achievements:

Li Bai has the highest achievements in Yuefu, Gexing and Jueju. His songs completely broke all the inherent forms of poetry creation, no one relied on them, and his brushwork was diverse, reaching the magical realm of unpredictability and swaying.

In Li Bai's poems, imagination, exaggeration, metaphor and personification are often used comprehensively to produce magical brilliance and magnificent artistic conception, which is the reason why Li Bai's romantic poems give people heroic, unrestrained, elegant and immortal.

Li Bai's poems and songs had a far-reaching influence on later generations. Han Yu, Meng Jiao and Li He in the middle Tang Dynasty, Su Shi, Lu You and Xin Qiji in the Song Dynasty, Gao Qi, Yang Shen and Gong Zizhen in the Ming and Qing Dynasties were all greatly influenced by Li Bai's poems.