Xiang Yu's Life and Related Poems

/view/2283.htm ````````` Life.

Where there is a will, there is a way. If we cross the rubicon, 120 Qin Guan will belong to Chu after all.

Hard-working people are rewarded by heaven, and they have tasted courage. More than 3,000 armour can swallow Wu.

(The first sentence is about Xiang Yu, and the second sentence is about Gou Jian)

Related poems

Gaixiage

Pull up the mountain and share the anger with the world.

Bad times never die.

What can I do without dying?

I'm afraid I'm afraid I can't do anything! Xiang Yu's most famous poem.

This is a desperate word issued by Xiang Yu, the overlord of Chu, on the eve of a deadly war. This poem is full of unparalleled heroism and affection; It not only shows rare self-confidence, but also sighs that it is insignificant. It is a miracle that just four sentences show such rich content and complicated feelings.

Quoted from "National Studies Website"

The title of the poem. Xiang yuzuo. Guo Maoqian's Poem Collection of Yuefu in Song Dynasty is called Ba Li Cao Shan, the Addendum to Selected Works is called Song in Gaixia Account, and Feng Weina's Ancient Poetry is called Gaixia Song. According to historical records, Xiang Yu, the overlord of the Western Chu Dynasty, was trapped by the Han army (now Lingbi South, Anhui Province), serenaded his food and drank in his tent at night. He knew that the defeat was set, but he lamented generously: "If you pull out the mountain, you will be angry and you won't die!" What can I do without dying? Feathers are famous for their beauty, and horses are famous for their horses. They sang the sad song of a hero who has lived all his life, "impassioned, with a thousand-year grudge" (in Song Zhuxi).