Hello, everyone! What I want to explain to you today is "Planting Flowers in the Green Field Hall of Fenghe Linggong";
Planting Flowers in the Green Field Hall of Fenghe Linggong
Author Tang Bai Juyi
Luyetang opens in Wuhua, and passers-by give instructions to the public. Your Majesty has peaches and plums all over the world, so why bother planting more flowers in front of the hall?
This poem "Planting Flowers in the Green Wild Hall of Lord He Ling" is one of the representative works of the famous Tang Dynasty poet Bai Juyi. Let's first look at the general meaning of this poem. In one or two sentences of the poem, "Green" The wild hall is open to occupy Wuhua, and passers-by give instructions to the public house. It means that the green field hall is open and captures the essence of all things. Passers-by say that it is the home of Duke Ling. In the following three or four lines of the poem, Duke Ling has peaches and plums all over the world, so there is no need to plant more flowers in front of the hall.
This means that your father-in-law’s students are all over the world, so why should he plant flowers in front of his house?
"Fenghe Linggong Grows Flowers in the Green Field Hall" uses metonymic rhetoric, using peaches and plums to represent students. Green Field Hall refers to Pei Du's villa in the Tang Dynasty. Its former address is Luoyang City, Henan Province. Pei Du He was the prime minister during the reign of Emperor Xianzong of the Tang Dynasty. He contributed greatly to quelling the rebellion in the feudal towns. In his later years, due to the exclusive power of the eunuchs, he resigned and retreated to Luoyang;
By writing this poem, Pei Du's house can take advantage of the essence of all things without planting flowers, which expresses The author Bai Juyi, also known as Xiangshan layman in his later years, was a great realist poet in the Tang Dynasty of my country. His poems had a wide range of themes, various forms, simple and popular language, and some Known as the "Poetry Demon" and the "Poetry King", his representative poems include "Song of Everlasting Sorrow", "The Charcoal Seller", "Pipa Play", etc.;