What are some poems that describe the grandeur and ambition of a man?

1. Live as long as the heaven and earth, and shine as brightly as the sun and the moon ------- Warring States Period. Chu. "She Jiang" by Qu Yuan

2. The road is long and far away, I will search up and down ------ Warring States Period. Qu Yuan. "Li Sao"

3. The whole world is turbid, but I alone am clear; everyone is drunk, but I alone am awake ------ Warring States Period. Qu Yuan's "The Fisherman"

4. I am still kind in my heart, and even though I died nine times, I still have no regrets------Qu Yuan's "Li Sao"

5. The old man is in trouble, but his ambition is thousands of miles; the martyrs are ambitious in their old age ------Three Kingdoms. Wei. Cao Cao's "The Turtle is Longevity"

6. A good man must have a fast horse, and a fast horse must have a good son ------ Folk Song of the Northern Dynasties. "Song of the Willows"

7. Xingtian dances with relatives, and fierce ambition is always there------Jin. Tao Yuanming's "Thirteen Poems from the Classic of Mountains and Seas"?

8. Straight as a red silk rope, as clear as jade pot ice ------ Southern Dynasty. Song Dynasty. Bao Zhao's "Dai Baitou Yin"

9. The strong wind knows the strong grass, and the rough wind knows the honest minister------"Giving to Xiao Yu" by Li Shimin of the Tang Dynasty

10. I wish you to learn from the pine trees, but be careful not to be like a peach or a plum - "Two Poems of Huang Huoshang Presented to Wei Shiyu" by Li Bai of the Tang Dynasty

The whole world is turbid and I am alone pure, everyone is drunk and I am alone awake.

1. Interpretation

The world is turbid, but I am clear and transparent (not like the others), the world is intoxicated, but I am sober, so I am exiled.

2. Brief analysis of the original work

It comes from Qu Yuan's "Chu Ci: Fisherman". After Qu Yuan was exiled, he was politically persecuted and encountered a kind of difficulty in his personal life. Works created under difficult circumstances.

There are two characters in the full text-Qu Yuan and the Fisherman. The full text adopts a contrastive approach, mainly through question and answer style, to express two opposing attitudes towards life and completely different ideological personalities. The full text has four natural paragraphs, which can be divided into three parts: head, abdomen and tail. The article begins with Qu Yuan and ends with the fisherman. The two natural paragraphs in the middle are the dialogue between the two, which embodies Taoist philosophical thoughts everywhere. Among them, the idea of ??"not being stagnant in things, but being able to move with the world" had a great influence on Taoism in later generations.