1. Explain how a mountain-like figure can look up to him. Only here to pay tribute to his fragrant moral glory;
2. The source is a sentence given to Meng Haoran by Li Bai, a poet in the Tang Dynasty;
3, the whole poem
Master, I cheer you from the bottom of my heart. Your fame has risen to the sky.
In the rosy youth, you gave up the importance of hats and chariots and chose pine trees and clouds; Now whitehead.
Drunk moon, sage of dreams, bewitched by flowers, you turned a deaf ear to the emperor.
Gaoshan, how I long to reach you, that's all.
Step 4 take notes
I respect Mr. Meng's solemnity. He is noble, charming and famous all over the world.
When I was a teenager, I despised fame and disliked official chariots and horses. When I am old, I retire to the mountains and abandon the dust.
On a moonlit night, he is often drunk and elegant. He is not infatuated with flowers and plants, and has an open mind.
How can a mountain-like figure look up to him? I only pay tribute to his fragrant moral brilliance here.
(1) Meng Fuzi: refers to Meng Haoran. Master, a respected general title.
⑵ Romantic style: The ancients praised literati's romantic style, mainly referring to their literary talent, good words, natural and unrestrained demeanor, and their inability to make ends meet. Wang Shiyuan's Preface to the Collection of Meng Haoran said that Meng was "beautiful in bone and clear in appearance, but scattered in spirit, saving patients and resolving disputes in order to establish righteousness." Irrigation of vegetables and bamboo is noble. "
⑶ Beauty: refers to Meng Haoran's youth.
(4) Whitehead: Whitehead refers to Meng Haoran's later years.
5] Lie Songyun: Living in seclusion.
[6] Drunk on the Moon: Drunk on the Moon. Middle voice: short for "middle voice", that is, drunkenness. In the Cao Wei era, Xu Miao liked to drink, calling sober people "saints" and turbid people "sages". English: pronounce this sound, and the verbs "heatstroke" and "poisoning" mean to be drunk after drinking sake, so they are called middle school students.
Once infatuated with flowers: infatuated with flowers and plants means intoxicated with the beauty of nature.