Looking at Lushan Waterfall
The whole poem is: The incense burner in Rizhao is full of purple smoke, and the waterfall hangs in Qianchuan from a distance. The high bluff on the high cliffs, as if there were a few thousands of feet, people trance thought that the galaxy from heaven to fall into the world.
The incense burner peak glowed with purple haze under the sunlight, and a waterfall hung in front of the mountain like white silk in the distance.
The waterfall soaring on the high cliff seems to have several thousands of feet, which makes people feel trance-like that the Milky Way has fallen from the sky to the earth.
Appreciation: This is a landscape poem written by the poet Li Bai when he lived in seclusion in Lushan Mountain around the age of 5. This poem vividly depicts the magnificent scenery of Lushan Waterfall and reflects the poet's infinite love for the great rivers and mountains of the motherland.
This poem is extremely successful in using metaphor, exaggeration and imagination, with unique conception, vivid language and lucidity. Su Dongpo appreciated this poem very much, saying that "the emperor sent the Milky Way to drop its pulse, and in ancient times there were only fallen immortals". "Immortal" is Li Bai. "Looking at Lushan Waterfall" is indeed an example of physical description and lyricism.
Li Bai (February 8, 71-December 762), whose name was Taibai, was named Qinglian Jushi, also known as "fallen immortal". He was a great romantic poet in the Tang Dynasty and was praised as a "poetic immortal" by later generations. It is also called "Li Du" with Du Fu. In order to distinguish it from the other two poets, Li Shangyin and Du Mu, that is, "Little Li Du", Du Fu and Li Bai are also called "Great Li Du". He is cheerful and generous, loves to drink and write poems, and likes to make friends. The overall style of his poems is bold and heroic, fresh and elegant, magnificent and full of momentum. It not only reflects the prosperity of the Tang Dynasty, but also exposes the debauchery and corruption of the ruling class, showing the positive spirit of despising the powerful, resisting the traditional bondage and pursuing freedom and ideals, which is very romantic. China, a poet of the Tang Dynasty, is known as "Poet Fairy" and "Poet Chivalrous Man". Li Taibai Ji has been handed down from generation to generation, and most of his poems were written when he was drunk. His representative works include Looking at Lushan Waterfall, it is hard to go, Difficult Road to Shu, Going into Wine, Liang Fuyin, and Early Making Baidicheng. His Ci and Fu have been biographies in the Song Dynasty (such as Wen Ying's Record of Xiang Shan Ye), and in terms of its pioneering significance and artistic achievements, "Li Bai's Ci" enjoys a very lofty position.