Suzhou poetry

Poems related to Suzhou are as follows:

1. I'll meet you in Gusu, and I'll do my best. -Tang Du Fu's "Sending People to Visit Wu"

Appreciation: The biggest color in Suzhou is water. Since the team established its territory in Suzhou, the waterways in the city, the number of fishing boats and the life on the water are the most important lives of the local people. Poems come from other people's rivers, which shows what kind of local color they are.

2. Gusu lives on the stage and waits for drunkenness in the Wu Palace. -Tang Li Bai's "Wuqi Qu"

Appreciation: The poet outlined the outline of the Wu Palace in the sunset and the drunken shadow of the beauty stone in the palace on the Gusu stage, which was profound with his pen and implied great sadness.

The poet set the Wu Palace in the background of the twilight crow, which invisibly brought some symbolic color to the "Wu Qishi", making people vaguely feel the dark atmosphere around the Wu Palace, in sharp contrast with the scene of "Wu Palace is drunk and beautiful". This hint runs through the whole article, but it is subtle.

Wuzhong benefited from Suzhou and was better than Wang Cheng. -Song Yang Wanli's "Boping River Baihuazhou"

Appreciation: The first two sentences explain their karma with Suzhou. The plain narrative is quite folk. It seems that I'm glad that I got a trip to Wuzhong Jiasheng because of Wang Cheng's convenience, but I'm actually digging up feelings for the following. The word "Wang Cheng" has been slightly exposed.

4. Hanshan Temple outside Gusu City, the midnight bell goes to the passenger ship. -Don Zhang Ji spent the night near Fengqiao.

Appreciation: In Hanshan Temple outside Suzhou, the bell rang in the middle of the night, and the bell reached the boat moored by the river. Hanshan Temple, located near Qiao Feng Bridge in the western suburbs of Suzhou, was founded in the Liang Dynasty.

The world is noisy. At this time, the poet spent the night on the boat, but he could hear the bell of the temple. The silence on the river is obvious, but silence is often accompanied by loneliness. The poet can still hear the bell in the middle of the night, which means that the poet has not fallen asleep until midnight.

The poem goes on to point out that the ship he took was a "passenger ship", once again depicting the poet's wandering scene in a foreign country.