The wind is rustling and the water is cold.

Jing Ke, a Warring States Poet "Yi"

The wind is rustling, the water is cool, and the strong men go and never return.

Explore the tiger's den, enter the dumpling palace, face upwards and exhale, and turn into Bai Hong.

Make an appreciative comment

This is a generous elegy of a strong man who went to the wolf's den and knew that he could not live any longer.

There are only two sentences. The first sentence is about the parting environment, bleak autumn wind, cold water and a tragic and desolate atmosphere. The scenery description is permeated with the singer's feelings. The second sentence shows the hero's unswerving concern for the disaster.

The language of this poem is simple, concise, lyrical and picturesque, and it is the swan song of China's ancient poems.

Jing Ke got his name from this, but two short poems are immortal. The difficulty in expressing majestic feelings in poetry lies in convincing people, not in arrogance and exaggeration; There is a more permanent and universal feeling behind temporary feelings, not a temporary impulse. Words about tragedy are often easy to be emotional, and it is difficult for people to distinguish between true and false under emotions, so they not only deceive others, but also deceive themselves. Many works that were in high spirits at that time later felt dull when read. It was that performance that deceived them. "Song of Xiao" regards two understatements as eternal swan songs. When we read, we must have Jing Ke's life experience. This is the universality of art, which transcends time and space and appeals to that eternal emotion.

There have been different opinions about Jing Ke's behavior since ancient times. Some people say that Jing Ke is a brave man who gave his life for justice, some people say that he is a trivial outlaw, and some people say that he is a terrorist in ancient China.