Dai Fugu (1 167—— about 1248), a Chinese character, often lives in Shiping Mountain in Nantang, hence his name Shiping, Shiping Yinqiao and Tiantai Huangyan (now Taizhou, Zhejiang Province), a famous Jianghu poet in the Southern Song Dynasty. Later generations were Dai Liankui, an official of Qing Dynasty.
He studied with Lu You and wrote poems. His works were influenced by the poetic style of the late Tang Dynasty and had the style of Jiangxi Poetry School. Some works express patriotic thoughts and reflect people's sufferings, which is of practical significance. In his later years, he summed up his experience in poetry creation and wrote On Ten Poems in poetic style. He was an official all his life, wandering the rivers and lakes, and then returned to his hometown to live in seclusion. He died in his eighties. He wrote poems such as Farewell to Ancient Grass.
His poetry style is fresh and lively, mainly describing natural scenery and expressing feelings of parting, and he is known as the representative of the "Yongle Style" poetry school. In addition to poetry creation, he also participated in the compilation of Yongle Dadian, which made an important contribution to the inheritance of ancient culture in China.
Appreciation of Dai Fugu's works;
1, Dai Fugu's poems are famous for "Yongle style", the most famous of which is Farewell to Ancient Grass.
2. This poem describes the poet's feelings when he left his friends on the ancient grassland, with sincere feelings and profound artistic conception, which can be called a classic in ancient China literature.
3. In this poem, Dai Fugu expressed his feelings about the passing time and the pain of parting through the description of natural scenery and emotional association.
4. He used "not coming for half a year" to describe not seeing an old friend for half a year, and used "The sunset melts gold, Shan Ye is quiet, the road is long, Artemisia is vast, where are the geese flying?" I miss my hometown to express my loneliness and homesickness.
5. The whole poem is simple and implicit, full of philosophy, and the emotion and realm complement each other, which embodies the characteristics of poetry in the prosperous Tang Dynasty and the style of Dai Fugu's "Yongle Style" poetry school.