The night parking near Fengqiao was adapted into a modern story.

Thinking: A night berth near Fengqiao was adapted into a modern story, and association began with the content of this poem.

In the autumn night, the poet is moored at the Maple Bridge outside Suzhou. The beautiful scenery of the water town in the south of the Yangtze River attracts wanderers who have worries about traveling, and makes him appreciate a meaningful poetic beauty such as falling moon, crying, frost, river maple, fishing fire and sleepless.

On the riverbank, the yearning has frosted, the stars in the night sky are as clear as frost, and the grains are gone, which is sad. In the autumn night, frustrated men on passenger ships, faint candlelight, rippling waves.

Forget the secular peach blossom, willow green and thyme. Tonight, there is only him, looking up at the sky proudly, and tonight there is only him, looking up at the bright moon in the boudoir. Green sleeves dipped into the river with the wind, and this immortal poem was written by the maple bridge.

Extended data:

A night-mooring near maple bridge is the work of Zhang Ji, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. After the Anshi Rebellion in the Tang Dynasty, Zhang Ji wrote this poem when he passed Hanshan Temple. This poem accurately and delicately describes the observation and feelings of a passenger ship night sleeper on the night scene in late autumn in the south of the Yangtze River, and outlines scenes such as the setting of the moon, frosty nights, fishing on the river peak, and lonely boat passengers.

In addition, this poem also fully shows the author's yearning for travel, his worries about his home country, and his worries about being in troubled times and having no home. It is a masterpiece of writing troubles.

The sentences in the whole poem are vivid, emotional and picturesque, and the logical relationship between the sentences is very clear and reasonable, and the content is easy to understand. This poem is not only selected from various anthologies of Tang poems in China, but also included in primary school textbooks in some Asian countries.