Hu's sonnets are flourishing. Third, [Tang Tang] Dü f ǔ Du Fu Shú zhá o Z ā I Jué dá xi m: o Dà mo, Jiāng shàng yàn zi gèng Xiáng ng ng knows that Maozhai is extremely low and tiny, so the name of the swallows on the river is shínídi m:n w Qin sháng, géng Ji fěch ch ch chén sh.
The third poem, Jiu Jue Sentence, is a poem written by Du Fu, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. This poem describes common objects in early spring, such as swallows, wicker, cuttlefish and sand grass. They are lifeless, just staying by the river, creating a cold and silent state. However, everything in Du Fu's poems is often anthropomorphic. The swallow, willow, flower and sand grass in this poem seem to have feelings and come alive, but people are in a cold and heartless emptiness.
The whole poem pays attention to the riverside and absorbs images such as wicker, swallow, gull and Sha Ou, but they are all dotted with the feeling of emptiness and coldness. The antithesis is neat and natural, which embodies the characteristics of natural flow. If it is regarded as a landscape poem, the color of one or two sentences seems to be out of harmony with the genre characteristics of "quatrains", but this is the unique feature of Du Fu's gloomy and frustrated poems.
Du Fu's writing characteristics:
1, Du Fu's poems are full of realistic spirit.
Pay attention to the life and destiny of the people at the bottom of society, reveal social contradictions and unreasonable phenomena, and present a real and complicated social picture. His poems not only have profound life background and humanitarian concern, but also reflect the social outlook and spiritual outlook of the times.
2. Du Fu's poetic language is natural and simple.
Nothing is carved, but it is very expressive and infectious. Most of his poems take natural scenery as images, such as mountains, water, flowers and birds. Through personification, these natural scenery are endowed with emotion and vitality, which causes readers' admiration and emotion.
3. Du Fu's poems are well structured.
Pay attention to the use of beat and rhythm. His five-character poems and seven-character poems are particularly prominent. They not only have neat sentence structure, but also form a strong sense of rhythm and music through antithesis and parallelism. The application of this rigorous structure and rhythm makes Du Fu's poems perfectly combined in form and content, and achieves a high artistic effect.