What are the language features of Tao Yuanming's Drinking (V)?

This poem was written by Tao Yuanming after he resigned and retired. It shows the poet's interest in life while enjoying the natural scenery. Although the language of the whole poem is light, without ornamentation, exquisite rhetoric and flowery rhetoric, it seems that it has no intention of writing for poetry, but it shows a deep poetry.

"What can I ask you? The heart is far from being biased. " A rhetorical question, simple and natural, tells the center of the whole Tao-all natural pleasures are felt only because the poet's mood transcends the secular world. The word "distant heart" is eye-catching and tells the truth that the environment is born of the heart. As far as these two words are concerned, they are unremarkable, in fact, they are wonderful, and naturally blend with the artistic conception of the whole sentence and even the whole poem, becoming the finishing touch.

At first glance, the word "see" seems to be touched by a letter, and it is only after careful study that I realize that this is where the poet lies. It not only shows the poet's surprise of inadvertently seeing Nanshan when picking chrysanthemums, but also blends people and things into one, depicting a leisurely and enjoyable picture. The picture of rural life is complacent, and Ren Tao's elegance and backbone are also vividly on the paper. We seem to see the image of a noble hermit who hates dirty officialdom, lives and works in peace and contentment and loves nature. He takes chrysanthemums as his friends, mountains as his friends, lingers among them and enjoys himself. It's really "picking chrysanthemums under the east fence and seeing Nanshan leisurely." Become a beautiful sentence that has been told through the ages.

Plain language and simple and sincere feelings are the remarkable characteristics of this poem (drinking). Tao Yuanming, with his admirable skill of turning stone into gold, left many vivid and wonderful pens. After reading this poem, I can't help but think of two poems by Li Taibai: "Clear water produces hibiscus, and it is natural to carve it!"