Village Trip is a seven-character poem written by Wang Yucheng when he was demoted as the envoy of Shangzhou in the second year of Chunhua (99 1). It's about the night view of the mountain village, and the season is autumn.
The content of the poem is probably that the poet is riding a horse, enjoying the scenery along the way and listening to the sound of the valley at dusk. While enjoying the scenery and reciting poems, the author suddenly found that the bridges in the village and the trees on the Yuan Ye are very similar to those in his hometown, which led to homesickness.
Wang Yucheng, a poet and writer in the Tang Dynasty, wrote "Traveling in the village, crossing the mountain path, and blooming in Huang Zhi". The full text of his ancient poems is as follows:
The horse crossed the chrysanthemum and crossed the mountain road, leaving the horse to walk freely.
Listen to the sound of thousands of valleys at night and watch some peaks silent in the sunset.
The leaves of huanghuali are as red as rouge, and the fragrance of buckwheat flowers is as white as snow.
What happened? I was suddenly disappointed. The original tree of the village bridge is like my hometown.
Village Trip is one of the representative works of Wang Yucheng's lyric poems in the Northern Song Dynasty. Based on the rural behavior, this poem vividly depicts the charming scenery of Shan Ye and truly expresses the poet's homesickness with implicit poetic language. In poetry, scenery description is combined with lyricism. Scenery writing is the foreshadowing of lyricism, and lyricism is the end of scenery writing.
The changing process of the poet's mood from carefree to disappointed is vividly reflected in this "two combination". This is a picturesque poem by autumn scenery, and it is also a touching homesick song. From this, we can get a glimpse of the freshness and simplicity of Wang's poems.
Precautions:
(1) Xinma: Ride a horse and walk at will. Nocturnal walking: refers to the pleasure of reveling in the beautiful scenery of mountains and rivers.
(2) Morning and evening: refers to the sound of autumn. Lai, the voice of nature.
(3) Li Tang: Li Du, also known as Pak Lei and Baitang. Deciduous tree with excellent wood and red leaves.
(4) Buckwheat: Millet, with small white flowers in autumn and black-red triangle fruit.
5] Primitive tree: a tree on the meta-leaf. Originally, vilen.