On literary common sense, artistic characteristics, central idea and appreciation of poetry

Zhao Yi (1727~ 18 14)

Poets and historians in Qing Dynasty. Yun Song and Yun Song were born in Oubei and Yanghu (now Changzhou, Jiangsu). In the twenty-sixth year of Qianlong (176 1), he was a scholar and was awarded editing by the Hanlin Academy. He used to be the magistrate of Zhen 'an and Guangzhou, and the official went to the west. In thirty-eight years, Gan Long resigned and gave lectures at Yangzhou Anding College. Zhao, Yuan Mei and Jiang Shiquan are also called "the three great masters of Qianlong".

Enjoy 1:

Zhao Yi advocates innovation and opposes mechanical simulation, which is reflected in this poem. In order to explain the change of poetic style from generation to generation, the poet quoted two great poets in the history of poetry, Li Bai and Du Fu in the Tang Dynasty, as examples. People think that even great poets like Li and Du Fu, whose poems have been circulated for thousands of years, no longer give people a sense of freshness. From the perspective of historical development, every era has its leading figures, and it is not necessary to follow the ancients. It is well known that "talented people have come out of the country for hundreds of years." The article also reflects a sentence that everyone said: "The waves behind the Yangtze River push the waves before, and each generation is stronger than the next."

Appreciation 2:

Taking Li Bai's and Du Fu's poems as examples, this paper explains the first two sentences of the poem: "Du Li's poems are widely circulated and are not new so far." The poems of Li Bai and Du Fu have been passed down through the ages, and no one can compare them. However, even such a great poem is still not new. It can be seen that "talented people come forth in large numbers, each leading the way for hundreds of years", and affectionate people appear from generation to generation in the country, and their respective influences are only a few hundred years. The author believes that poetry should keep pace with the times, and poets should be innovative in their creation, not deliberately imitating, but following in the footsteps of the ancients.