Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - Peach Blossom Lake is not as deep as thousands of feet. What kind of feeling did Wang Lun show me?

Peach Blossom Lake is not as deep as thousands of feet. What kind of feeling did Wang Lun show me?

Peach Blossom Pond Deep in thousands of feet? Not as good as Wang Lun's "Send me a message" expresses the author's deep affection for Wang Lun and his reluctance to part with his friends.

"To Wang Lun" is a farewell poem written by Li Bai, a great poet in the Tang Dynasty, to Wang Lun, a local friend, when he visited Taohuatan in Jingxian (now southern Anhui).

Full text: Li Bai was about to go by boat when he suddenly heard singing on the shore. ? Even if the Peach Blossom Pond is deep, it is not as deep as Wang Lun's sending away my love.

Li Bai was about to travel by boat when he heard singing on the shore. Even if the Peach Blossom Lake is as deep as thousands of feet, it can't compare with what Wang Lun did to me.

Full text appreciation:

The traditional view of China's poetry is implicit. Yan Yu, a poetic theorist in the Song Dynasty, put forward four taboos in writing poetry: "The language should be straight and the meaning should be shallow. Avoid dew in the pulse, and the taste is short. " Shi Buhua, a poet in A Qing, also said that poetry "should not be expensive".

However, Li Bai's A Gift to Wang Lun is characterized by frankness, directness and less implicature. Its "language is straight" and its "pulse is dew", but its "meaning" is not shallow and its taste is stronger.

When the ancients wrote poems, they generally avoided calling them by their names, thinking that they had no taste. But To Wang Lun begins with the poet calling his own name and ends with calling the other person's name. On the contrary, he is honest, kind, free and easy, and very affectionate.