Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - The jade rabbit rises to the mountain stream, and the fisherman falls into the deep water. Apes on both sides of the Taiwan Strait are crying endlessly, and canoes have passed Chung Shan Man.

The jade rabbit rises to the mountain stream, and the fisherman falls into the deep water. Apes on both sides of the Taiwan Strait are crying endlessly, and canoes have passed Chung Shan Man.

"Apes on both sides of the strait are crying endlessly, and the canoe has passed Chung Shan Man" comes from "Early Sending Baidicheng".

Arrive in Baidicheng/Baidixiang Jiangling early.

Author: Li Bai

Early in the morning, I bid farewell to Jiangling city, which is high into the sky, thousands of miles away, and the boat is only one day away.

The cries of apes on both sides of the strait are still unconsciously crowing in their ears, and the canoe has passed the heavy green hills.

First Coming to Baidicheng is a four-line poem written by Li Bai, a great poet in the Tang Dynasty, when he was pardoned during his exile. It is one of Li Bai's most popular poems. In the second year of Gan Yuan, Tang Suzong (759), the poet exiled Yelang and went to Bai Di for forgiveness. From time to time, he took a boat back to Jiangling to write this poem. The poem is about the Yangtze River from Bai Di to Jiangling, where the water is fast and ships are flying. The first sentence is about the height of Baidicheng; The second sentence is written in Jiangling Road, and the ship is fast; Three sentences fly into the boat, accompanied by the sound of mountain shadows; Four sentences write that the boat is as light as nothing, pointing out that the water is like diarrhea. The poet combined the happy mood after forgiveness with the grandeur of the countryside and the smooth and brisk sailing along the river. The whole poem is full of exaggeration and whimsy. Elegant and shocking, but not artificial, arbitrary and natural. Yang Shenzan, a Ming scholar, praised him: "You were scared to cry by the wind and rain!"