Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - The last two lines of the poem "There are rugged peaks in the mountains locked in the clouds and mist"
The last two lines of the poem "There are rugged peaks in the mountains locked in the clouds and mist"
The last two sentences: Usually invisible, occasionally extraordinary.
This is a poem that Chairman Mao sent to Jiang Qing.
Original verse: There are strange peaks in the mountains and rivers, locked in the clouds and mist. It is usually not seen, but occasionally it is impressive.
Jiang Qing
Soon after Mao left Beijing, Jiang Qing quickly rose to the top and seemed to be the second most important person in the regime. She wrote a very bold poem, paired it with a photo she took, and gave it to an editor of "China Photography" magazine. The poem is about a mountain, and the photo shows a mountain that reaches straight into the sky. This majestic, beautiful, dignified and underestimated mountain is none other than Jiang Qing himself! This poem will not win any literary awards; There are strange peaks on the river, locked in the clouds and mist. Usually invisible, occasionally exposed. "Jiang" refers to her last name. This poem imitates Tang poetry and also reminds people of the time when she was named "Jiang Qing" instead of "Lan Ping" when she was in Yan'an. A Tang poem said, "There are many green peaks on the river." As critics later said, whether Jiang Qing had Mao Zedong in mind when she wrote this "hazy poem," it showed that Jiang Qing believed that she had not yet earned her due. Cheers. (Jiang Qing actually convinced Vitek that this was a poem written by Mao to praise her!) Jiang Qing told the editor of "China Photography" that the poems and photos should be published under the pseudonym "Langyatai", which is her hometown. The name of an ancient and famous mountain in Zhucheng. She wanted to hint to people - after some exploration through the mysterious dark clouds - who the author was, but she did not want to put her real name on it and publicly declare her pride and ambition. Finding herself in the great literary and political tradition, Wu Zetian indeed made important contributions to the literature of the Tang Dynasty. She wanted to remind those senior connoisseurs that when she and Mao began to live together in Yan'an, they Many people know that her name was taken from a Tang poem - her long and close relationship with the great leader of the Chinese revolution will soon die out and be replaced. Leave the poems and photos to China Photography. After that, Jiang Qing suddenly took it back. Later, she changed her mind and sent them back again. She went back and forth like a cat who couldn't decide where to hide the newly caught fish. In the end, she still did not publish them. Perhaps, after Mao Zedong came back from Changsha, he criticized this plan that made Jiang Qing so excited. More likely, Jiang Qing changed her mind nervously. A woman is lonely in a man's political world. Striving to be the queen will not only bring herself, but also the history of the Communist Party of China (and the Communist Party of other countries) to a new realm. Regardless of the reason, the fact that the poems and photos were not published shows that Jiang Qing was in a dangerous zone, either politically or psychologically, or both.
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