Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - An analysis of Zhang Ji's poems in Liangzhou Ci

An analysis of Zhang Ji's poems in Liangzhou Ci

On Zhang Ji s Liangzhou Ci;

The first two sentences of Zhang Ji's poem Liangzhou Ci describe the scenery in front of him, and at the same time point out the place, time, weather and season he wrote. The first sentence "Wild geese fly low in the border town at dusk" draws people's attention to a flock of geese flying low, showing that the place where geese fly is the border town, the time is dusk and the weather is rainy. The second sentence "Asparagus is beginning to grow" draws people's attention to a reed in bud, which shows that it is a warm spring from the growth of reed. The first two sentences: write about the sky view of the border town. The ground landscape overlooking the border town has a panoramic view. The last two sentences of the poem extend the poetic realm to the other side of the vast and distant desert, and push the poetic thinking out of sight forever!

The third sentence, "Countless bells flying over the moraine", is about a group of camels carrying goods marching slowly in the desert, but there are no images of camels and escorts in the sentence, only camel bells floating from the desert. This is a wonderful use of conveying shadows with sound and seeing shapes with sound. Here, as long as you write down the bell, it will be transformed into an image by the vivid association, and a picture of the camel team drifting away will emerge in your mind.

The author was attracted by camel bells because his poetic pen turned into a string of bells floating in the desert, and because he was in the border town, his eyes were in trouble. His incomparably heavy heart has gradually disappeared in the desert of the west with camel bells and flew to the four towns of Anxi (where Kuqa in Xinjiang is now ruled), although it is far from sight. The last sentence of the poem, "You want to practice in Anxi", is exactly what the author's feelings note, and it is also the crowning touch of this poem.

Liangzhou Ci is a group of poems written by Zhang Ji, a poet in Tang Dynasty, with three poems. Expressed the poet's sadness and indignation at the present situation of the frontier.

Full text: Wild geese fly low at dusk in the border town, and asparagus gradually gathers. Countless clocks have passed the cymbals, so you have to carry them to Anxi. The river flowing through the Phoenix River flows eastward, and Pennisetum and Ulmus pumila have been growing for sixty years. The soldiers in the border town suffered from the mercy of the Lord, but no one knew how to recapture Liangzhou.

Zhang Ji (about 767 ~ 830) was a poet in the Tang Dynasty. The word Wenchang. Han nationality, Suzhou Wu people, or Yue Zhou Wujiang people. Originally from Suzhou (now Suzhou, Jiangsu Province), he moved to Wujiang (now Wujiang Town and County, Anhui Province).