Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - Thousands of miles of white clouds and yellow days, which poem does the north wind blow geese and snow from?

Thousands of miles of white clouds and yellow days, which poem does the north wind blow geese and snow from?

"Thousands of miles of Huang Yun, yellow sunshine, and the north wind blowing geese and snow in succession" comes from Gao Shi's "Two Poems of Biedongda University" in Tang Dynasty.

Original poem:

Like a bird, she still flapped her wings and felt sorry for herself, leaving Beijing for more than ten years.

A gentleman is poor, who wants to meet today without paying for drinks?

Translation:

Thousands of miles away in Huang Yun, the weather was gloomy, and the north wind sent away the geese, which caused heavy snow. Don't worry about having no friends ahead. Who in the world doesn't know you?

Poetry appreciation

This poem first shows a farewell scene puzzled by the snow, which is a typical scene in ancient farewell poems. In China's poems, there is a poem "Step out of the east gate of the city and look at Jiangnan Road in the distance". My old friend went there in the snowstorm the day before yesterday. "The feeling of giving people away is very confused, and the snow scene is confused. It is really hopeless.

At dusk, heavy snow fell, and the battle array was shocked and troubled. It evokes a feeling of cold at dusk, wandering, screaming in the sky and crying helplessly. The word "blowing geese" is wonderful. It gives people the feeling that it is not the downwind of the "autumn geese and Changfeng escort", but the headwind. The difficulty of flying geese implies the difficulty of wandering.

The first two sentences are difficult to set off the atmosphere, so it is not so difficult to see the wonderful turning point below. After writing about the harsh climate and environment, the last two sentences are not more angry words, sentimental words and exhortations. Instead, I encouraged my friends to embark on the journey in a confident tone. The word "Mochow" fell from the sad scene, full of pride, overflowing with words: "Mochow has no confidant in the road ahead, and no one in the world knows you."

These two sentences, or based on the identity of a famous pianist, are only superficial semantics at most, and their deeper meanings are optimism and self-confidence like "There are plenty of fish in the sea" and "Life is somewhere tomorrow", which are inseparable from high-quality attitude towards life, lofty political ambitions and extraordinary talents-the so-called "self-improvement with temperament", so it can add color to people with lofty ideals.

The author's ability to write such a farewell poem is also closely related to the prospect given to him by the times. Although he is penniless, he still cares about the world. Although he has no talent, he is not willing to sink. This confident and optimistic attitude towards life is the product of the prosperous Tang Dynasty.