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Maybe the sword under the waist is straight from Loulan? Where did the Tang Dynasty poet Li Bai come from?
"I would like to put my sword in my waist and cut Loulan straight" comes from the Tang Dynasty poet Li Bai's "The First Six Songs". This sentence is the end of the poem, expressing the author's strong desire to serve the motherland and recover the frontier. The whole poem reads: "Five In the snow in Tianshan Mountain, without flowers, it is cold. Spring can only be imagined in the flute "Folding Willow", but it has never been seen in reality. The soldiers fought the enemy in the golden drum during the day and slept in the saddle at night. I would like to put my sword under my waist and cut Loulan straight. "

Translation of Six Poems "Sai Qu Xia" (Ⅰ)

In May, the mountains were still covered with snow, with only the cold and no flowers. Spring can only be imagined in the flute "Folding Willow", which has never been seen in reality.

The soldiers fought to the death with the enemy in the golden drum during the day, but slept with their saddles at night. I hope that the sword hanging around my waist can pacify the frontier as soon as possible and make contributions to the country.

Brief introduction of the author

Li Bai (70 1-762), the word Taibai, was a romantic poet in the Tang Dynasty and was praised as a "poetic immortal" by later generations. Han nationality, ancestral home in Ji Cheng, Longxi, was born in Broken Leaf City (which belonged to the territory of the Tang Dynasty at that time and now belongs to Kyrgyzstan). At the age of 4, he moved to Mianzhou City, Jiannan Province with his father. Li Bai has more than 1000 poems, among which Li Taibai Ji has been handed down from generation to generation.