The prince's children rushed back, and the beautiful woman was wet with tears.
Xiao Lang was a passer-by as soon as Houmen entered the sea.
Seeing the Maid Off is a seven-character quatrain written by Cui Jiao in Tang Dynasty. This poem describes the sadness that the beloved person was robbed, and reflects the love tragedy caused by the disparity of family status in feudal society. The poetry is quite deep, the expression technique is implicit but not explicit, the resentment is not angry, and the euphemism is tortuous.
Working background:
At the end of the Yuan Dynasty and the beginning of the Yuan Dynasty, the aunt of scholar Cui Jiao had a beautiful handmaid who fell in love with Cui Jiao, but was later sold to a powerful person. Cui Jiao was fascinated by it and longed for it. During a cold meal, the maid occasionally went out to meet Cui Jiao. Cui Jiao wrote this song "To a Maid" with mixed feelings. Later, when Yu Yong read this poem, he asked Cui Jiao to accept his handmaid, and spread it in the poetry circle as a much-told story. (Fan Yi's "Yunxi Friendship")