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Chuzhou Xijian has good words, good paragraphs and good sentences
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Articles and works: Chuzhou Xijian
< p>Author of the article: Wei YingwuWei Yingwu’s archive information: Tang Dynasty poet
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Wei Yingwu’s famous quotes
Chuzhou West Excerpts from Chuzhou Xijian
Classic sentences from Chuzhou Xijian
***Includes 2 good words, paragraphs and sentences about Xijian in Chuzhou
Pity the edge of the quiet grassy stream There are orioles singing in the deep trees.
Tang Dynasty Wei Yingwu's "Chuzhou Xijian" pity: love. Oriole: Oriole. The general meaning of these two sentences is: I especially love the open and quiet Xijian, with lush green grass and full of green eyes. On the mountains between the streams, the cries of orioles can be heard from deep in the trees from time to time. The poem describes what the poet saw and heard when he traveled to Xijian. The lush green grass adds vitality to the west stream, and the oriole's crow, carrying the sound in the empty valley, makes the west stream even more serene. No wonder the poet was "single pity" and lingered over it.
The spring tide brings rain late in the day, and there is no boat crossing the wild river.
Collection of Famous Sayings from Chuzhou West Stream
Spring tide in "Chuzhou West Stream" by Wei Yingwu of the Tang Dynasty: refers to the rising spring water, not the river tide. The general meaning of these two sentences is: the spring rain is falling rapidly, the water in the west stream is swollen due to the evening rain, the ferry in the wild seems very quiet at this time, the boat is lying on the water's edge, no one is ferrying it. This is a description of the scenery of Xijian in the evening rain. The twilight is vast and there is no one in the empty stream. A small boat is tied to the edge of the stream and floats freely. The village crossing is silent and desolate. In Song Dynasty Kou Zhun's "Reminiscence of Climbing the Tower in Spring", there is a poem "No one can cross the wild water, and the lonely boat is crossing the sun", which is similar to the scenery described in these two sentences. Some people think that there is sustenance here, and the phenomenon of the idle ferry expresses the poet's helpless and sad feelings of "not being in his place and having no use for it". Although this explanation is far-fetched for the original work, when we quote it today, we can also use the phenomenon of rushing water and sloping boats described in these two lines of poetry to metaphorically describe the situation in which people are underappreciated for their talents.