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What is the plant described in the poem dancing in the east wind?

The plants described in the poem Dancing East Wind are: autumn willow.

The banquet that once danced in the east wind came from Willow, which was a poem by Li Shangyin, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, to express his feelings by chanting willow. This poem is about the willow tree in autumn, but the poet does not write it from the front, but remembers its spring scenery first and then returns to the willow tree in front of him. The whole poem is meaningful, implicit and euphemistic.

There is not a word "willow" in the whole article, but every sentence is about willow, every sentence is about scenery, every sentence is about things, and every sentence is about people, expressing the lament for the sparse and withered autumn willow. The autumn willow in the poem has experienced the disparity between the present and the present, which is a vivid portrayal of the poet's self-sighing life experience.

Appreciation of works:

The poem is about the willow in autumn, but the poet does not start now, but remembers its spring scenery first, and then returns to the willow in front of him. One or two sentences: "I danced in the east wind, and the spring garden was heartbroken." It means that the slender drooping willow branches in spring are blown by the wind, which is most likely to remind people of the dancing of dancers. This word "dance" vividly shows the graceful appearance of the spring willow, and at the same time combines the willow branches with the lively dance feast to further set off the joy of the willow branches.

The word "dance banquet" seems to make people see the scene of willow branches dancing with dancers, and they can't tell who is the dancer and what is willow branches. The two complement each other and are beautiful! Originally, willow branches were blown by the east wind, but the word "one by one" was used in the poem, which said that willow branches were chasing the east wind, turning passive into active, and writing about the vitality of willow branches.