Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - Jiang Changpu practiced, and the sky was clean with bronze.

Jiang Changpu practiced, and the sky was clean with bronze.

Jiang Changpu practiced, and Jing Tian brushed bronze, which means as follows:

"Jiang Chang Piao Su Lian" describes white silks and satins fluttering in the wind, as long as a river, as white as pixel silk, and very beautiful. The sky is clean and clear, as bright and clear as polished bronze.

The whole poetry is infected by the sadness of farewell for the grass on the Yuan Ye, which is particularly beautiful and tactful in the natural environment with beautiful scenery and Ming Che sky. This sentence comes from the Tang Dynasty poet Bai Juyi's Farewell to Ancient Grass.

Creative background:

"Farewell to Fude Guyuan Grass" was written in 788 AD (the third year of Zhenyuan in Tang Dezong), when the author was sixteen years old. This poem is an exam-oriented exercise. According to the rules of scientific research, the word "Fu" must be added to any limited poem topic at present, which is similar to chanting things.

Ideological theme:

This poem expresses farewell to friends through the description of weeds in the ancient plain. It can be seen as an ode to weeds, and then an ode to life. The first four sentences of this poem focus on the diachronic beauty of weed life, while the last four sentences focus on the synchronic beauty.

About the author:

Bai Juyi (772 -846) was born in Xinzheng, Henan, and his ancestral home was Taiyuan, Shanxi. He was a great realistic poet in the Tang Dynasty and one of the three great poets in the Tang Dynasty. Bai Juyi and Yuan Zhen jointly advocated the New Yuefu Movement, and together with Liu Yuxi, they were called the "Bai Yuan" and "Bai Liu" of the world.