-
The white arboreal crow in the atrium, the cold dew is silent and the wet osmanthus. Tonight, the moon is bright, and I don't know whose house the autumn thoughts are.
-
Tonight, the moon is bright, and I don't know whose house the autumn thoughts are.
-
Wang Jian's "Fifteen Nights of Looking at the Moon and Sending Du Langzhong" is a poem written to a good friend during the Mid-Autumn Festival
The white arboreal crow in the atrium, the cold dew is silent and the wet osmanthus.
Tonight, the moon is bright, and I don't know whose house the autumn thoughts are.
It means that the moonlight of the Mid-Autumn Festival shines on the courtyard, the ground is as white as a layer of frost and snow, and the crows on the trees stop making noise and fall asleep. It was late at night, and the cold autumn dew quietly wet the osmanthus flowers in the court. Tonight, when the moon is in the sky, people are admiring the moon, I don't know whose house the vast autumn thoughts fall on?
Appreciation of "Fifteen Nights Looking at the Moon and Sending Du Langzhong".
Fifteen Nights Looking at the Moon and Sending Du Langzhong" is a seven-word quatrain on the night of the Mid-Autumn Festival. In folklore, the formation of the Mid-Autumn Festival has a long history. The poet Mochizuki sighed, but the way of writing is completely different from other Mid-Autumn Festival poems, which is very creative and even more intriguing.
The white arboreal crow in the atrium", clearly writing the moon viewing environment, and secretly writing the character mood, concise and subtle. This sentence is like the first sentence of Ma Zhiyuan's "Tianjingsha Autumn Thoughts", with the help of unique scenery, it suddenly pushes the bleak and desolate scenery to the reader's eyes, giving people an unforgettable impression. The poet writes about the moonlight in the atrium, only using the word "ground white", but it gives people a sense of stagnant water, emptiness, clarity and purity, and coldness.
-
The euphemistic and subtle lyrical technique of borrowing the scenery uses rich imagination and vivid language to render the affectionate and long artistic conception of the Mid-Autumn Festival, and express the affection of parting thoughts and gatherings euphemistically and movingly.
-
1 Pushing oneself and others expands the scope of those who look at the moon.
2. Writing about acacia is not a positive description, but a method of 'wanting to say this, talking about him', which is written with profound implications and euphemism and moving.
-
The poet began to write "earth" and "crow", but not the moon, but let us clearly feel the existence of the moon, because "the ground is white" and "perched crow" is the result of the moon shining, since the ground is as white as frost, and the perching crow can be seen, it can be seen that although the poet did not write "moonlight", but we feel "the moon is bright and clean" everywhere, so it is a real "white earth", "perched crow", fictional "moonlight", and the poem title of "looking at the moon".
-
This poem is a seven-character quatrain, and the seven quatrains are divided into two categories, combined into four sentence patterns:
There are two kinds of positive case flat style: 1, flat and flat, the first sentence rhymes, 2, flat and close, the first sentence does not rhyme, and there are two kinds of partial case: 1, the first sentence rhymes, 2, the first sentence does not rhyme.
This poem presents a picture of a lonely, deserted, and quiet Mid-Autumn Festival night. The bright moonlight shone on the courtyard, and the ground seemed to be covered with a layer of frost. The crows and magpies on the trees had fallen asleep, and the dew of the autumn night was coldly falling, wetting the osmanthus flowers in the court.
This elegant, quiet and beautiful picture can't help but tempt people to reverie: tonight, everyone in the world is looking up at the bright moon, but I don't know whose house the thick sorrow of autumn falls? This poem expresses the homesickness of the Mid-Autumn Festival night.
-
The understanding of poetry focuses on the description of artistic conception and the space for thinking, which is that people often only open one window, and the rest depends on the reader's imagination.
-
"Fifteen Nights Looking at the Moon" depicts the moonlight on the night of the Mid-Autumn Festival and the mood of looking at the moon and cherishing people, showing a picture of a lonely, lonely and quiet Mid-Autumn Festival night. It expresses the author's homesickness.
-
"Fifteen Nights Looking at the Moon" is a poem created by the Tang Dynasty poet Wang Jian, which is based on the Mid-Autumn Festival moonlit night.
This poem presents a picture of a lonely, bleak, and quiet Mid-Autumn Festival night. The last two sentences of the moon tonight are full of hope, and I don't know whose house the autumn thoughts fall are often sung by later generations.
In the whole world, who does not look at the moon and is homesick, I don't know whose side the autumn thoughts fall on tonight The poet pushes himself and others, expands the scope of the moon-watcher, and the realm is lofty; is obviously pregnant with his own people, but he says "who is the family in autumn", and the expression is euphemistic. It expresses extremely strong feelings of homesickness and homesickness. The poet uses figurative language and rich imagination to render the specific environmental atmosphere of the Mid-Autumn Festival and the moon, bringing the reader into the artistic conception of a bright moon and a long and affectionate thought. >>>More
Good people are not in extraordinary times.
The atrium is white arboreal crows, and the cold dew is silent wet osmanthus. >>>More
Appreciation: Playing with the moon refers to enjoying the moon under the moon, that is, appreciating the moon. Qi Bai's poem on admiring the moon is written very condensedly, the text is popular and easy, the rhyme is excellent and soft, and the moonscape on the night of August 15 is delicately and vividly depicted, like a freehand painting with a flowing spirit. >>>More
Fairy tale "The Garden of the Giants".
The Garden of Giants (Oscar Wilde's fairy tales) generally refers to the self-pretending giants (Oscar Wilde's fairy tales) "The Selfish Giant" is a work of children's land and air talk created by the British aesthetic writer Oscar Wilde, which tells the story of the selfish giant who becomes generous from selfishness and finally enters heaven under the guidance of God. >>>More