The full content of the poem "The apes on both sides of the Taiwan Strait can't stop crying" is as follows:
"Early Departure from Baidi City" Tang Dynasty: Li Bai
Chao Ci Ci Baidi Among the colorful clouds, a thousand miles of rivers and mountains return in one day.
The apes on both sides of the strait can't stop crying, and the boat has passed the Ten Thousand Mountains.
Interpretation:
In the early morning, I bid farewell to Baidi City, which is high in the sky. Jiangling is thousands of miles away, and the boat trip only takes one day.
The sounds of apes on both sides of the strait are still ringing in my ears, and before I know it, the boat has passed through thousands of green mountains.
Appreciation:
The whole poem "Early Departure from Baidi City" gives people a sense of sharpness, elegance and flying. However, one cannot fully understand the whole poem just by looking at the boldness of its momentum and the sharpness of its writing. The whole poem is filled with a kind of passion that suddenly burst out of the poet after going through difficult years, so there is pride and joy in the majesty and speed. The pleasure of the clipper leaves readers with a broad space for imagination. In order to express his cheerful mood, the poet also specially used the "Jian", "Huan" and "山" in the flat "deletion" rhyme to make the rhyme, making the whole poem appear particularly melodious, brisk and with a long aftertaste.
Background:
In the spring of the second year of Qianyuan (759) of Emperor Suzong of the Tang Dynasty, Li Bai was exiled to Yelang due to the case of Yong Wang Li Lin, and rushed to the place where he was demoted via Sichuan. When I arrived at Baidi City, I suddenly received the news of the pardon. I was so surprised that I immediately took a boat east to Jiangling. This poem was written when the boat arrived at Jiangling, so the poem is titled "Going Down to Jiangling". Predecessors once thought that this poem was written by Li Bai when he was a young man in Shu. However, according to the poetic meaning of "A Thousand Miles to Jiangling Return in a Day", Li Bai once went up to the Three Gorges from Jiangling. Therefore, this poem should have been written when he returned.
Author:
Li Bai (701-762), courtesy name Taibai and Qinglian Jushi, was a romantic poet of the Tang Dynasty and was hailed as the "Immortal of Poetry" by later generations. His ancestral home is Longxi Chengji (to be tested). He was born in Suiye City in the Western Regions. He moved with his father to Mianzhou, Jiannan Road when he was 4 years old. Li Bai has more than a thousand poems and essays in existence, and the "Collection of Li Taibai" has been handed down to the world. He died of illness in 762 at the age of 61. His tomb is in Dangtu, Anhui today, and there are memorial halls in Jiangyou, Sichuan, and Anlu, Hubei.
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