"Lagerstroemia"? Du Mu of the Tang Dynasty
A new branch greets the autumn dew at dawn, not occupying the highest spring in the garden.
What's the matter with the speechless peaches and plums? The sun is smiling towards the wind.
One branch of crape myrtle bloomed near autumn. Although beautiful, it did not catch up with spring and was not the most beautiful flower in the garden.
Those peaches and plums that were once so fruitful have long since become history, and the crape myrtle has its own fun behind these flowers.
This poem can especially be used to symbolize the social style and poetry of the late Tang Dynasty.
In fact, if flowers are used to describe the poems of the early, prosperous, middle and late Tang Dynasties, crape myrtle flowers can exactly represent the characteristics of the poems of the late Tang Dynasty.
Beautiful, but thin (one branch) and delicate.