The meaning of the ancient poem Yu Gezi is as follows:
1. The meaning of Yu Gezi (ancient poem): Egrets are flying freely in front of Xisai Mountain, peach blossoms are blooming on the river bank, the spring water is rising, and the water is Mandarin fish is plump. The fisherman, wearing a green bamboo hat and a green coir raincoat, braved the slanting wind and drizzle to fish happily. He was fascinated by the beautiful spring scenery in the south of the Yangtze River and refused to leave for a long time.
2. Fisherman's Song - Zhang Zhihe's original text: Egrets fly in front of Xisai Mountain, and peach blossoms and flowing water make mandarin fish fat. Green bamboo hat, green coir raincoat, slanting wind and drizzle do not need to return. This poem describes the fishing scene during the spring flood season in the Jiangnan water town. There are distinct colors of mountains and waters, and the image of a fisherman. It is a landscape painting written in poetry.
Yu Gezi
"Yu Gezi", the name of the Ci brand, was originally a monotonous twenty-seven characters with a flat rhyme. There are three sentences or two in the middle, using duality as an example. Later, this tune was mostly used as double tune. "Zi" means "qu", and "Yu Ge Zi" means "Yu Ge Zi". This tune was first seen in "Yu Ge Zi: Egrets Flying in Front of Xisai Mountain" by Zhang Zhihe, a poet of the Tang Dynasty. Zhang Zhihe's "Fisher's Song" is like a rainbow bridge between China and Japan.
It is recorded in "History of Japanese Lyrics": About forty-nine years after Zhang Zhihe wrote "Yu Gezi" (AD 823, that is, the fourteenth year of Hirohito in the Heian Dynasty of Japan) the biography of lyrics To Japan. "The Fisherman's Song", also known as "The Fisherman", "The Fisherman's Music" and "The Fisherman's Ci", was the original name of the Tang Jiaofang song. Later, people wrote lyrics based on it and it became the name of the lyrics. Enter the "Huang Zhong Palace".