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Ancient Poems of Tang Du Fu
Ching Ming [ Tang ] Du Fu

This is the day when the flowers are in full bloom, and thousands of people come out of Changsha. The willow at the end of the ferry is so bright and colorful, and the road is so proud of its hooves that it makes you feel sorry for your knees.

This is a good time to visit the Xiangxi Temple, and all the generals have come from the army. The first thing I want to do is to get a good look at the newest and most important thing I want to do is to get a good look at the newest and most important thing I want to do.

The evening of the golden stirrups, the turning of the roof, and the distance of the green house. I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to do this, but I'm sure I'll be able to do it, and I'm sure I'll be able to do it.

While my brother and nephew are not allowed to write a book, I have yet to rest from the war. I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to do that, but I'm sure I'm going to be able to do it, and I'm sure I'm going to be able to do it.

Du Fu (712-770), Zimei, a Han Chinese, was a native of Xiangyang and later migrated to Gong County, Henan Province. He was called Shaoling Ye Lao, a great realist poet of the Tang Dynasty, and together with Li Bai, they were known as "Li Du". In order to distinguish himself from the other two poets, Li Shangyin and Du Mu, who were known as "Li Du", Du Fu and Li Bai were also known as "Li Du", and Du Fu was often referred to as "Lao Du".

Du Fu's influence in classical Chinese poetry is so far-reaching that he has been called the "Sage of Poetry" by later generations, and his poems have been called the "History of Poetry". His poems are known as the "History of Poetry". The later generations called him Du Picked Up and Du Gongbu, and also called him Du Shaoling and Du Cao Tang.

Du Fu composed such masterpieces as Spring Hope, Northern Expedition, Three Officials, and Three Farewells. In the second year of Qianyuan (759), Du Fu abandoned his official post and went to Sichuan. Although he escaped the war and lived a relatively stable life, he still cared about the people and the country. Although Du Fu was a realist poet, he also had a wild and uninhibited side, and it is not difficult to see Du Fu's boldness from his masterpiece "Song of the Eight Immortals in the Drink".

Du Fu's ideology was centered on Confucianism's idea of benevolence and government, and he had a grand ambition to "make the customs simple again". Although Du Fu was not well known when he was alive, his reputation spread far and wide, and he had a profound influence on both Chinese and Japanese literature. About 1,500 poems of Du Fu*** have been preserved, most of which are collected in the Du Gongfu ji (Collection of Du Gongfu).