Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - The 24 Solar Terms - Grain Rain's most famous poem.

Grain Rain's most famous poem.

The famous ancient poem describing Grain Rain is Grain Rain written by Liu Yuxi, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. The original text and translation are as follows:

Original: divide the yin and cherish, and the evening scenery is good. The forest is smoky and the balcony in Grain Rain is sunny.

Every minute should be doubly cherished, and the sunset scenery is also suitable for catering and enjoying. In the wilderness, the warm southeast wind has blown; In front of the pavilions, the beautiful Grain Rain season ushered in sunny weather.

Liu Yuxi is a bold and unrestrained poet and is known as a poet. Liu Yuxi's poetry is clear because of its implicit and deep connotation, open and generous realm and lofty and upward emotion. Liu Yuxi has been demoted to the south for many times, and the south is also a popular place for folk songs, so Liu Yuxi often collects folk songs and learns his style to create poems.

Appreciation of Grain Rain's Works

"When you are divided into Yin, you should cherish it and be good at welcoming it." These two sentences mean that we must cherish every minute, and the evening scenery is also suitable for catering and enjoying. It's time to write about Grain Rain. It's time for Grain Rain, and it's already the tail of late spring. When spring is about to pass, the poet thinks that we should cherish the last spring scenery more, and must not hurt the feeling of spring and miss the appreciation of the evening scenery.

Although spring is short, we should cherish it; Although the evening performance is late, we still have to invite it. This is the attitude that life should have. We should face it calmly, always be optimistic and embrace life. "Smoke in the forest, sunny balcony in Grain Rain." In the wilderness, a warm southeast wind blew; In front of the pavilions, the beautiful Grain Rain season ushered in sunny weather.

Refer to the above content: Kaifeng. It is Liu Yuxi, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, who appreciates Grain Rain in Grain Rain's solar terms.