Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - What is what we hope, flying in heaven, two birds growing together on the earth with one wing, two branches of a tree. Mean?

What is what we hope, flying in heaven, two birds growing together on the earth with one wing, two branches of a tree. Mean?

We hope to fly in the sky, like two birds, have the wings of the same bird and grow together on the ground, like two branches of a tree. I plan to be a bird flying in the sky with me and a branch on the ground.

Source: Tang Bai Juyi's Song of Eternal Sorrow: "On the seventh day of July, in the Palace of Eternal Life, we secretly told each other in the quiet midnight world. We hope to fly in heaven, two birds become one, grow on the earth, two branches of a tree ... the earth lasts forever, and the sky lasts forever; One day both will end, and this endless sorrow will continue forever. "

At that time, in the middle of the night on the seventh day of July, there was no one in the hall of eternal life, so we made a pledge of eternal love. In heaven, I would like to be a bird flying with me. On earth, I would like to grow branches together. Even if it lasts forever, there will always be an end, but this life-and-death feud will never end.

Extended data

Appreciation of Song of Eternal Sorrow;

The Song of Eternal Sorrow gives people the enjoyment of artistic beauty, which is the exquisite artistic conception of the poem. The center of the whole article is "Song of Eternal Sorrow", but the poet tries his best to write and render it with "thick ink and heavy color" as the starting point.

Song of Eternal Sorrow is a narrative poem with strong lyrical elements. The poet adopted the expression technique of China's traditional poetry, which is good at telling stories and portraying characters, and harmoniously combined narrative, scenery description and lyricism, forming the lyric characteristics of poetry.

Poets make the characters' thoughts and feelings more profound and rich through layer-by-layer rendering, repeated lyricism and repetition, and make the poems "delicate in texture" and more artistic in appeal.