Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - The significance of Jiang Xue's poem ~ ~

The significance of Jiang Xue's poem ~ ~

Xue Jiang

Birds fly in Qian Shan, but there are no footprints in thousands of miles.

A boat on the river, a fisherman wearing his webworm moth; Fishing alone is not afraid of snow and ice.

Jiang Xue, a work written by Liu Zongyuan after he was relegated to Yongzhou, has always been read by people. This little poem expresses ambition. With extremely refined writing, the author outlines a fisherman fishing alone on the snowy river, artistically summarizes the sinister political environment he was in at that time, and shows his strong will not to be afraid, not to yield to the dark forces and his noble quality of not being in cahoots.

The scenery written in the poem is: peaks, no birds, no paths, and no human footprints. The whole land was covered with snow, and an old fisherman in hemp fiber and hat was fishing alone on the Han River. Look, what a vivid picture it is to fish alone in the cold river! What does this picture mean? As we all know, there will never be "pure" landscape poems or landscape paintings in works of art, and in them, the author's feelings and realistic content will always be more or less reflected. In fact, the best in landscape poetry, though full of flowers and birds, is full of mist, but every word must be like a scene, and the sound and taste are always sentimental. This poem is no exception. As long as you know Liu Zongyuan's life experience, you can see this.