Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - The grass of the white sand river is as thick as dust, and the shadows are as high as the grassy pavilion. What does this phrase mean?

The grass of the white sand river is as thick as dust, and the shadows are as high as the grassy pavilion. What does this phrase mean?

What is the meaning of the phrase "The grasses of the Baisha River are aspired to be aspired to be"

From the poem by Gu Zi (顾况), which is about the Venerable Master of Splendor (gu zheng)

Who is the one whom the guests want to ask?

The tree in front of the temple was planted by Mr. Sheng's hand, but the only thing that blossomed was the sadness of the hawk-cuckoo.

Gu Fong's life:

Gu Fong (ca. 727-ca. 815) was a Han Chinese, a native of Hengshan, Haiyan, Suzhou (now in Haining, Zhejiang Province), and a poet, painter, and connoisseur of the Tang Dynasty. He was a poet, painter, and connoisseur of the Tang Dynasty. He was not a high official in his life, and was once a writer, but he was relegated to the position of a military officer in Raozhou because of his poems that mocked and offended the rich and powerful. In his later years, he lived in seclusion in Maoshan Mountain.

The second half of the poem was never found on the Internet, but I did find the line "Sinister guest high and low knot grass pavilion."

The two sentences are linked together:

The first half of the sentence describes the scenery. White sand (I think it's a place name?) River grass (green grass by the river) Koji (Koji has the meaning of yellow) Dusty silk (willow silk, willow branches). In a certain place, the willow silk has become goose-yellow.

The second half of the sentence is probably narrative. Together they are:

The green grass by the river in Baisha County, the willow leaves have become goose-yellow willow silk fluttering. Willow silk with the wind blowing high and low swaying, entangled together, like a thatched pavilion. (It can also be done that the willows are blown by the breeze to the thatched garden.)

2. The green grass by the river in Baisha County, and the willow leaves have become goose-yellow willow silk. Here, there are women dressing up (or tying up their hair in buns) in thatched pavilions of different heights.

3. The green grass by the river in Baisha County and the willow leaves that have become goose-yellow. Here, there are women tying the knot in thatched pavilions of different heights. How do I feel some strange ......

0.0 How to translate how strange, my first year, rusty, bad do not blame.