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"Plugged Song" Wang Changling

author:Zhengya poetry
"Plugged Song" Wang Changling

"Plugged in"

Cicadas chirping in the air mulberry forest, August Xiaoguan Road.

Plug out and back into the plug, everywhere yellow reed grass.

Never secluded, all to the battlefield old.

Mo Xue Ranger, praise Zi Lu good.

"Cicadas chirping in the air, August Xiao Guan Dao." "Empty mulberry forest" refers to the mulberry forest where the leaves have withered; "Xiaoguan", the ancient traffic fortress between Guanzhong and Saibei. This joint means: knowing the screaming in the dry mulberry forest, the Xiaoguan Road in August is cool and the autumn business loan is high.

"Plug out and back in, yellow reed grass everywhere." "After leaving the plug, the weather became colder, and the outside of the Kannai Pass was full of yellow and yellow reeds.

"Never a stranger, always to the battlefield old." "Youhe" refers to Youzhou and Merged State. This joint meaning is: Since ancient times, Haojie in Shanxi, Hebei Province, has been accompanied by dust and yellow sand until old age.

"Mo Xue Ranger, praise Zi Lu is good." "Ranger" refers to a person who is brave and arrogant and often provokes wrongdoing; "boastful", proud and boastful; "purple horse", generally referring to horses. This association means: Mo Xue's self-proclaimed and brave ranger, pretentiously boasting of the horse.

Wang Changling's Biansai poems stand out from the tang poetry and are praised by people. This "Plugged Song" was composed by the poet when he was roaming the northwest frontier in his early years, and the poem was written by the conquest of the border and did not return, but warned the teenager not to exaggerate the force, expressing the meaning of anti-war. (Three Hundred Poems of Tang Dynasty)

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