laitimes

The famous sentence of Li Shangyin, a famous poet of the Tang Dynasty: In the dust of the world, I would rather love and hate

author:Wen Ruohe speech training

Good morning, friends! Today's daily sentence, recommend the famous sentence of Li Shangyin, a famous poet of the Tang Dynasty, for friends:

In the dust of the world, I would rather love and hate.

This sentence is from Li Shangyin's "Beiqingluo", and the full text is:

Qingluo, a plant that grows on cliffs, refers to the mountain here; 崦, 崦嵫 (z), a mountain located in Gansu, refers to the place where the sun sets in ancient times. The meaning of this poem is:

The remnants of the sun fell into the mountains, and I went to visit a monk who lived alone in a hut. Along the way, the leaves fell without knowing where the monks were, and they winded up the mountain road surrounded by cold clouds, and they didn't know how much they had walked.

Finally I met the monk, who was chanting alone in the darkness of the night, and I leisurely leaned against a green vine to talk to him.

This is a heart-warming poem, and the picture depicted in the poem is also very substitutionary. It seems that we ourselves, dragging a tired and bored body in the world, climbing the landscape and feeling our own smallness in the vastness of nature, while also looking down on the love and hatred of the secular world, thus gaining peace of mind.

In speech and communication,

For example, we can say something like this: "Li Shangyin, a great poet of the Tang Dynasty, said: 'In the dust of the world, I would rather love and hate.' If confined to our own little world, our love and hatred may be everything. If we look at the wider world as a backdrop, we will find that our little things may not be a thing at all. ”

share:

Read on