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What are the poems about Chang 'e?

The poem about "Chang 'e" is as follows:

Chang 'e, I must regret eating the elixir, and now I am alone, in the blue sky, singing every night. Chang 'e by Li Shangyin, a poet in Tang Dynasty.

If you don't smile on the moon, there should be no traces of stealing drugs through the ages. From Wang Yucheng's "Yunxian Goose Peak in Hefeng"

The white rabbit plays medicine in autumn, revives in spring, and Chang 'e lives alone with whom. From Li Bai's "asking for the moon asks his old friend Jia Chunling" in Tang Dynasty.

In the evening, the emperor gave candles to faint, and Chang 'e harvested the moon and planted cassia twigs. From where? Mei's Thirty-eight Miscellaneous Questions of Fan and Tang and Their Rhymes (Twenty Candles)

The Goddess Chang's fly to the moon

Explanation:

1. Also called Chang 'e. Legend has it that Hou Yi's wife rose from the earth to the moon.

I invited the elixir of life to the Queen Mother of the West, and Chang 'e secretly went to the moon. -"Looking for God"

3. Post-metaphor beauty

Related poems:

Chang'e

Tang Dynasty: Li Shangyin

The mica screen was dyed red by thick candles, and the Milky Way gradually tilted towards the morning star.

Chang 'e, I must regret eating the elixir, and now I am alone, in the blue sky, singing every night.

Appreciate:

Through the screen decorated with mica, the shadow of the candle gradually faded. The Milky Way is also quietly disappearing, and the morning star sinks into the dawn. Chang 'e in the Moon Palace may regret stealing Houyi's elixir of life. Now only the blue sky and blue sea accompany her with a lonely heart every night. This is a satirical poem, satirizing those who believe in immortals and seek immortality, and satirizing those who abandon love and seek the Long March. Taking Chang 'e as an example, the author said that she always tasted loneliness in the moon palace after stealing the fairy medicine to become immortal. The author disapproves of Chang 'e's idea of sacrificing secular love life for immortality.

Allusions:

Chang 'e is the daughter of Di Ku (Emperor Jun), one of the three emperors and five emperors in ancient times, and the wife of Hou Yi (Yi Yi). She is called Heng E because of her extraordinary beauty. She was renamed Chang 'e and Chang 'e in the Western Han Dynasty to avoid the taboo of China Emperor Liu Heng. It is said that Chang 'e and Hou Yi started monogamy. In order to commemorate them, later generations interpreted the story of the Goddess Chang'e flying to the moon, and many folk legends, poems and songs were circulated. In myths and legends, Chang 'e went to the moon to become immortal and lived in the Guanghan Palace above the moon because she stole the elixir of life obtained by the Queen Mother of the West. Before the Eastern Han Dynasty, there was no data showing that Chang 'e and Hou Yi were husband and wife. It was not until Gaoyou annotated Huai Nan Zi that Chang 'e was the wife of Hou Yi. Later, in Taoist mythology, Chang 'e and Xing Jun, the moon god, became one. Taoism regards the moon as the essence of Yin, respects it as the Empress of the Moon, or the Emperor of the Moon Palace as a filial and wise king, and creates female idols.