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Johnny's poems

This poem is Lin Jie's Begging for the Spirit in the Tang Dynasty. The translation of the whole poem is as follows: Looking up at the blue sky on Tanabata night, it seems that the cowherd and the weaver girl meet on the magpie bridge across the Tianhe River. Every household is looking at the autumn moon while trying to be clever (threading a needle on the moon), and there are tens of thousands of red lines that pass through it.

The original poem is as follows:

See Bixiao tonight on Tanabata, and cross the river bridge with the cowherd and the weaver girl. ?

Every family watches the autumn moon, and every family wears HongLing.

Note: Qiao Qi is an ancient festival, which falls on the seventh day of the seventh lunar month, also known as Qixi. Blue sky refers to the boundless blue sky. Thousands. There are many metaphors.

Extended data

About the author: Lin Jie (831-847), a Fujian native, was a poet in the Tang Dynasty. When I was a child, I was very smart. You can write poetry at the age of six, and once you write it, it becomes a chapter. He is also good at calligraphy and chess. Death, only seventeen years old. Qiao Qi is a famous poem written by Lin Jie, a poet in Tang Dynasty, which describes the grand occasion of folk Qixi.

On the evening of the seventh day of the seventh lunar month, commonly known as Qixi, it is also called Daughter's Day and Daughter's Day. It is the legendary day when the Cowherd and the Weaver Girl meet on the bridge across the "Tianhe". In the past, the folk activities of Tanabata were mainly about seeking cleverness. The so-called begging for wisdom is asking the Weaver Girl for a pair of skillful hands. The most common way to beg for wisdom is to put a needle on the moon. If the line passes through a pinhole, it is called cleverness.

"Today's Tanabata, I see the blue sky. I want to lead the cow and the weaver girl across the river bridge." "Blue sky" refers to the boundless blue sky. The first two sentences describe the folk stories of the Cowherd and the Weaver Girl. The annual Chinese Valentine's Day is coming again, and people in every household can't help looking up at the vast sky. This is because this beautiful legend has touched a kind and beautiful heart and aroused people's beautiful wishes and rich imagination.

"Every family watches the autumn moon, and every family wears HongLing." The last two sentences explain the clever things clearly, concisely and vividly. Poets do not specifically write out various wishes in their poems, but leave room for imagination, which more and more reflects people's joy at festivals.

The poem "Begging for Wisdom" is an intensive reading text in Group 8, Book 6, People's Education Press. This set of teaching materials is arranged around the theme of folk stories and myths and legends. It involves well-known myths and legends, bringing students back to the joy of listening to adult stories when they were young, and fully feeling the rich imagination of the ancients.