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What is the first or last sentence of "Chyi Chin's painting, calligraphy, poetry, wine and tea"?

The last sentence of "Chyi Chin's Painting, Calligraphy, Poetry, Wine and Tea" is "Everything in those days can't be separated from it", which comes from the poem about Lian Po written by the poet Cha in Qing Dynasty.

The content of the whole poem is: "Qinqi, calligraphy, painting and poetry are all hops, and everything in that year could not be separated from it;" Now seven things have changed, rice, oil, salt, sauce, vinegar and tea. "

It means: playing the piano, playing chess, reading, painting, reciting poems, drinking and enjoying flowers. These things used to stick with me every day when I was young; Now these seven pastimes have changed, replaced by rice, oil and salt, soy sauce, vinegar and tea.

Extended data

Gradually, many trivial things in life will emerge one after another instead of romantic things. We should learn to manage a family's eating and drinking.

Tea (1695 ~ 1749), also known as lay poet, was a poet in Qing dynasty.

Cha Weiren bought books extensively here and made friends with famous domestic scholars. Famous writers, scholars and poets, such as Hang Shijun, Jiangling and Li E, once lived in Shuixizhuang, or recited poems, or devoted themselves to painting and calligraphy, or devoted themselves to classics, or wrote books, or appreciated epigraphy, calligraphy and picture books, which produced a large number of poems, articles, calligraphy and paintings, making Shuixizhuang an important town of ancient Tianjin literature and art.

In the appreciation and evaluation of poetry, it is permeated with its own unique aesthetic views and values, opposing formalism and retro-ism in poetry circles, advocating "different spirit", advocating original spirit, respecting fresh and natural poetic style, and positioning itself in the "light and eternal" aesthetic realm.

References:

Baidu Encyclopedia-Lian Po Poetry Talk