What does it mean to be in a foreign land?

In this sentence, it means loneliness, but its meaning is different. A foreign land refers to a place different from home, that is, a foreign land. Being a stranger means being a guest in another country. This sentence comes from the Tang Dynasty poet Wang Wei's "Mountain Festival Thinking of My Shandong Brothers". The original poem is as follows:

I am a lonely stranger in a strange land, and I miss my family more often during the holidays.

When I think of my brothers' bodies climbing high, I will feel a little regret for not being able to reach me. ?

In the vernacular, it means that a person can't reunite with his family when he is far away from home, and he misses his distant relatives more every Double Ninth Festival. Far away, I feel sorry for myself when I think of my brothers climbing high with dogwood.

Extended data

I wrote this poem because I miss my relatives in my hometown on the Double Ninth Festival. Wang Wei lives in Zhou Pu, east of Huashan Mountain, so it's called Remembering Shandong Brothers. When he wrote this poem, he probably sought fame in Chang 'an. Although the bustling imperial capital was very attractive to young literati who were keen on official career at that time, it was a "foreign land" for a young wanderer after all. The more bustling and lively, the more lonely and helpless the wanderer is in the vast sea of people.

The first sentence uses a word "unique" and two words "different", which is sufficient. My thoughts about my loved ones and my feelings about my lonely situation are all condensed in the word "independence". "Being a stranger in a foreign land" only refers to being a guest in another country, but the artistic effect caused by the word "different" is much stronger than that caused by the general description of being a guest in another country.

In three or four sentences, if we just think about how brothers climb mountains and wear dogwood in the Double Ninth Festival, but they are alone in a foreign land and can't participate, although they write about their homesickness in the festival, they will appear straightforward and lack freshness and affection. The poet thought in the distance: "There is one person missing from the dogwood." Brothers far away from home all wore horns when climbing the mountain today, only to find that one brother was missing-he was not among them.

It seems that it is not a pity that I failed to spend the holidays with my brothers in my hometown, but that my brothers failed to reunite completely during the holidays; It seems that it is not worth saying that a person is a stranger in a foreign land, but the shortcomings of brothers need to be understood.