The butterflies in the lingering drama dance from time to time, and the charming Yinger just crows freely. Commentary: The butterflies in the fragrant flowers have been flying, and the free and soft oriole just cried with joy. Usually used to praise the beautiful scenery in spring. Source: Tang Du Fu's No.6 "Looking for Flowers Alone by the River".
Lingering: lingering. I don't want to leave. Comfort: Ease and comfort. Cha-cha: Onomatopoeia, singing. Butterflies wandering in the first couplet often play and fly among the flowers. Comfortable and complacent beautiful orioles crow in Chen Wenjing.
Seven poems "Looking for Flowers Alone by the River". The first four poems describe the feelings of being tired of flowers, afraid of spring, welcoming spring and pitying flowers respectively. The last three songs show the joy of Shang Huashi, implying that it is difficult to stay in spring. The whole poem is a unique flower-seeking picture with clear context and orderly levels, which shows Du Fu's love for flowers, lingering for a better life and unchanging hope for beautiful things.
This poem narrates the scene and feelings of Shang Huashi, a girl from Huangsi Temple, depicts the splendid spring scenery around the thatched cottage, and expresses her love and comfort for beautiful things. The beauty of spring flowers, the cordial harmony between man and nature, are all on paper. The first sentence points out that the place to look for flowers is on the path of "Huangsiniangjia". This sentence is written in a poem by a famous person, which has a strong interest in life and a folk song flavor.
Writing characteristics
1, this poem is about enjoying the scenery, which is very common in the quatrains of the prosperous Tang Dynasty. However, it is rare to see such a poem with a very delicate description and unusually beautiful colors. Syntactically, most of the poems in the prosperous Tang Dynasty were naturally mixed, but Du Fu was different from them. For example, "antithesis" (later couplets) is the style of quatrains in the early Tang Dynasty, and there are few quatrains in the prosperous Tang Dynasty, because it is difficult to achieve a perfect ending.
In addition, these two sentences should be made according to customary grammar: butterflies dance when they stay, and yinger crows freely. Putting "Linglian" and "Freedom" at the beginning of a sentence is not only for phonological needs, but also for semantic emphasis, which makes the meaning easier to understand and the syntax more novel and changeable.