This sentence comes from the Song of the Peach Blossom Temple written by Tang Yin, a poet in the Tang Dynasty.
The picture of the whole poem is gorgeous and elegant, the style is elegant and handsome, and the melody returns to the sky and dances with snow, which means mellow and profound. Although my eyes are full of fragrant words such as flowers, peaches, wine and drunkenness, there is no vulgar meaning, but the brushwork is straight through the back of the paper, which makes people suddenly realize. This is the strength of Tang Yin's poetry painting, and this poem is Tang Yin's masterpiece.
The poem depicts two scenes, one is the life scene of Hou Lu, a senior official in the Han Dynasty, and the other is the life scene of Tang Yin himself in the Ming Dynasty. Only a dozen words, such as "bow before horses and chariots", "dusty" and "mediocre", vividly outline the life scenes of famous officials and rich people in Ming Dynasty. Tang Yin's own life scenes are described in detail, such as "planting peach trees", "picking peach blossoms in exchange for wine money", "sleeping in the flower room before getting drunk", "I wish I would die of old age in the wine room rather than bow down to the front of horses and chariots" and "drinking snuff is the fate of a hermit". Readers can appreciate and evaluate which of the two paintings is better or worse.
The whole poem has distinct levels, simple and euphemistic language, and is almost a folk monologue. However, it is this kind of monologue that contains infinite artistic tension and gives people endless aesthetic enjoyment and strong sense of identity. It deserves to be the best in Tang Yin's poems. This also coincides with Han Yu's "the voice of peace is weak, and the voice of sorrow and joy is wonderful;" Happy words are hard to write, and poor words are easy to write well "("net talk about singing and poem preface ").
The two most prominent and impressive images in this poem are "flowers" and "wine". Peach Blossom was first seen in literary works, and Yao Tao, originally written in The Book of Songs Nan Zhou, was intended to express a free and unrestrained emotion. As soon as Tao Yuanming's Peach Blossom Garden came out, peach blossoms were more used to express their secluded feelings. In ancient times, peach also had the meaning of exorcising ghosts and evil spirits. "Peach" is homophonic with "escape" because of its meaning of avoiding the world. In Tang Yin's poems, the image of "peach blossom" appears frequently.