Current location - Education and Training Encyclopedia - Graduation thesis - From which poem does Jiang Feng Fishing for Fire and Sleeping? Who wrote it?
From which poem does Jiang Feng Fishing for Fire and Sleeping? Who wrote it?
A night-mooring near maple bridge by Zhang Ji in Tang Dynasty.

The Origin of a night-mooring near maple bridge —— Tang Dynasty: Zhang Ji

Crows fell on the moon, crowed coldly, slept on maple trees, and slept in fishing lanes by the river.

In the lonely Hanshan Temple outside Suzhou, the bell that rang in the middle of the night reached the passenger ship.

The moon has set, crows crow all over the sky, the maple trees on the river and the fishing fires on the boat make it difficult for me to sleep alone. In the lonely and quiet Hanshan Temple outside Gusu, the bell that rang in the middle of the night reached the passenger ship I was riding.

Extended data

1, the creative background of night parking near Fengqiao

An Shi Rebellion broke out in January of Tianbao 14th year. Because the political situation in Jiangnan was relatively stable at that time, many scribes fled to Jiangsu and Zhejiang to avoid chaos, including Zhang Ji. One autumn night, the poet anchored at Fengqiao outside Suzhou. The beautiful scenery of autumn night in Jiangnan water town attracted the traveler with travel worries and made him write this poem with clear artistic conception.

2. Introduction to the author of a night-mooring near maple bridge.

Zhang Ji is knowledgeable, talkative and knowledgeable. Making friends with Huang Furan is more affectionate than Kundi. In the 12th year of Tianbao (AD 753), he was a scholar. However, the civil servant chose the last place and returned home. In the first year of Tang Daizong, Li Yubao (AD 762), 10, the government forces recovered the two capitals, and Zhang Ji was hired as Yuan Wailang and sent to Xifu. From then on, he abandoned his pen and joined the army. Later, he became a proofreader, promoted a proofreader, and finally became a salt and iron judge.

Divide the wealth of the flood state. At the end of the Dali period, Zhang Ji died of illness only after serving as a salt and iron judge for more than a year. He was honest and clean, and later his wife died in his place. Zhang's collection of poems, Zhang's Genealogy, has been handed down to later generations and carved into words, among which a night-mooring near maple bridge is the most famous.