Lin Jie
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Lin Jie (831-847), a poet of the Tang Dynasty, was named Zhizhou, fujianren. There are two poems in the complete Tang poetry, Qiqiao and wangxiantan.
Life of the characters
Lin Jie has been brilliant since he was a child. At the age of six, he was able to write poems, write a chapter, and master calligraphy and chess. He died at the age of 16. There are two poems in the whole Tang poetry, among which Qiqiao is a famous poem written by Lin Jie, a poet of the Tang Dynasty, about the Qixi Festival.
It is said that Lin Jie, when he was young, was also very interested in wonderful legends like Qiqiao, just like his mother or other women. Looking up at the brilliant Tianhe in the far-reaching night sky, watching the two dazzling stars on both sides of the Tianhe, looking forward to seeing the two stars together, I wrote the poem "Qiqiao".
The seventh night of the seventh month of the lunar calendar is commonly known as "Qixi", also known as "daughter's Day" and "maiden's Day". It is the day when Niulang and Zhinu meet on the magpie bridge across the "Tianhe" in legend. In the past, Qixi's folk activities were mainly begging for skillful hands. The so-called begging for skillful hands means begging for a pair of skillful hands from Zhinu. The most common way of begging for skillfulness is to put a needle through the moon. If the thread passes through the pinhole, it is called dexterous. This custom is the most popular in Tang and Song dynasties.
personal works
Qiqiao
Tanabata tonight to see Bixiao, morning glory Weaver across the bridge.
Every family looks at the autumn moon and wears tens of thousands of red silk.
Wang Xiantan
The badminton has gone to the immortal Road, and the grass and trees in the Danlu have withered away.
I don't know when the thousand years will come back, but when the empty envoy comes, people sweep the old altar.
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sentence
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Take off the gold plate and hang up the pearls. Drink the jade slurry when the red shell is open. (see chronicle for litchi)
Chinese PinYin : Lin Jie
Lin Jie