Afterword
Aftertone, a Chinese word, refers to the sound that seems to remain in the ear after the music is played.
Interpretation of words
Pinyin: y ú y ī n explanation: refers to the sound that seems to remain in the ear after the music is played
Citation explanation
(1) . the sound is endless. Singing or playing is very touching.
In the Han Dynasty, Zhang Heng's "Si Xuan Fu" said: "the plain girl caresses the string, but the rest of her voice is still lingering. It's so beautiful to sing Han Wang praised "Ode to Dongxiao": "the article is smooth, the integrity is clear, and the final poem has the remaining sound."
(2) It's a moving sound.
Pan Yue of Jin Dynasty wrote "Yang Jingzhou Lei" that "raising the voice increases the mourning, and the mourning has a lingering sound." Chapter 10 of Lao Can's Travels: "the wonderful use of that Zhise is also in his left hand. After seeing his right hand voice, the left hand moves forward and backward, and the rest of the voice goes with Yi Yi, which is really unheard of." Zhao Puchu's poem "zhegutian · Guanma Shizeng hongxiannvyan" says: "the sound of water flowing into the dream flows, and the poet's heart is full of singing voice."
(3) . refers to the ending.
Ba Jin's "cold night" Five: "the sound is quite long, these words are obviously spit out from her heart." Junqing's "spring on the Weihe River, the river of dawn": the aftersound of the ancient bell is still ringing on the plain
Chinese PinYin : Yu Yin
Afterword