Looking at the Sea is regarded as a masterpiece of Jian 'an's character. Looking at the Sea is a four-character poem written by Cao Cao, a poet in the late Eastern Han Dynasty. The first chapter of Out of Xiamen is simple in language, rich in imagination, magnificent, desolate and tragic.
Looking at the sea is a magnificent sea scene outlined by Cao Cao when he climbed the Jieshi Mountain to look at the sea, with a lot of romantic passion. It depicts the magnificence of the motherland's rivers and mountains, not only the magnificence of mountains and seas, but also the enterprising spirit of the poet who lives by heaven and cares about the world.
Appreciate:
Guan Canghai is selected from Yuefu Poetry, which is the first chapter of Yuefu Poetry Out of Xiamen. In this poem, scenery and emotion are closely combined. Cao Cao expressed his ambition to unify China and make contributions by writing about the sea.
This feeling is not directly revealed in the poem, but contained in the description of the scenery. This lyric way is different from many lyric ways of writing landscape poems in ancient times. Many lyric poems describing scenery in ancient times were divided into scenes, or they focused on the scenery above and the emotion below. For example, in Jing Ke's Song of Yi Shui, the sentence "The wind is rustling and the water is cold" focuses on Feng Shui.
The next sentence "A strong man will never return" describes the feeling that a strong man will die. For example, Du Fu's "The Story of Climbing Yueyang Tower", the first part of "With Wu in my east and Chu in the south, we can see the endless drifting of heaven and earth", which focuses on scenery and is also very ambitious; The bottom line is "but there is no news from relatives or friends, I am old and sick, alone with my boat", and the focus is on love writing.