
Youth in Fresh Clothes and Angry Horses: the Poem and Wine of Tang and Song Dynasty Poets
About This Novel
Tang poetry and Song lyrics are the pinnacle of the beauty of Chinese characters. What is the story behind each famous piece? How can each of the big shots be so happy and happy? If you read poetry from a different angle, you will find a different poetic meaning. The super angry young man Luo Binwang, the eternal love sage Du Fu, the great counterattack Gao Shi, the perfect male god Wang Wei, the literary uncle Meng Haoran, the prodigal son Wen Tingyun, the heroine Li Qingzhao, the all-round genius Xin Qiji... Thirty poetry masters, involving nearly three hundred poetry classics. The book is meticulously researched, integrating poetry and history, linking up the dazzling moments in the literary world of the Tang and Song Dynasties, from which we can glimpse a passionate history with ups and downs. This "poetry novel" is very enjoyable to read, and it is a literary arena that has never been seen before. This is a tribute work by "Young Angry Horse", a hardcore lover of Tang poetry and Song lyrics and a popular WeChat public account. Just turn the page and read it.
What Readers Think
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Official(12)Scraped 11d ago
good book
Young people should read Li Bai, he will make you arrogant and bloody; middle-aged people should read Du Fu, he will give you humanistic care and sense of responsibility; as for Wang Wei, you can read it anytime. He will tell you how to enter the world with great vigor and how to be born dignifiedly.
not bad
It's interesting. I flipped through it and read it. I actually finished it.
Li Bai's brocade robe was torn open, and his body was covered with scars.
I once read a biography of Li Bai, but I only saw arrogance and unrulyness. When I read "A Young Man in Fresh Clothes and a Raging Horse.2", I had a different feeling. The book is very realistic. It says that Li Bai's arrogance was arrogance and inferiority - Li Bai called himself after Li Guang; he compared himself to Xie An; as a scholar, he dissed Confucius and Mencius, and despised all Confucian scholars... Li Bai was very conflicted - "Isn't it said that "An Neng can bend his eyebrows and bend his waist to serve the powerful"? Why do you miss drinking with the "Five Marquises and Seven Nobles" again?... Isn't it "The Emperor can't come on the boat"? Why do you miss the Qilin Palace and the Tortoiseshell Banquet again?... Haven't you already seen through the saying that "all things will flow in the past"? Why are you looking forward to the imperial court's amnesty again?" At the same time, Li Bai is tragic. He has a thousand-foot waterfall in his heart, but we only see the arrogance and majesty, but forget the sadness behind the waterfall.
We all know about Yang Guang. An emperor's great youth was used for his own entertainment. This may not be a true portrayal of every emperor, but it is Yang Guang's story.
great book
Bringing boring historical figures to life, they are no longer paper figures in textbooks.
Well written, hope to continue working hard
Good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking.
Emm I read the physical book, and I just looked it up. I didn't expect that there was _(•̀ω•́ ∠)_ At that time, I would pick up the book at twelve or eleven thirty every night, and would not put it down until one o'clock in the afternoon. Sometimes I would read it for a while around six o'clock in the afternoon, and I would finish it in a few days. Now all that flashes through my mind are pale words like, "It's very beautiful, very beautiful, very beautiful..." (Helpless¬_¬`My ability to formulate sentences in writing seems to have been lost)
People should not be judged by their appearance. We know that Yang Guang did not fulfill his responsibilities as an emperor and did not fulfill his duties. Instead, he squandered everything. However, we did not expect that he was actually a poet.
Average
Since you can't give good life-like characters, why write a book just to earn royalties? It's not very likable from the beginning. Maybe you recruited someone who is willing to fight and someone who is willing to suffer.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(12)Scraped 11d ago
good book
Young people should read Li Bai, he will make you arrogant and bloody; middle-aged people should read Du Fu, he will give you humanistic care and sense of responsibility; as for Wang Wei, you can read it anytime. He will tell you how to enter the world with great vigor and how to be born dignifiedly.
not bad
It's interesting. I flipped through it and read it. I actually finished it.
Li Bai's brocade robe was torn open, and his body was covered with scars.
I once read a biography of Li Bai, but I only saw arrogance and unrulyness. When I read "A Young Man in Fresh Clothes and a Raging Horse.2", I had a different feeling. The book is very realistic. It says that Li Bai's arrogance was arrogance and inferiority - Li Bai called himself after Li Guang; he compared himself to Xie An; as a scholar, he dissed Confucius and Mencius, and despised all Confucian scholars... Li Bai was very conflicted - "Isn't it said that "An Neng can bend his eyebrows and bend his waist to serve the powerful"? Why do you miss drinking with the "Five Marquises and Seven Nobles" again?... Isn't it "The Emperor can't come on the boat"? Why do you miss the Qilin Palace and the Tortoiseshell Banquet again?... Haven't you already seen through the saying that "all things will flow in the past"? Why are you looking forward to the imperial court's amnesty again?" At the same time, Li Bai is tragic. He has a thousand-foot waterfall in his heart, but we only see the arrogance and majesty, but forget the sadness behind the waterfall.
We all know about Yang Guang. An emperor's great youth was used for his own entertainment. This may not be a true portrayal of every emperor, but it is Yang Guang's story.
great book
Bringing boring historical figures to life, they are no longer paper figures in textbooks.
Well written, hope to continue working hard
Good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking, good looking.
Emm I read the physical book, and I just looked it up. I didn't expect that there was _(•̀ω•́ ∠)_ At that time, I would pick up the book at twelve or eleven thirty every night, and would not put it down until one o'clock in the afternoon. Sometimes I would read it for a while around six o'clock in the afternoon, and I would finish it in a few days. Now all that flashes through my mind are pale words like, "It's very beautiful, very beautiful, very beautiful..." (Helpless¬_¬`My ability to formulate sentences in writing seems to have been lost)
People should not be judged by their appearance. We know that Yang Guang did not fulfill his responsibilities as an emperor and did not fulfill his duties. Instead, he squandered everything. However, we did not expect that he was actually a poet.
Average
Since you can't give good life-like characters, why write a book just to earn royalties? It's not very likable from the beginning. Maybe you recruited someone who is willing to fight and someone who is willing to suffer.
