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The canoe has passed. Which poem belongs to Wanzhong Mountain?
This poem comes from Li Bai's "Send Baidicheng Early", which means that I am still enjoying the cries of monkeys on both sides of the White River. My boat has passed many mountains.

The whole poem "Early Send Baidicheng"

Early in the morning, I bid farewell to Jiangling city, which is high into the sky, thousands of miles away, and the boat is only one day away.

Apes on both sides of the Taiwan Strait are crying endlessly, and the canoe has crossed Chung Shan Man.

Apes on both sides of the strait are crying, and canoes have appreciated in Chung Shan Man;

In the Three Gorges of the Yangtze River in ancient times, "there were often high apes whistling". The poet said, "I can't stop crying", because he is driving a fast canoe on the Yangtze River, listening to the cries of apes on both sides of the strait and looking at the mountain shadows on both sides. More than one ape's cry, more than one mountain shadow. Because of the speed of boats and pedestrians, the cries and mountain shadows become "one piece" between eyes and ears. This is how Li Bai felt about the shadow of the ape mountain when he left the gorge. Sitting on this boat, which is like an arrow leaving the string and flowing downstream, the poet feels extremely carefree and excited. In Qing Dynasty, Gui Fu praised: "Beauty lies in the third sentence, which can make the spirit of longevity fly over." ("Zapp")

In an instant, the "canoe" has passed the "Chung Shan Man". In order to describe the speed of the ship, the poet added the word "light" to the ship itself in addition to the ape sound and the mountain shadow. It is clumsy to say that the ship is fast; And the word "light" has different meanings. When the Three Gorges was in danger, the poet went upstream, not only feeling that the ship was sinking, but also feeling sluggish. "Three dynasties scalpers, it is too late. It doesn't feel like silk. " (Up to the Three Gorges) Now it's as light as nothing, and the ship is fast as readers can imagine. As soon as the "Chung Shan Man" ended, the canoe entered a smooth road, and the poet's pleasure of going through all kinds of hardships and setting foot on the road naturally showed itself. These last two sentences are not only a description of the scenery, but also a comparison, an expression of personal feelings and a summary of life experience. They are exquisite and incoherent.