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There are strange peaks on the mountain, locked in the clouds; I don't usually see it. Who comes occasionally?
Shortly after Jiang Qingmao left Beijing, Jiang Qing rose rapidly, like the second person in this regime. She wrote a bold poem, accompanied by her own photos, and gave it to an editor of China Photography magazine. The poem is about a mountain, and the photo is about a mountain soaring into the sky. This majestic, beautiful, dignified and underestimated mountain peak is none other than Jiang Qing himself! This poem will not win any literary prize; There are strange peaks on the river, locked in the clouds. I can't see it at ordinary times, but occasionally show it. "Jiang" refers to her family name. This poem imitates the Tang poetry and reminds people that she was named "Jiang Qing" instead of "Lan Ping" in Yan 'an. A Tang poem said, "There are several peaks on the river." . As later critics said, when Jiang Qing wrote this "misty poem", no matter whether she thought of Mao Zedong or not, it showed that Jiang Qing thought she didn't win the applause she deserved. Jiang Qing convinced Vicat that this was a poem written by Mao praising her! ) Jiang Qing told the editor of China Photography that poetry and photos should be published under the pseudonym "Lang Tongtai", which is the name of an ancient famous mountain in Zhucheng, her hometown. She wants to hint at people-after some groping in the mysterious dark clouds-who the author is, but she doesn't want to mark her real name and publicly announce her conceit and ambition. Jiang Qing hoped to find herself in China's great literary and political traditions, and Wu Zetian did make an important contribution to the literature in the prosperous Tang Dynasty. She wanted to remind those senior appraisers-when she and Mao started living together in Yan 'an, many of them knew that her name was taken from the Tang Dynasty-that her long-term close relationship with the great leader of the China revolution would soon die out and be replaced. After giving the poems and photos to China for photography, Jiang Qing suddenly withdrew them. Later, she changed her mind and sent them back. She walked back and forth five times like a cat who couldn't decide where to hide the fish she had just caught. Finally, she didn't publish them. Perhaps, after returning from Changsha, Mao Zedong criticized this plan that made Jiang Qing so excited. More likely, Jiang Qing changed her mind nervously. Although she is extremely confident, as a woman, she is lonely in the political world of men. Being a queen will not only bring yourself, but also bring the history of China's * * * production party (and other countries' * * * production parties) to a new field. Whatever the reason, the poems and photos were not published, indicating that Jiang Qing was in a political or psychological danger zone, or both.