Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - Poems describing the river scenery

Poems describing the river scenery

1, Poem: Rock goes through the air, stormy waves beat on the shore, and thousands of piles of snow are rolled up.

Said by Su Shi in Song Dynasty, "Niannujiao Chibi Nostalgia".

Interpretation: The steep stone wall towering into the sky, like thunder crashing on the river bank, stirred up waves as if rolling up thousands of piles of snow.

2. Poetry: The solitary sail is far away from the sky, and the sky only flows along the Yangtze River.

From: The Farewell of Meng Haoran on the Way to Yangzhou by Li Bai in the Yellow Crane Tower in the Tang Dynasty.

Interpretation: The shadow of the boat sailing gradually disappeared at the end of the blue sky, only to see the rolling Yangtze River heading for the sky.

3. Poem: Tianmen breaks the Chu River and Higashi Shimizu flows.

From: Looking at Tianmen Mountain by Li Bai in Tang Dynasty

Interpretation: The Yangtze River splits the Tianmen Xiongfeng like a giant axe, and the Qingjiang River flows eastward here.

4. Poetry: The mountains are flat and primitive, and the rivers meander in the wilderness.

Said by Li Bai in the Tang Dynasty, "Seeing Friends Off at Jingmen Ferry".

Interpretation: Green hills fade away, and Ye Ping is endless. The Yangtze River surges and flows into the vast wasteland.

5. Poetry: A thousand miles away in Jiangling, one day.

From: Li Bai's "The First Made Baidicheng/Baidixiang Jiangling" in the Tang Dynasty

Interpretation: In the morning, the morning glow is all over the sky, and I am about to embark on my return journey. Looking up from the river, you can see the colorful clouds in Baidicheng, such as among the clouds, and the scenery is gorgeous! Jiangling, thousands of miles away, arrived in one day.