Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel franchise - Ancient poems describing eating

Ancient poems describing eating

Without a glass of Taiping wine, bloom will grow old —— Song Shuyue Xiang's "Thousands of hibiscus plants in Gao Ping are drunk, like visiting the city of hibiscus"

If the roots of the stomach are compared, the roots of the stomach will eat vines themselves-Song Ziyi's steamed dolphins.

Lai Guan has salt to eat, but he suffers from no money and no knife —— Song and Huang Tingjian's Old Pit Into the City

The mud cow eats the water grass, and the wooden horse bites the tile —— Answering Yun Ju Xi and Mourning the Past in the history of Song Dynasty

Farming cattle eat up the shortage of fields, and two taels of gold compete for grain —— Tan's Land of Gold and Gu Men

It's strange to eat some oil and go home-Song Shi Hui Kong's Ancient Fu.

Eleven years' dream of spring is cold, and Yuchuan tea goes south —— Qing Gong Zizhen's Poem Ninety-three in the Sea

The two rivers are torn apart, but the wall collapses and everyone dies —— Song and Chen Yong's "The Statue of Visiting Shaoling in Dongtun in February"

Lotus peanuts are beautiful, chestnuts are delicious —— Song Wu Mai's "Send chestnuts and meet monks in Nangshan"

You can't beat the waves, but you can beat the drums and music —— Watch the Tide by Song Anonymous.