Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - What are the beautiful poems about the Forbidden City?

What are the beautiful poems about the Forbidden City?

The beautiful poems about the Forbidden City include:

1. "Passing through the Huaqing Palace" Tang Dynasty: Li Yue

The jade chariot has ascended to heaven, but the Forbidden City still remains. The tree lives forever.

Translation: The emperor and the empress ascended to heaven, but only the thousand-year-old tree of immortality still grew upright there.

2. "Flowers in the Back Garden·The Stone City Is Still Empty River Country" Five Dynasties: Sun Guangxian

The Stone City is still Empty River Country, and the Forbidden City is in spring.

Translation: The city remains the same, the river flows empty, and the spring scenery of Empress Chen’s palace remains the same.

3. "Meeting Eyes·The Girl Who Yongs Red" Qing Dynasty: Nalan Xingde

Who knows what happened in the Forbidden City? It is Zhu Yan who is safe. There was competition to pick out jade and jade hairpins, until the first year of the reign of Emperor Zheng.

Translation: Who else can I ask about the past events in the palace? Only the red girl flower still vaguely exists. I remember that during the Zhizheng period of the Yuan Dynasty, the red girl flowers in front of the palace competed for beauty, and the palace ladies competed to pick and insert them. But now, the flowers are still there, but the flower pickers are no longer there.

4. "Two of the Four Lyrics of Stepping" Tang Dynasty: Liu Yuxi

Peach trees and willows are easy to pass by, and the makeup under the lamp becomes a song under the moon. Because this is the palace of King Xiang, it still has a slim waist to this day.

Translation: The road is easy to pass under the peach willows, and people sing under the lamps and makeup under the moon. Because it is the Forbidden City of King Xiang, there are still many beauties there.

5. "Qingming Day" Tang Dynasty: Wen Tingyun

Who sent out the zhe bomb? Oriole separated from the Forbidden City.

Translation: I wonder who is firing missiles at birds? The oriole quickly flew into the courtyard next to the wall and chirped on the roof.

Introduction:

The buildings in the Forbidden City in Beijing are divided into two parts: the outer court and the inner court. The center of the outer dynasty is the Hall of Supreme Harmony, the Hall of Zhonghe, and the Hall of Baohe, collectively referred to as the three main halls. They are the places where the country holds major ceremonies. The left and right wings of the three main halls are supplemented by two groups of buildings: Wenhua Hall and Wuying Hall. The center of the inner court is the Qianqing Palace, the Jiaotai Palace, and the Kunning Palace, collectively known as the Housan Palace. It is the main palace where the emperor and queen live.

After that is the Imperial Garden. On both sides of the Housan Palace are the East and West Sixth Palaces, which are where the concubines lived and rested. To the east of the East Sixth Palace are Buddhist temple buildings such as the Tianqiong Palace, and to the west of the West Sixth Palace are Buddhist temple buildings such as the Zhongzheng Hall. In addition to the Outer Court and the Inner Court, there are two buildings on Outer East Road and Outer West Road.