Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - Ancient poems describing snow

Ancient poems describing snow

1, the north wind rolls white grass, and eight In the snow crosses Tatar Day. (Quoted from Song of Snow White Farewell to the Home of Tian Li Wu in Tang Dynasty)

Commentary: The north wind swept across the earth, blowing off the white grass, and it snowed heavily in the sky in August in Saibei.

2. Thousands of miles away in Huang Yun, it's daytime, and the north wind blows goose feather and heavy snow one after another. (Excerpted from two poems "Don't Move Big" by Gao Shi in Tang Dynasty)

Interpretation: Huang Yun is thousands of miles away from the sun, the weather is gloomy, the north wind sends geese, and the snow is falling.

3. Yanshan snowflakes are as big as seats, and pieces of them blow off Xuanyuantai. (Excerpted from Li Bai's Popular in the North in the Tang Dynasty)

Interpretation: The snowflakes in Yanshan are very big, just like bamboo mats. They are scattered all over the floor, floating in XuanYuanTai.

Until dusk, when the snow collapses our tent, our frozen red flag can't fly in the wind. (Quoted from Song of Snow White Farewell to the Home of Tian Li Wu in Tang Dynasty)

Interpretation: In the evening, the snow kept falling in front of Yuanmen, the red flag froze and the wind could not move.

5. The ground is white and cold, and snowflakes are as big as palms. (Excerpted from Li Bai's "Mocking Wang Liyang for Refusing to Drink" in Tang Dynasty)

Interpretation: The earth is white, the wind is cold, and the falling snowflake is like a big hand.