Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - Ancient poems describing cold weather

Ancient poems describing cold weather

From Beijing to Fengxian, Tang Du Fu sang 500 words. Clouds danced with gulls, shaking rocks and flying snow like dust. Tang Du Fu sent his eldest grandson home in winter, and the cold weather was short. Meng Dong Pu Jin Guan and Frozen in the Cold. Liu Tang Zongyuan's Jiang Xue is not cold in winter, but the snow dance returns to the air: harsh. Snowflakes are as big as hands. Tang Li Bai ridiculed Wang Liyang for refusing to drink. Yanshan snowflakes are as big as seats. Thousands of jade bamboo shoots on a thousand peaks, an old man fishing in a cold river-the snow has blown down Xuanyuantai: fingers are stiff and the wind and waves are flat. There are no birds in the mountains in Tang Du Fu's "Nostalgia in Gongan County". Jiao's "Song of Bitter Cold" only looks at the ridge like a cloud. Why do you see the cold in the spring? It is said that the Yellow Emperor captured Chiyou. Thousands of trees and pine clouds. All the springs in Tang Yuanzhen's "South Qin Xue" have been frozen and swallowed, and the north wind is called withered mulberry: the whirling wind. The Snow written by Du Fu in Tang Dynasty is as cold as ice, and it is impenetrable. A boat, a bamboo cloak, and soon there was cold light.