Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - What are the ancient poems describing spring?

What are the ancient poems describing spring?

1, the original text: good rain knows the season, and it happens in spring. Sneak into the night with the wind, moisten things silently. The wild path is dark, and the river is bright. Look at the red and wet place, the flowers in Jinguancheng are heavy.

Said by: Delighting in Rain on a Spring Night, Du Fu in Tang Dynasty.

Interpretation: Good rain knows the solar terms of rain, just when plants sprout and grow in spring. As the spring breeze quietly falls at night, it silently moistens everything in spring. On a rainy night, the field path was dark, and only the lights on the river boat flashed alone. Looking at the flowers soaked in rain at dawn, they are beautiful and red, and the whole Jinguan City has become a world of flowers and flowers.

2, the original text: winning the day to find the waterfront, boundless scenery. Everyone can see the face of spring, the spring breeze blows flowers open, thousands of purple, and the scene of spring is everywhere.

From: Spring Day by Zhu in Song Dynasty

Interpretation: When the weather is sunny, the river in Surabaya is green, and the endless scenery is completely new. Anyone can see the face of spring. The spring breeze is full of flowers and beautiful spring scenery everywhere.

3, the original: Jasper makeup into a tree height, ten thousand hanging moss tapestry. I don't know who cut the thin leaves, but the spring breeze in February is like scissors.

From: Singing Willow by He in Tang Dynasty.

Interpretation: Tall willows are covered with new green leaves, and drooping willows are fluttering gently like thousands of green ribbons. I wonder who cut this thin willow leaf. This is the spring breeze in February. Like a magic pair of scissors.

4, the original text: thousands of miles of green red, Shanguo wine flag wind. More than 480 ancient temples were left in the Southern Dynasties, and countless pagodas were shrouded in wind and rain.

From: Jiangnan Spring by Du Mu in Tang Dynasty

Interpretation: The vast south of the Yangtze River is full of singing and dancing, green trees and red flowers set each other off, and wine flags are flying everywhere at the foothills of waterside villages. Many ancient temples left over from the Southern Dynasties are now shrouded in this hazy misty rain.

5, the original text: people are idle osmanthus, and the night is quiet and empty. When the moon comes out, the birds are startled, and the sound enters the spring stream.

From: Bird Watching Creek by Wang Wei in Tang Dynasty

Interpretation: In the silent valley, only the sweet-scented osmanthus in spring is falling silently, and the spring mountain is empty in the quiet night. The moon rises, and the moonlight shines on the earth, which alarms the birds living in the mountains and sings in the spring stream from time to time.