Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - Yongmei's poems

Yongmei's poems

1. Poetry: All fragrant flowers shake off their beauty and occupy the small garden.

From: Song Lin Bu's Two Poems "Xiaomei in the Mountain Garden"

Interpretation: Hundreds of flowers are dying, and unique plum blossoms are in full bloom against the cold wind. The bright and gorgeous scenery occupies all the scenery in the small garden.

2. Poem: There are some plums in the corner, and cold ling opens them alone.

From: Plum Blossom by Wang Anshi in Song Dynasty

Interpretation: There are several plum blossoms in the corner, blooming alone in the cold.

3. Poem: Mei Xuxun's snow is three points white, but the snow loses a piece of plum fragrance.

Said by: Xue Mei No.1 by Lu Meipo in Song Dynasty.

Interpretation: In all fairness, plum blossoms make snowflakes crystal white, but snowflakes lose to plum blossoms.

4, verse: scattered into mud, crushed into dust, only as fragrant as ever.

Said by: Lu You in Song Dynasty, not Yongmei.

Interpretation: Even if it withers, grinds into mud and turns into dust, plum blossoms still exude a faint fragrance as always. ?

5, verse: faint plum blossom fragrance is about to dye, filar silk willow belt dew begins to dry.

From: Cao Xueqin's Xiang Ling Yin Yue Xia in Qing Dynasty

Interpretation: The sparse plum blossoms in the moonlight exude a strong fragrance, and the silver willow branches seem to be dried by dew.