Famous ancient poems about horses

The famous poems about horses are as follows:

Don du fu

I haven't taken the bus for a long time, and it's very cold. When the dust is exhausted, the disease is sad at the end of the year.

Hair and bones are extraordinary and gentle. Things are not shallow, moving and thinking deeply.

Ma Yong

Don

Once, Bole was knowledgeable, unlike Longxing, and dared not do it.

I'm not surprised that the salt truck is still thin if Kim Chui-ko hasn't been booed.

It is difficult to satisfy Ji Wang's bosom friend addiction, so I want to buy a name for Zhao Yan.

In the morning and evening, I will fly to Yin Huang to eat soap, and I will sing in the blue sky.

Ma Qi

General manager Tang Huo.

Li Qing is eight feet tall, and the chivalrous man leans on Xiong Hao. Sweat through the snow, and the brocade robe will not be stained with mud.

Look at the sudden shadow on the side of the road, and the saddle bottom is curled. Not only expensive, but also more rewarding.

Purple horse

Tang Libai

The red horses of jujube trees are running and singing, and their jade-like hooves are swinging up and down. When he reached the river, he refused to cross the water, as if he were pitying the brocade covered with brocade.

The snowy border is so far away from the Tubo border that Huang Yun's garrison at sea is also vague. Traveling thousands of miles with a whip, how can you not love the warmth of a family?

Twenty-three Horses Poems is a group of poems by Li He, a poet in Tang Dynasty. This group of poems named "Ode to a Horse" actually expresses the poet's sigh and indignation, as well as his ambition and desire to make contributions. This is a group of distinctive poems about objects, with artistic features such as implicit warning, profound sustenance, ingenious conception and flexible use of allusions.

This is a group of poems about horses. By reciting many historical stories about horses, Ying Jie's ambition and desire are expressed, and the author's sigh and indignation are expressed. Poetry is composed of poems, which are natural and closely related to the main theme; Separately, each song has its own emphasis and its own system.

Being poor and unable to meet the fate of talents made Li He's heart full of bitterness, resentment and complaints. Poems about horses are a portrayal of this situation for poets. Wang Qi, a poetry critic in Qing Dynasty, commented on Li He's Twenty-three Horses Poems, saying that Ma Chu was not in the horse, but the poet really said that Ma Chu was not in the horse.