Taohuawu Taohua Temple, Taohuaguan Taohuaxian;
Peach Fairy cultivates peach trees and picks them to sell wine.
When I wake up, I just sit in front of the flowers, and when I am drunk, I come to sleep under the flowers;
Half awake and half drunk day after day, flowers bloom year after year.
I would rather die of old age than bow before horses and chariots;
Cars and horses are rich and interesting, and hops are poor.
If wealth is compared with the poor, one is in peace and the other is in heaven;
If you compare poverty to horses and chariots, he will have to drive away my leisure.
Others laugh at me for being crazy, and I laugh at others for not being able to see through;
There are no graves of Hao Jie in Wuling, no flowers, no wine, and no hoes to plow the fields.
Song of the Peach Blossom Temple is a classic poem by Tang Yin, a famous painter, writer and poet in Ming Dynasty. Song of the Peach Blossom Temple is the most famous poem in Tang Yin's poems, and it is a work of self-criticism and warning.
Speaking of the Peach Blossom Temple, here is a story. It is said that Tang Bohu took a fancy to a house in Suzhou, and was later abandoned by others. No one has left his job for a long time. There is also a place in Suzhou called Taohuawu. According to records, when Tang Bohu decided to buy a house, because he had no money, he had to use some of his books as collateral to borrow money from an official friend in Beijing. Later, he spent more than two years trying to write, draw and sell money before paying off the payment.