Poems praising the ancient city

Smelling the flute in Los Angeles on a spring night (Tang Libai)

Yu Di's dark flying sound scattered into the spring breeze in Los Angeles.

In this nocturne, the willow is broken, and no one can afford to be homesick.

When writing this poem, Li Bai was traveling in Los Angeles (now Luoyang). In the Tang Dynasty, Luoyang was a very prosperous city, known as the East Capital. At that time, Li Bai lived in Los Angeles, probably in an inn. In the dead of night, he accidentally heard the flute, which triggered his hometown.

Night berth near Fengqiao (Tang Zhangji)

Crows fell on the moon, crowed coldly, slept on maple trees, and slept in fishing lanes by the river.

In the lonely Hanshan Temple outside Suzhou, the bell that rang in the middle of the night reached the passenger ship.

When the Anshi Rebellion broke out, because the political situation in Jiangnan was still relatively stable at that time, many scribes fled to Jiangsu and Zhejiang to escape the rebellion, including Zhang Ji. One autumn night, the poet was boating on the Maple Bridge outside Suzhou. The beautiful autumn scenery of Jiangnan water town attracted this stranger with travel worries and made him write this poem with clear artistic conception. Suzhou is Suzhou, and now there is gusu district in Suzhou.

A Farewell (Don Mutu)

Frustrated, he roamed the rivers and lakes with wine, indulging in Wang Xi women's Yu Chuling and Zhao Feiyan's slender waist dancing.

Yangzhou's ten years, like a dream, wake up, but in the brothel women this is a fickle reputation.

Du Mu once served as the shogunate of Niuxiangu in Huainan, transferred to a minister, and lived in Yangzhou. At that time, he was thirty-two years old, fond of feasting and traveling, and had a lot of contacts with prostitutes in Yangzhou, which was poetic and romantic. This is a reminiscence work, written ten years after the poet was appointed as the secretariat of Huangzhou. The poet has a deep understanding of life and hurt himself. Dance Academy is not as frivolous, decadent, vulgar and dissolute as described in some literary history.