The poems written by Xiaoman Wheat Sui Man Man mainly include "Xiaoman Collection", "Preface to the Lanting Collection", "Spring View", "Viewing the Sea", etc. The most famous one is "Preface to the Lanting Collection".
Extended information:
1. "Xiaomanji": "Xiaomanji" is a collection of essays written by Han Yu, a litterateur in the Tang Dynasty, which includes many poems. These poems depict the scenes of the Xiaoman season and describe farming life as their themes, such as "Crossing Dongting", "Liangzhou Ci", etc.
2. "Preface to the Lanting Collection": "Preface to the Lanting Collection" is a preface written by Wang Xizhi, a calligrapher in the Eastern Jin Dynasty. It is known as the pinnacle work in the history of Chinese calligraphy art. It depicts the scenery of the Xiaoman season, such as "The Tian family has few leisure months, but people are twice as busy in May. The south wind blows at night, and the wheat is covered with long yellow." It is endlessly memorable.
In April 353 AD (the third day of March in the ninth year of Jin Yonghe), Wang Xizhi, then the internal historian of Kuaiji, and forty-one friends including Xie An and Sun Chuo gathered at Lanting in Shanyin, Kuaiji. , drinking and composing poems. Wang Xizhi compiled these poems into a collection and wrote a preface to describe the incident of drinking Qushui and express his inner feelings caused by it. This preface is the "Preface to the Lanting Collection". He also wrote a "Preface to the Lanting Collection".
Taizong of the Tang Dynasty admired him so much that he personally wrote the "Biography of Wang Xizhi" in "Book of Jin" and praised him as "perfect and perfect". Copies of the work were also given to nobles, relatives and ministers, and they were buried with the original works.
3. "Spring Outlook": "Spring Outlook" by Du Fu, a poet of the Tang Dynasty, also describes the Xiaoman season, "When hundreds of rivers reach the sea from the east to the sea, when will they return to the west? If a young man does not work hard, an old man will be sad. ." Its meaning expresses the cyclical changes in nature and the impermanence of life's destiny.
4. "Viewing the Sea": "Viewing the Sea" written by Cen Shen, a poet of the Tang Dynasty, said: "The country is so beautiful that it attracts countless heroes to bend their waists. I cherish the military power of Qin and Han Dynasties and slightly lose their literary talent. The ancestors of the Tang Dynasty and Song Dynasty, "A little less coquettish." expresses political frustration and cultural pride through the use of natural scenes.
Summary: Although Xiaoman Festival is only one of the twenty-four solar terms, it has a high status in Chinese culture and is endowed with rich cultural connotations. Whether in terms of poetry or other literary forms, Xiaoman has become one of the important themes in literati's writings.