Su Dongpo, a great writer, is good at tasting tea. His two quatrains are really amazing. First, the "beautiful jade bowl" is slim, and the rest of the flowers spit blue shirts. The song swallows the water clouds and condenses the quiet courtyard, and the dream scares the snow and rocks. "second:" empty flowers and wine jars, snow melts mountains, and rivers rise day by day. The beauty of these two palindromes is that as long as they are read counterclockwise, they can both read two beautiful and charming tea poems. This is really "new because of meaning, new because of feeling." Teahouses in some cities in China like to hang the name of "natural residence" There are palindromes on both sides:? "Guests come from nature, and guests descend from heaven". This pair of couplets is simple and easy to understand. The first couplet is plain, and the second couplet is combined with palindromes, which suddenly changes the environment of the teahouse, honoring the guests as "Tianke", showing the host's service attitude, which is surprisingly simple and ingenious. The name of "Natural Residence" teahouse is embedded in the first and second couplets, which is interesting and intriguing to read.
Another teahouse wrote in reply: "Interesting words can be appropriate, and tea can be pure." Looking back, couplets are brand-new. The meanings of conjunctions have their origins. For example, Tang Shiyun said, "It's fun to take a sip alone." That's why it's interesting. ...
There are also many palindromes in modern tea culture. A tea drinker in Beijing Laoshe Teahouse chanted "Big bowl of tea in front of the front door". This couplet reflects the location of the teahouse and the way to make drinks, with occasional quips that are embarrassing.