I mentioned this poem because I saw an old story. As a result of the textbook reform in the education department, Lu Xun's works were deleted, and the deeds of national heroes such as Wei Qing, Huo Qubing, Yue Fei and Wen Tianxiang were deleted. This poem by Gan Long was incorporated into the primary school textbook. Of course, the reviser also gave reasons such as national unity and cultural integration. However, deleting it will inevitably make people wary of the remarks of former US Secretary of State Dulles.
We don't talk much about whether the textbook reform is reasonable, just look at this interesting poem.
The poet wrote about snow. The first three sentences are from one to nine, which is really a bit oily. The last sentence is slightly artistic, but it is said that the most artistic sentence was added by Ji Xiaogang because he couldn't stand it.
In fact, the first three sentences of this flashy poem are also shanzhai copies created by Qianlong. The original poem is Yin Xue by Zheng Banqiao, a gifted scholar in Qing Dynasty;
Even the doggerel is fake, which shows that Gan Long's talent for writing poems is really flattering.
As emperor, Zhu Yuanzhang, the founding emperor of the Ming Dynasty, also wrote similar poems. According to Jiang Yikui's Collection Outside Yaoshan Hall in Ming Dynasty, Zhu Yuanzhang's poem about snow is as follows:
Obviously, oil is also unavoidable, but it is still quite open-minded and verve.
In fact, the ancients often like to digitize their own poems, and the second generation of Taoist Ma Yu, who is familiar to many people, is one of them. Yes, it is Ma Yu in Jin Lao's Legend of the Condor Heroes. He is a real person in history. He once wrote "The Man Fang Ting from One to Ten":
Although full of religious color, but still look at the foundation and philosophy.
The most famous and artistic poem with numbers is Shao Yong's poem "Mountain Village Poetry" in the Northern Song Dynasty;
In a few words, a small mountain village like a paradise jumped to the page.