Li Bai's wine poems

Li Bai's poems about wine are:

1, have you noticed how the water of the Yellow River flows out of heaven and into the ocean, never to return? Have you noticed that the lovely hair in the bright mirror in the high room, although it is silky black in the morning, has turned into snow at night. Oh, let a man with spirit take risks where he wants to go, and never point his golden cup at the moon empty! .

I drink a pot of wine from the flowers alone. No one is with me. Raise my cup, I invite the bright moon, which brings me its shadow and makes us three people.

3, the cost of pure wine, for the gold cup, 10,000 copper coins and a hip flask, Pan Yujian is ashamed of 10,000 yuan. I threw the food bar and cup aside. I couldn't eat or drink. I pulled out my dagger. I peeped in four directions in vain.

4, lanling wine tulips, jade bowl filled with amber light. But I got the host drunk and didn't know where it was.

5, if the sky does not love wine, the wine star is not in the sky. If you don't like wine, you shouldn't have the name Jiuquan.

6, but Junshan is good, spreading Hunan water. Baling didn't drink enough wine and got drunk together in the autumn of Dongting Lake.

7. But since the water is still flowing, even though we cut it with a sword, sadness will come back, even though we drown them with wine. Since the world can't satisfy our desire, I will loosen my hair and get on a fishing boat tomorrow.

8. Nanhu Qiushui is smokeless at night and can ride straight into the sky. Let Dongting Lake enjoy some moonlight on credit and enjoy the moon and drink happily.

9. What are bells and drums, delicacies and treasures? I hope I never wake up drunk. Ancient sober people and sages were forgotten, and only great drinkers can be immortalized.

Lipper

Li Bai (70 1 -762), a great romantic poet in Tang Dynasty, was called "Poet Fairy" by later generations, and was also called "Da Du Li" with Du Fu.

Li Bai is cheerful and generous, loves to drink and write poems, and likes to make friends. He was deeply influenced by Huang Lao's thought of starting a family. Li Taibai was handed down from generation to generation, and most of his poems were written when he was drunk. There are biographies of Li Bai's Ci and Fu in the Song Dynasty (such as Wen Ying's Xiang Ji). As far as its pioneering significance and artistic achievements are concerned, Li Bai's Ci Fu enjoys a high status. His representative works include Looking at Lushan Waterfall, it is hard to go, Difficult Road to Shu, etc.