Untitled by Li Shangyin in the Tang Dynasty
Li Shangyin was one of the few poets who deliberately pursued the beauty of poetry in the late Tang Dynasty and even the whole Tang Dynasty. He is good at poetry writing, and parallel prose also has high literary value. His poems are novel in conception and beautiful in style, especially some love poems and untitled poems are touching, beautiful and moving, and are widely read.
Extended data
Other poems describing cherry blossoms
1, into the village?
Don
The mountains may not be deep in the Spring Festival Evening, and cherry blossoms are everywhere.
Peach and plum don't follow the rain, knowing that there will always be sunny days.
The author came to a small mountain village in late spring and saw cherry blossoms all over the mountain. Here, two contrasts are used to highlight the characteristics of cherry blossoms. One is time. Cherry blossoms like light and cold, and can bloom in early spring. Even when other flowers in the mountain don't bloom, the cherry blossoms in the mountain bloom. This highlights the quality of cherry blossoms that are not afraid of cold. The second is peaches and plums.
Peaches and plums are more casual, and the rain comes with them. Although the flowers are beautiful, they fall off easily. If you can survive the spring rain, you will be as beautiful as cherry blossoms on a sunny day. In the author's eyes, cherry blossoms are as beautiful as peaches and plums and as cold-resistant as wintersweet, which can be described as heroes among flowers.
2. "First sight of mountain flowers"?
Fan Song Chengda
There is not much mud in three sunny days. It will take several days.
In the second spring in eastern Hunan, there are cherry blossoms and tree flowers.
As always, Fan Chengda's poems are full of pastoral joy. This poem is concise in language and fresh in style. The first two sentences are about the period from the New Year to the beginning of spring in February. "It won't be sunny for three days." The New Year was spent in several storms. Just entering February, the mountain cherry has blossomed, reporting the arrival of spring.
A word "cha" expresses the author's melancholy surprise after the storm. This poem, in plain silence, highlights KINOMOTO SAKURA's fear of cold and wind and rain.