Chongqing’s Jinfo Mountain welcomes the first sunshine after the snow. What poem does this remind you of?

Recently, it was sunny after snow in Bamian Mountain, Jinfo Mountain, Chongqing. It's as beautiful as a fairyland on earth. Looking at such beautiful scenery, people can't help but think of some beautiful poems.

For example, in "Xue Qing" written by Yang Wanli of the Song Dynasty, there are two lines of poetry that I like very much.

Three thousand realms of silver, ten thousand layers of Yaolin. The sky is green and the snow is light red.

The words used in these two poems are easy to understand, catchy and not lacking in musical beauty. The three thousand realms correspond to the ten thousand realms, and the light green and the light red mirror each other. The contrast between these two poems is neat, lively and interesting at the same time. The second song is "Xueqing Rhymes Again" written by the Song Dynasty poet Chen Zao

After the clear clear wind swirls in the sky, the dawn melts into the mud of the stranger's road. The old juniper tree has a hidden and moving color, which is a good theme for welcoming the spring and sending out the wax.

These two poems use simple and plain language to show us the scene of sunshine after snow in winter. It expresses the author's joy that the weather has cleared up. The third poem is "Poetry for Playing in the Snow" by Sui Dynasty poet Wang Heng

Brightness is everywhere, and the wandering wind returns. The walls and platforms look like they were first constructed, and the beautiful trees look like they were newly planted.

This poem describes the scene of heavy snowfall in language full of vitality and interest, showing the dynamics and liveliness of snow. It expresses the author's love and admiration for snow. The fourth poem is "Looking at the Snow on Zhongnan Mountain" written by the ancestors of the Tang Dynasty.

Zhongnan has beautiful yin ridges and snow floating in the clouds.

The meaning of these two sentences is that standing in Chang'an City and looking southward, you can see that the north side of Zhongnan Mountain is even more handsome and tall. A silvery white snow mountain loomed in the dense clouds. (Yin: In ancient times, mountains to the south and water to the north were yang, and mountains to the north and water to the south were yin.) The fifth poem is "Tianshan Snow Song to Send Xiao Zhi Back to the Capital" written by Cen Shen of the Tang Dynasty

The snow clouds in the mountains are often closed, and thousands of The peaks are covered with snow and Cui Wei.

The meaning of these two poems is: The towering snow peaks of Tianshan Mountain are surrounded by clouds and mist, which remain all year round. They are covered with white snow and are majestic and majestic. These two poems describe the scene of mist and layers of snow in the Tianshan Mountains. It expresses the poet's reluctance and reluctant farewell to his friends. The sixth poem, I believe everyone is familiar with it, is "Bai Xuege Sends Judge Wu Back to the Capital".

Suddenly a spring breeze came overnight, and thousands of pear trees bloomed.

The meaning of these two poems is: crystal clear snowflakes hang all over the branches. It was as if a spring breeze blew overnight, causing hundreds of trees to bloom into white pear blossoms in the ice and snow. This poem is also a farewell poem written by Cen Shen, a poet of the Tang Dynasty. We all learned it in middle school. I won’t go into details here.

In the thousands of years of poetry history in our country, there are countless poems describing snow. From "The Book of Songs": "I have passed on in the past, and the willows are still there." Now I come to think about it, the rain and snow are falling, and the wind and snow send spring back, and the flying snow welcomes spring in "Bu Suanzi. Yong Mei". They are all the ultimate descriptions of snow, and this is also the mark left by snow on our nation.