1. There are thousands of bamboos in Fengbeihu, and a single flower in the east garden in the evening.
From "Bei Pavilion Recruiting Guests" by Bai Juyi of the Tang Dynasty. The poem describes the beautiful scenery of the Beiting Pavilion: Looking to the north, you can see the spring breeze blowing thousands of bamboo poles, and looking to the east, you can see the setting sun reflecting the trees and flowers in the garden. "Thousands of stems of bamboo" and "one tree of flowers" are both exaggerated rhetoric, intended to emphasize the size of the bamboo forest and the abundance of flowers.
2. Huang Si’s natal family is full of flowers, with thousands of flowers hanging low on the branches.
From the sixth chapter of "Seven Quatrains on the Riverside Looking for Flowers Alone" by Du Fu of the Tang Dynasty. Trail, path. The poem describes the scene of flowers blooming in front of Huang Si’s mother’s house, bending the branches and covering the path.
3. The branches of Cymbidium are especially green, and the silent flowers of peach and plum are red.
From "Dancing in the Spring Wind" by Ouyang Xiu of Song Dynasty. The poem describes the scene in spring when the cymbidium flowers have faded and the leaves are green, and the peach and plum blossoms are in bloom. The first sentence uses personification rhetoric to personify Cymbidium. Writing about Cymbidium with "hate" superficially refers to the fact that Cymbidium has faded, but in fact it expresses the poet's regret for the decline of Cymbidium. The latter sentence also uses anthropomorphic rhetoric to personify the peaches and plums, allowing them to have human actions such as "speechless" and "self (autonomous, free)".
4. Pretending to be a red peach and apricot color, there is still a solitary, thin, snowy and frosty appearance.
From "Red Plum" by Su Shi of the Song Dynasty. Gushou refers to the appearance of dry plum branches and sparse flowers. The poem describes that although the red plum blossoms are as red as peach and apricot, they still retain the attitude of solitary branches and sparse flowers, proud of the frost and fighting against the snow. It means that although the red plum has the beauty of peach and apricot, it still has the character of Aoshuang Douxue in its heart.
5. After the rain, the branches of cherries are covered with blood, and the flowers are red and purple.
From Jin·Dong Jieyuan's "The Romance of the West Chamber". The poem describes the scene after the rain when the branches are covered with red cherries and flowers of all colors compete with each other.