Poems containing numbers and animals
For ten years in the West Lake, horses were tied to willows, taking advantage of the delicate dust and soft mist. Wu Wenying's "Preface to the Orioles' Cry: Feelings of the Spring Festival Gala"
Two orioles sing in the green willows, and a row of egrets ascend to the blue sky. - Du Fu's "Quequatrains"
The fragrance of rice flowers speaks of a good year, listen to the sound of frogs piece. Xijiang Moon by Xin Qiji of the Song Dynasty
A crane flies above the clouds in a clear sky, bringing poetry to the blue sky. "Autumn Poems" by Liu Yuxi of the Tang Dynasty
But I love the beauty of the sea bass (People come and go on the river, but I love the beauty of the sea bass. You look at a boat, and it disappears in the storm.
——"Fan Zhongyan of the Northern Song Dynasty" "The Fisherman on the River")
The peacock flies southeast, lingering for five miles. ——(Han Yuefu Peacock Flying Southeast)
Three or two branches of peach blossoms outside the bamboo are a prophet of the warmth of the spring river. ——(Su Shi's "Hui Chong's "Evening Scene on the Spring River")
The apes on both sides of the bank can't stop crying, and the boat has passed the Ten Thousand Mountains. ——(Li Bai's "Chaofa Baidi City")
The envoy came from the south, and the five horses hesitated. "Han Yuefu·Mo Shang Sang"
Thousands of birds have disappeared, and thousands of people have disappeared. "Snow on the River" by Liu Zongyuan of the Tang Dynasty
The green shade does not slow down the passage of time, adding four or five orioles. Song Dynasty Zeng Ji's "Three Qu Daozhong"
A few peach blossoms outside the bamboo are a prophet of the warmth of the spring river. "Hui Chong's "Evening Scene on the Spring River" by Su Shi of the Tang Dynasty
I flew to the Qianxun Pagoda on the mountain and heard the cock crow and saw the sun rise. "Climbing Feilai Peak" by Wang Anshi of the Song Dynasty
The wild geese disappear in a few rows in the sky, and a solitary cloud emerges in silence. Wei Zhuang of the Five Dynasties "Ti Pan Dou Yi Shui Pavilion Back Pavilion"
In October, the eagle comes out of the cage, the grass withers, the pheasant and the rabbit become fat. "Eagle Flying" by Bai Juyi of the Tang Dynasty
Giant pythons have been bred since then, and they often live for thousands of years. Tang Dynasty Yuan Zhen's "Poetry of Insects·Ba Snake"
A hundred birds have finished nursing their chicks, but the autumn swallows are alone in wasting time.
"Late Yan" by Bai Juyi of Tang Dynasty