"ZH nán táo yāo", "Nan Zhou Yao Tao" tá o zh and yā o y ā o, Zhu ZhuóqíHuá. ZH: and zhī zǐ yú guī:, yí q í shi ǐ ji ā. Peach blossoms are in full bloom, colorful and bright red as fire. The girl is going to get married and be happy at her husband's house. Táo zh yāo yāo, yǒu fén qíshí. zh zhǐyúgu, yíqíJiāshí. Peach blossoms are in full bloom and there are countless fruits. The girl is going to get married, and the heir who gave birth early is going to make a fortune.
I love you, I love you, I love you. You know, peach blossoms are in full bloom, and green leaves never fall. The girl is getting married, and Comix is in harmony. Nan Zhou Yao Tao's full translation of The Book of Songs: Peach blossoms are in full bloom, with bright colors and red as fire. The girl is getting married and going back to her husband's house in high spirits.
Peach blossoms are in full bloom, and the fruits are heavy, big and sweet. The girl is getting married, having children early and having a prosperous heir. Peach blossoms are in full bloom and green leaves are blooming in the wind. The girl is getting married, and her husband's family is happy and safe. The Book of Songs is that peach grove. The flowing Xiapi, like the bride's red veil, was gently lifted by the spring breeze. It's so cute that the fruit is full. They are really like a group of children.
Squeezed among the branches and leaves, laughing and laughing, as long as there are these fruits in spring, it will not be cold and cheerless. Didn't you sigh when the peach blossoms opened? You are worried that this season flies like a boat, hiding the worries of an eighteen-year-old girl and hiding too many spring-like flowers. You're too embarrassed to say it.
Appreciation of Nan Zhou s The Book of Songs Yao Tao;
Nan Zhou Yao Tao is divided into three chapters. The first chapter compares the youthful charm of the bride with the bright peach blossoms. "Peach flies away" begins with colorful symbolic meaning, and the exquisite peach blossoms that hit the face give the poem a strong sense of color. "Burn out its splendor", it can be said that the peach blossom has reached the extreme, and the beauty has reached a harsh level.
Judging from the relationship between metaphor ontology and metaphor, what is written here is fresh and tender peach blossoms, which are blooming one after another. At the moment, the newly-dressed bride is both excited and shy, and her cheeks are flushed, which really shows the charm of two phases. There are both descriptions of scenery and characters in the poem, and the scene blends with each other, setting off a happy and warm atmosphere. This kind of scene can be seen even at today's rural wedding.