Six poems about Lycium barbarum in The Book of Songs are all in Xiaoya. Another poem is in the Wind of the Country, by General Zhong Zi. The first poem about Xiaoya Lycium barbarum was written by Xiaoya Mu Si. There are five lines in this poem * * * to the effect that people who serve abroad are far away from home for the endless "Wang Shi".
The second is Xiaoya Zhangdu, which has four parts. The work begins with a lonely fruit tree, expressing the feeling that the "husband" left his hometown, missed his parents and wife, and hoped for an early reunion. The fourth sentence before the third festival is written in Chinese wolfberry: "I'm going to Beishan, and I like it very much."
The third song is "Xiao Ya Nan Shan You Tai", which consists of five sentences. This is a poem praising noble virtues and birthdays. Compared with Mulberry, Yang, Li and Lycium barbarum, the works praise the "gentleman" and wish him "endless life", peace from generation to generation and prosperity for future generations-"Er". "There is a saying in Nanshan that there is a gourd, and there is a saying in Beishan ... You can only be a gentleman, and you can protect Queen Eyre. It is said that the name of Lycium barbarum is a combination of the characteristics of two tree species, and its trunk is "Shu Qi"-shaped; The branches are shaped like "gourd" and chicken feet. The answer lies in these two poems.
The fourth poem is "Xiaoya Zhan Lu", which has four sections, the third section of which is: "Zhan Zhan Lu, in another Lycium barbarum, shows a gentleman and makes virtue. "This poem describes that when the nobles held the inauguration ceremony of the ancestral temple, a guest celebrated the" gentleman "with medlar, red dates and phoenix trees.
The fifth song is April in Xiaoya, which consists of eight sections. The last section is Lycium barbarum: "There are ferns in the mountains, and there are Qi Qi, which makes them sad."
The sixth poem is "Beishan, Xiaoya", which consists of six lines. At the beginning, I wrote Lycium barbarum: "I love Beishan, and I choose my fruit." I work with scholars day and night. The king is decadent and worried about my parents. "This poem describes a low-level official who has been responsible for heavy corvee for a long time. People who are dissatisfied with wealth and power, regardless of \ "calling the number \" and the life and death of the lower class, and blindly have fun. The Book of Songs is the earliest collection of poems in China, which mainly describes the events from the early years of the Western Zhou Dynasty to the mid-Spring and Autumn Period, and many chapters were written by Zhou people. Since the 1980s, the tombs and chariots and horses in Zhonghe Township and Langwozikeng in Ningxia have proved that the territory of the Western Zhou Dynasty crossed Liupanshan from the north and arrived. Six of them are difficult to determine, but Beishan, Xiaoya is expected to be tested, and its songs should be picked from Lycium barbarum growing in Zhongwei, Ningxia and its neighboring vilen Mountain today. The poem is called "Beishan", and the first two sentences at the beginning are "I am interested in Beishan, and my writing is wonderful", which means climbing the sorghum in Beishan, eating some wolfberry and having a taste. This mountain is in the north of Yulong placanticline. The "Northern Mountain of the Great Wall" mentioned in Shan Hai Jing refers to the "Northern Mountain" north of Long Yuan placanticline. "Long Yuan placanticline" is the Guyuan Great Wall in Ningxia, the "North Mountain" of Guyuan Great Wall. The Book of Songs is called Beishan. This title lasted for a long time. "The History of the Three Kingdoms, Shu Wei" records: "If Zhuge Liang crosses the Wei River, ascends the original land, joins forces with Beishan, isolates Longdao, and shows off the people, it will not benefit the country. "The' Weihe River' mentioned above is the Weihe River; "Original" refers to Dayuan, now called Guyuan and Yuanzhou; "Beishan" is the northern sag and residual vein of Liupanshan Mountain in Guyuan, Ningxia. "Dragon Road" is the Liupanshan ancient road that passes through Haiyuan and Guyuan in Ningxia. "The History of the Three Kingdoms" said that if Zhuge Liang crossed the Wei River, entered Guyuan and occupied Longdaoguan in Liupanshan, it would cut off the Longshan Avenue from the Central Plains to Hexi. To sum up, this area has long been called "North Mountain". This low hill and ridge,