Poems about spring include:
Spring Day
Zhu Xi [Song Dynasty]
The sun is fragrant on the Si River, and the boundless scenery is new for a while. .
Easy to recognize the east wind, colorful colors are always spring.
The first sentence is "Shengri Xunfang Surabaya Shore": "Shengri" points out the time of tomorrow; "Sishui Bin" points out the location; "Xunfang" points out the theme.
The second sentence, "The boundless scenery is new for a while," describes the initial impression gained from watching the spring scenery. "Boundless Scenery" inherits from the first sentence "Searching for fragrance in a victorious day" and tells the result of searching for fragrance. Use "boundless" to describe all the scenery within sight. "A moment of newness" not only describes the return of spring to the earth and the natural scenery taking on a new look, but also describes the author's refreshing and joyful feeling when he goes on an outing.
Jiangnan Spring
Du Mu [Tang Dynasty]
Thousands of miles away, the orioles are singing, the green is reflected in red, and the wine flags are blowing in the mountains and rivers of water.
There are four hundred and eighty temples in the Southern Dynasties, and many towers are in the mist.
This song "Jiangnan Spring" has been famous for thousands of years. The poem not only depicts the bright spring scenery in the south of the Yangtze River, but also reproduces the misty and rainy terrace scenery in the south of the Yangtze River, making the scenery in the south of the Yangtze River more magical and confusing, and has a special interest.
"Quequatrains"
A short canopy is tied in the shade of an ancient tree, and a staff and quinoa help me cross the east side of the bridge.
The apricot blossom rain makes your clothes wet, and the willow wind blows on your face without chilling it.
This poem describes the author's trip, uses personification to express the soft warmth of the spring breeze, and expresses the author's love for nature.
Other famous poems include Du Fu's "Quatrains", Su Shi's "Evening Scene on the Spring River in Huichong", Du Mu's "Qingming", Wang Wei's "Birds in the Stream", etc.