Are there any poems or idioms that describe snow?

1. There are no city walls in the wild clouds, and rain and snow are falling all over the desert. ——Gao Pian's "To the Snow"

2. When the six flying flowers come into the house, sit and watch the green bamboos turn into green branches. Gao Shi's "Two Poems of Farewell to Dong Da"

3. Thousands of miles of yellow clouds and white sun, and the north wind blows wild geese and snow. ——Song Zhiwen "Response to Snow in the Garden"

4. I don’t know if the rain in the courtyard has fallen this morning, but I suspect that the forest flowers bloomed last night. ——Zu Yong "Looking at the Remaining Snow in Zhongnan"

5. Zhongnan has beautiful yin ridges and snow-covered clouds. ——Zu Yong "Watching the Remaining Snow in the South"

6. The stream is so deep that it is hard to bear the snow, and the mountains are frozen and cannot move the clouds. ——Tao Yuanming "Written in the middle of the twelfth month of the year of Guimao and respect my younger brother"

7. The wind is desolate at the end of the year, and the sun is snowing. ——Lu Benzhong's "Treading on the Shasha·Snow is Like Plum Blossoms"

8. Snow is like plum blossoms, and plum blossoms are like snow. Both the similarity and the dissimilarity are strange. ——Zu Yong "Wang Jimen"

9. Thousands of miles of cold light produces snow, and the dawn on three sides stirs up dangerous signals. ——Du Fu's "Confronting the Snow"

10. There is always snow in the Tianshan Mountains, and the snow on thousands of peaks and ridges is Cuiwei. The north wind blows at the entrance of Chiting at night, and the snow in Tianshan becomes thicker overnight. ——Cen Shen's "Snow Song of the Tianshan Mountains, Sending Xiao Zhi Back to the Capital"

11. The sound of returning home breaks the blue clouds. Snow fell from the back window and the smoke from the furnace continued. ——Li Qingzhao's "Bodhisattva Barbarian·The sound of returning Hong cuts off the remaining green clouds"

12. Magpies flew from nowhere in the forest, trampling on the pine tops in the light snow. ——Xin Qiji's "Congratulations to the Bridegroom: Drinking in a Long Pavilion"

13. Pluck the snow to find spring, and burn lanterns to continue the day.

——Mao Pang's "Traveling on the Shasha·Yuanxi"