Sentences describing the appearance of Jia Baoyu and Lin Daiyu

Sentences describing the appearance of Jia Baoyu and Lin Daiyu:

1, Jia Baoyu:

If the face is in the mid-autumn moon, the color is like spring flowers, the sideburns are cut, the eyebrows are painted in ink, and the face is like a peach blossom petal. Smile when you are angry, and you will look at it affectionately. ?

His face was radiant. The moon flowers are beautiful, and the moon in the Mid-Autumn Festival is particularly round and clear. The flowers in Chunxiao are especially bright and moist.

His "face" and "color" are so matched, full of youthful vitality, his heart is as pure as the moon in the Mid-Autumn Festival, and his feelings are as vibrant as the flowers in the spring dawn.

2. Lin Daiyu:

Two bends are like frowns, and a pair of eyebrows are like happy eyes. The state has two sorrows, and it is sick. Tears a little, breath slightly. When it is quiet, it shines like a flower on the water, and when it is moving, it is like a weak willow. The heart knows better than the stem, and the disease is not as good as the west.

Hide the wind without a trick. Clean up the quality, clean it up, and don't let the pollution sink into the ditch.

Although he is young, he speaks well. Although he is timid, he has a natural romantic attitude.

1, the hero Jia Baoyu in China's classic Dream of Red Mansions. He is the second son of Jia Zheng and Mrs. Wang, reincarnated as assistant minister of Chixia Palace and lived in Guo Rongfu. Born because of the title of jade, he is the grandson of the jade generation of the Jia family, so he was named Jia Baoyu, and the Jia family was called Master Bao.

2. Lin Daiyu, the heroine of China's classic Dream of Red Mansions, is the first of the twelve women in Jinling, the reincarnation of Xiancao in the West, the only daughter of Jia Min, the fourth daughter of Fu Rong and Lin Ruhai, the granddaughter of Jia Baoyu, and her aunt, lover and confidant. Jia Fu is called Miss Lin.

3. A Dream of Red Mansions is China's first classical Four Great Classical Novels, a novel written by Cao Xueqin in Qing Dynasty, also known as "The Story of the Stone" and "Jinyuyuan". This book is divided into two editions: 120 Cheng Ben and 80 Fat Ben.