This is Fan Zhongyan's "Zhishan Temple":
The tower is crowned with Cui Wei, and the Ganoderma lucidum is safe there.
The clouds flew across the river, and the flowers fell into the city.
The crows gather together in the morning when they have food, and the tiger returns at night after hearing the sutra.
I occasionally look at the west pavilion and see the setting sun of Wulao.
Zhishan Temple was built in the early Tang Dynasty. Every year, there is a temple fair on the Christmas Day of Ksitigarbha Bodhisattva, the 30th day of the seventh lunar month. It was later destroyed by a mountain fire. It was rebuilt in the early Song Dynasty and subsequently repaired (qì, 气). It was destroyed by war in the third year of Xianfeng in the Qing Dynasty (1853), and was rebuilt in the twenty-seventh year of the Republic of China (1938). After liberation, the Buddhist statues in Zhishan Temple were destroyed. It was changed to Zhishan Park in 1956 and rebuilt in 1992. There are only three Buddhist temples in existence. They were built in the Qing Dynasty and have a simple style.
In the third year of Jingyou (1036), Fan Gong offended the powerful Prime Minister Lu Yijian by publishing the "Hundred Officials Picture" and was charged with being a crony. He was deposed and demoted to Raozhou as a local official. When Fan Zhongyan came to the local area, in addition to establishing education and running schools, "one chapter of memorials exempted birds from drinking tea, benefiting tens of thousands of people", there is also a record of Fan Gong's close relationship with Buddha: Fan Gong was guarding Poyang and wanted to invite monks from Zhishan Temple. He recited the "Diamond Sutra" to save his late mother. One night, he dreamed that his mother said to him, "I have obtained half a volume of the ancient Buddhist sutra, and I have been transcended." The next day when Fan Zhongyan went to the mountain, there was a newly arrived eminent monk called the master of the ancient pagoda. When Fan Zhongyan saw him, he thought, "It was like a message in a dream." Fan Zhongyan was very happy about the mutual fulfillment of the salvation of his late mother, and praised the ancient pagoda master for his "immaculate conduct and unrivaled climb". At that time, Jianfu Temple happened to be short of an abbot, so Fan Zhongyan invited the eminent monk and the master of the ancient pagoda to take over. Fan Zhongyan's mother fasted for long periods of time and worshiped Buddha with great respect during her lifetime. Fan Zhongyan said that his mother "kept on the stars every night and was dizzy after eating too little for more than twenty years before she died." Zhong Yan also wrote a poem "Zhishan Temple" at that time, in which there is a sentence "crows gather together when they have food, and tigers return at night after hearing the sutras", saying that the Buddhist teachings are so vast that even birds and tigers are influenced by the sutras. ...As a relegated person, Fan Zhongyan came to this kind of Buddhist fairyland, leaving behind all the battles of honor and disgrace in the world, and yearned for "only a quiet place, and what you get comes from Lanfen." The verses come from the poem "The Ascending Master Biyunxuan". Biyunxuan is located in the Zhishan Temple where Zhongyan delivered his deceased mother.