Su Shi, the great writer of the Song Dynasty, once wrote that "the tides of August and eighteen are as spectacular as the world has ever seen."
The poem "Tide Watching on Seventeen Days" written by the Northern Song Dynasty poet Wang Shidao praising the tide of the Qiantang River has also been praised by people: "A white rainbow walks over the long flat sand, and the jade cup is empty at Yaotai. On a clear day, the bottom of the clear river is shaking, "The sun rises and falls in the rapid waves."
"The rivers and lakes are white when the sun sets, and the sky and earth are clear when the tide comes." This is a poem written by Wang Wei of the Tang Dynasty. The general idea is: the sun sets in the west, the evening tide comes in, the river surges, the blue water and the blue sky merge into one, as if spring fills the world. It not only describes the huge momentum of the tide, but also writes about its special spectacular beauty.
One river, Qiantang, and two lakes are full of wine, three parts west and four parts demon.
I was drunk on the orchid boat after five cups of wine, and I woke up with six hundred bridges behind me.
Tianbao banished the immortal to ride on a crane, and the poetic style was full of poetry and the moon palace was cold.
Every time the tide in Qiantang becomes violent, it is suspected that there is a drunken orgy.
The king of Yue also fled to the deserted hills and tombs, and felt sad on the vast sea on a floating boat.
The mountains are chasing the smoke, and the sad wind is blowing and the tide is coming.
The turbulent waves from the sky are emptying, and the rivers are overturned, and the seas and mountains are destroyed.
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Borrow the Taishan pagoda to pay me money. The tide of the pond moistens my ink. The peaks of Wutai are my paperweight. The Sichuan basin is my inkstone. I lean on my horse and write a thousand words to write a unique article in heaven and earth.