What are some poems that praise girls?

The hands are like catkins and the skin is like gelatin. The collar is like a caterpillar, and the teeth are like rhinoceros. The head is furrowed and the eyebrows are furrowed. A beautiful smile and beautiful eyes. (Excerpted from The Book of Songs·"Shuo Ren")

Interpretation: This is a poem that uses metaphor to describe Zhuang Jiang's beauty. The fingers are white and soft, and the skin is white and delicate. The neck is long and white, and the teeth are smooth and well-proportioned. The forehead is broad and square, and the eyebrows are thin and curved. The smart smile has a wine dimple, and the beautiful and clear eyes reveal infinite affection.

2. The peach blossoms shine brightly. When the son returns home, it is suitable for his family. (Excerpted from "The Book of Songs·Taoyao")

Interpretation: This is a poem about a girl getting married. The first two sentences are about the bride's appearance. She is as graceful and charming as a peach blossom.

3. The clouds are like clothes, the flowers are like faces, the spring breeze is blowing the threshold and the dew is thick. If we hadn't seen him at the top of Qunyu Mountain, he would have met at Yaotai under the moon. A branch of red dew is fragrant, and the clouds and rain in Wushan are heartbreaking. Who can be likened to the Han Palace? Poor Feiyan relies on her new makeup. (Excerpted from "Qingping Diao" by Li Bai of the Tang Dynasty)

Interpretation: This is a poem describing the incomparable beauty of Yang Yuhuan. The clothes are like colorful clouds, the appearance is like flowers, and the dewy peonies are as elegant as the spring breeze blowing. Even the peerless beauty Zhao Feiyan cannot match Yang Guifei's natural beauty.

4. Green grass beside the river and lush willows in the garden. Yingying, the girl upstairs, stood brightly at the window, E'e'e made up in red and pink, and her slender hands were bare. (Excerpted from Nineteen Ancient Poems, "Green Grass Along the River")

Explanation: This is a song of resentment about missing a woman. The poem describes her beautiful and delicate appearance: white body skin, slender fingers, gorgeous dress and light and beautiful demeanor.

5. The Qin family had a good daughter who named herself Luofu. Luofu likes sericulture and picks mulberries in the south corner of the city. The green silk is the cage tie, and the cinnamon twig is the cage hook. The Japanese is wearing a bun on his head, and there are bright moon beads in his ears. Xiangqi is the lower skirt and purple qi is the upper skirt. When a traveler sees Luofu, he lowers his shoulder and strokes his beard... The plower forgets his plow, and the hoeer forgets his hoe. (Excerpted from Han Yuefu·Mo Shang Sang)

Interpretation: This poem outlines the image of the vanilla beauty Luofu. Luofu is carrying a mulberry cage woven with blue silk rope and using cinnamon branches as hooks. Her hair was styled in a beautiful and fashionable style, and her ears were adorned with dazzling pearls. Wearing a yellow patterned satin skirt and a purple patterned satin top. The last few sentences describe the gaffe of the bystanders, which further exaggerates the beauty of Luo Fu's appearance.

6. On the fifteenth day of the Year of the Orchid, spring is the only day of the year. It has a long train with a belt and wide sleeves. Orchid field jade on the head, Da Qin pearl behind the ear. How graceful are the two servant girls? There is nothing good in this life. One servant girl is five million, two servant girls are more than ten million. (Excerpted from "Yulin Lang" by Xin Yannian of the Han Dynasty)

Interpretation: This is a poem describing the beauty of a wine-selling girl. It uses an exaggerated technique to describe the brilliance of Hu Ji.

7. It looks like a bright moon over a river of clouds, and its body is like a gentle breeze moving waves. (Excerpted from "Bai Ning Song" by Liu Shuo of the Song Dynasty)

Explanation: This is a song praising the dancing girl. The dancer's face is as bright as the bright moon in the sky, and her body is as light as the gentle waves blown by the breeze.

Poetry, pronounced as: shī jù, is the sentence that makes up the poem. Poems usually follow the format of poetry and limit the number of words in each sentence. The earliest poems in China have a rhymed verse structure, with strict metrical requirements. For example, the poems in the pre-Qin period generally have four characters per line, as can be seen in the "Book of Songs". Later it developed into five-character or seven-character rhymed poetry, which was found in Tang poetry. After the economic and cultural development of the Song and Yuan Dynasties, the content of the poems was gradually expanded and interpreted. In the late period of the New Democratic Revolution, the poems evolved into free-style poetry without the limit of word count.

Detailed explanation

The sentences of poetry, the language of poetry, the imagery of poetry, the form of poetry, and the connotation of poetry also generally refer to poetry.

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Han Yu of Tang Dynasty's "He Hou Xielu Ode to Bamboo Shoots": "Hou Sheng came to comfort me, and I was shocked when I read the poem." 》Poetry: "In a century-old poem, between the wine glasses of the Three Kingdoms."

Guo Xiaochuan's poem "Building Hometown into a Paradise" "My poems are war drums. I will always urge you to move forward."