I have a golden bottle. Who has wine poems?

1. I have a golden urn, who has a wine poem:

I have a golden urn, who has wine, and the wind blows willows by the Baiyun River.

Crazy songs, drinking thousands of glasses of wine, getting drunk on September 9 next year.

Life is just a few glasses of wine, and one or two glasses are helpless and one or two glasses are sad.

They are all dead guests, so why worry?

This poem comes from Xin Qiji and is included in Jia Xuan's long and short sentences.

Xin Qiji's life:

Xin Qiji (1 140- 1207) was a poet in the Southern Song Dynasty. The original word Tanfu was later changed to You 'an, alias Jiaxuan, and was born in Licheng (now Jinan, Shandong). 2 1 year-old joined the anti-Jin army and soon returned to the Southern Song Dynasty. He has been to Hubei, Jiangxi, Hunan, Fujian and eastern Zhejiang. Fight for gold all your life. He has been on "Ten Comments on Meiqin" and "Nine Comments" to explain the strategy of war and defense, showing his outstanding military talent and patriotic enthusiasm.

His lyrics expressed patriotic enthusiasm for restoring reunification, poured out grief and indignation, and condemned the humiliation and peace of the rulers at that time. There are also many works that praise the rivers and mountains of the motherland. He has a wide range of subjects, is good at using predecessors' allusions, and has a heroic style, but there is no lack of delicacy and gentleness. The works include Jia Xuan's long and short sentences, and the neighbors include Xin Jiaxuan's poems and notes.