The sky is against the ground, and the rain is against the wind. The mainland faces the sky. Mountain flowers are to the sea tree, and the sun is to the sky. The thunder is weak and foggy. The sun sets into the sky. The wind is high, the moon is white and the rain is red. Cattle and women go around the galaxy, and two businessmen fight west and east. October frontier fortress, rustling frost surprised Rong brigade; On the Sandong River, the snow is long and the fisherman is cold.
River to Han, green to red. Uncle Yu is against Lei Gong. Smoke building to snow cave, moon palace to heavenly palace. A √ dà i, sunny. Wax blocked the fishing awning. Crossing the stars is like an arrow, spitting the moon is like a bow. Plum blossoms rain, and Chiting people feel the lotus wind. In front of Maodian village, the bright moon falls on the forest and chickens sing rhymes; On Banqiao Road, the green frost locks the horse's whereabouts.
Mountain to sea, China to Song. Four mountains vs three fairs. Palace flowers against forbidden willows, stuffed geese against dragon generals. Qingshu Temple in Guanghan Palace, picking up Cui. Zhuang Zhoumeng becomes a butterfly, and Lv Wang flies a bear. In the north (yǒu), the summer monsoon stops blowing, and the south curtain is exposed to the sun, which saves the winter drying. Crane dance floor, the jade emperor can be immortal; On Fengxiang stage, Zixiao blew away the beauty wind.
A Brief Introduction to Li's Weng Dunyun
Li Weng Dui Yun is a collection of works written by Li Yu, a writer in the late Ming and early Qing Dynasties. Li Weng Dui Yun is a book about the enlightenment of temperament. The book is divided into rhymes, including astronomy, geography, flowers and trees, birds and animals, people and utensils. It also teaches the methods of one, two, three, five, seven or even eleven pairs from the perspective of melody. The harmony of phonology can help children get training in pronunciation, vocabulary and rhetoric.
"Li Weng Dui Yun" is a practical teaching material for children in ancient China to learn to write poems, and it is known as one of the "Three Basics of Poetry".