Xuewang in Beidu (In the flat-headed village of the small house, where the smoke is blowing is the house.)
"Xuewang in Beidu" is a seven-character quatrain composed by Zhao Bingwen, a poet of the Jin Dynasty. The woodcutter cart came out of the snow in Qianshan Mountain, and the clouds snaked along the way. In the flat-headed village of the hut, people are everywhere where the smoke is blowing. ——Jin Dynasty·Zhao Bingwen's "Xuewang in the Northern Capital"
Zhao Bingwen (1159~1232) was a scholar and calligrapher of the Jin Dynasty. His courtesy name was Zhou Chen, his nickname was Xianxian Jushi, and in his later years he was called Xianxian Old Man. A native of Fuyang, Cizhou (now Ci County, Hebei Province). In the 25th year of Emperor Shizong's reign, he became a Jinshi and was transferred to Ansai. He was the governor of Dingzhou, and he was a lenient and simple official. Tired of paying homage to the Minister of Rites. When Aizong ascended the throne, he became a bachelor of Hanlin and studied national history with him. He served as an official for five dynasties, and he regarded himself as a poor scholar, never giving up his books for a day.
He is good at poetry and prose, and his poems mostly write about natural scenery. He is also good at cursive calligraphy. His works include "Collected Works of Xianxian Old Man Fu Shui"