Poems describing spring:
1. "Quequatrains" by Du Fu
Chiri, the mountains and rivers are beautiful, and the spring breeze is fragrant with flowers and grass. The mud melts and swallows fly, and the sand is warm and mandarin ducks sleep.
2. "Birdsong Stream" Wang Wei
The people are idle, the osmanthus flowers are falling, the night is quiet and the spring mountains are empty. The moonrise scares the mountain birds, and they sing in the spring stream.
3. "A Visit to the Garden Is Not Worth It" by Ye Shaoweng
You should pity the clogs and their teeth are covered with green moss, and the small buckle firewood door will not open for a long time. The garden is full of spring scenery, and a branch of red apricot comes out of the wall.
4. "Spring Festival" by Du Fu
The solemn tidbits are late, and the feathers are red and light. The day is long, the male bird is alone, and the spring is far away.
5. "Ode to the Willow" by He Zhizhang
The jasper is made up into a tree as high as a tree, with thousands of green silk ribbons hanging down. I don’t know who cuts out the thin leaves. The spring breeze in February is like scissors.
6. "Qingming" by Du Mu
It rains heavily during the Qingming Festival, and pedestrians on the road want to die. When I asked where the restaurant was, the shepherd boy pointed to Xinghua Village.
7. "Late Spring" Han Yu
The grass and trees know that spring will soon return, and all kinds of red and purple will compete with each other. The poplars and elm pods have no talent and thoughts, but they can only solve the problem of snow flying all over the sky.
8. "Peach Blossoms in Dalin Temple" by Bai Juyi
The beauty of April in the world is over, and the peach blossoms in the mountain temple are beginning to bloom. Everlasting regret has no place to return to in spring, and I don’t know where to turn.
9. "Spring" by Wu Yuanheng
The willows are overcast and the drizzle is clear, and the remaining flowers have fallen and the wandering orioles can be seen. The spring breeze blows the dream of hometown all night, and then chases the spring breeze to Luocheng.
10. "Inscribed on Nanzhuang of the Capital" by Cui Hu
On this day last year, in this gate, the faces of the people and the peach blossoms reflected each other's red. The human face has gone nowhere, but the peach blossoms still smile in the spring breeze.
To appreciate ancient poetry, you need to master the following steps:
1. Read the whole poem to understand the overall artistic conception and emotion. After reading the whole poem, understand the overall artistic conception and emotional tendency of the poem, as well as the cultural and historical background related to the author's life background. At the same time, pay attention to the characteristics of conception, imagery, phonology and rhythm.
2. Analyze the structure and wording of the poem. Analyze the structure and wording of poetry, including line number, sentence structure, rhyme and rhetorical devices, etc. Pay special attention to more advanced vocabulary and expressions. Use a dictionary and notes to learn about unfamiliar vocabulary and grammar.
3. Try to figure out the imagery and rhetorical techniques of poetry. Explore the unique imagery and rhetorical techniques in poetry, and understand the emotions and meanings expressed by the author through these techniques. For example, metaphors, personifications, borrowed objects, metaphors, etc. in poetry.
4. Analyze the historical background of the poem and the author’s life background. By understanding the author's life background and the cultural and historical background of his time, the meaning and emotion of the poem will become clearer.
5. Good at comparison and association. By comparing and associating poems with other poems and related cultural and historical events, you can gain a deeper understanding and appreciation of ancient poetry, and you can also deepen your own understanding of culture and history.
Finally, the process of appreciating ancient poems requires perseverance, repeated reading and analysis, and strengthening one's understanding and perception of poetry.