What are some poems praising Mount Fuji?

There is only one poem praising Mount Fuji:

It was written by a person in the Edo period, and the name is "Mount Fuji"

The original text is as follows:

The cyclists come and travel on the top of the clouds, and the dragon lives in the deep abyss of the old cave.

The snow is like a piece of grass, the smoke is like a handle, and the white fan hangs upside down in the East China Sea.

Introduction to Mount Fuji:

Mount Fuji [fù shì shān] (Japanese: ふじさん, English: Mount Fuji) is the highest peak in Japan and one of Japan's important national symbols.

1. An active volcano spanning Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures, close to the Pacific coast, about 80 kilometers southwest of Tokyo.

2. Mount Fuji is known as the "Holy Mountain" by the Japanese people and is a symbol of the Japanese nation.

3. As one of Japan’s national symbols, it enjoys a high reputation around the world.

4. It is also often called "Furong Peak" or "Fugaku" and "Fuji Kaolin".

5. Since ancient times, the name of this mountain has often appeared in Japanese traditional poetry "Waka".

6. Japanese poets once praised it with poems such as "The jade fan hangs upside down in the East China Sea" and "Fuji's white snow reflects the morning sun".

7. Mount Fuji is one of the largest active volcanoes in the world.

8. It is currently dormant, but geologists still classify it as an active volcano.

9. Since the beginning of written records in 781, *** has erupted 18 times. The last eruption was in 1707, and it has been dormant since then.

10. In August 2002 (the 14th year of the Heisei period), the Japan Institute of Land and Geography remeasured the height of Mount Fuji and found it to be 3775.63 meters.

On June 22, 2013, the 37th World Heritage Conference approved the inclusion of Mount Fuji in Japan on the World Heritage List, making Mount Fuji the 17th World Heritage Site in Japan.