Cui Daorong's ancient poem Plum Blossom shows the characteristics of plum blossom.

Plum Blossom is a poem written by Cui Daorong, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. The poet's entrustment to the north wind is that the poet loves flowers and borrows them, fearing that his mood will be leaked. Perhaps the poet looks at plum blossoms in spite of illness, and the flute is more likely to touch the heartstrings of people who love flowers. The fear of falling at the beginning of the cold plum blossom should imply the poet's sigh for life.

The first four sentences of this poem describe several sea flowers that bloom as white as snow. Although it has a unique charm, it can't be vividly expressed in the painting. She is elegant and noble, not afraid of cold and frost, and her faint fragrance contains clank charm. The last four sentences focus on lyric. The flute is the most likely to cause people's worries. The ancients said that troubled people don't want to listen, so they come to the pillow. Moreover, there is a plum blossom song in the flute, which easily causes people to worry about borrowing flowers. The poet is sick and lonely. In the scene of Leng Xiang mixed with flute, the poet has a faint heart: If the north wind understands my pity, don't destroy it easily, let her open more time. "Easy" is easy to say here. The "north wind" is the north wind. Ruan Ji has a poem saying: "The north wind is cold and slightly frosty."