According to the fourth paragraph of Lesson 9 of Chinese Book (Snow) published by People's Education Press.

The snow scene is beautiful. "It's snowing!" The children reported that snow was good news. Adults can't help but put down their work and go to the window to enjoy the gift of nature-snow. Especially in the south, the snow scene is difficult to photograph. Many families, regardless of the freezing weather, seized the opportunity of snowing to take a family photo in the snow and leave the snow scene as a souvenir. The children are busy making snowmen, snowballing and having snowball fights. Obviously, many people like snow. Compared with the sad mood when people encounter heavy rain, continuous rain, strong wind and scorching sun, the snow scene is refreshing. Because of this, there are also many poems about snow by literati in past dynasties. Xie Jin Daoyun once wrote in the poem "Ode to Snow": "The difference between sprinkling salt in the air can be simulated, if catkins are due to the wind." Comparing snow to salt in the air, it seems that the wind blows catkins all over the floor. The poem "How to Deal with Snow in the Garden" between the Tang and Song Dynasties said: "I don't know if it is happy today, but it is suspected that the forest bloomed last night." He said that he didn't know there were snowflakes falling in the yard today. He thought there were flowers on the branches of the yard last night, which was a vivid and appropriate metaphor. Zhang Songyuan's poem "Snow" wrote: "Yulong lost 3 million, and broken scales flew all over the sky." The jade dragon here describes flying snow, and the broken scales describe snowflakes flying like scales falling one after another. Huang Yuangeng's poem "Snow" compares snow to jade: "Mountains and rivers are thousands of miles away from jathyapple, and the world is selfless and jade Qian Qian." Li Bai's description of snow in Tang Dynasty is even more exaggerated. He wrote in "Popular in the North": "Snowflakes in Yanshan Mountain are as big as seats and blow down Xuanyuantai." Xuanyuantai is said to be the place where the Yellow Emperor caught flies.

In addition to many poets above, snow is compared to sprinkling salt, catkin, forest flowers, jade dragons, broken bones, jade, mats, and others compare snow to white crane feathers, plum blossoms, white carpets and so on.

When it first snows, the snowflakes are often neither big nor dense, such as catkins that float lightly with the wind. The wind is blowing harder and harder, the snow is getting denser and denser, and the snowflake is getting bigger and bigger, like a white net, and things in the distance can't be seen clearly. Like a continuous curtain, it falls straight to the ground and returns light at the same time. Snow covered roofs and roads, crushed branches, covered the appearance of various objects, blocked roads and traffic, and snowflakes flying all over the sky made heaven and earth melt into a white whole. If you walk on the road, you will soon become a living snowman.

Xiao Hong, a female writer in China, once described a snowy night in a field of life and death: the snow on the mountain was blown by the wind, as if to bury the small house beside the mountain. The trees howled and the snow covered the small room. A big tree leaning on the edge of Zhushan Mountain was broken. John was afraid of being overwhelmed by all the sounds and retreated to the horizon!

Russian writer Pushkin also described the coming of snowstorm in The Captain's Daughter: the wind is getting stronger and stronger. Xiaoyun became a thick white cloud, slowly rising, expanding and gradually covering the sky. It is snowing lightly. Suddenly, a large piece of snow fell. The wind roared and the snowstorm came. In an instant, the dark sky merged with Xue Hai, and everything was out of sight.

In the above two paragraphs, both Xiao Hong and Pushkin wrote about snow, snow fighting against wind, and wind helping snow.

Xiao Hong also wrote about the weight of snow; Snow should cover the hut and break branches.

Pushkin's description of the snowstorm also emphasized the role of clouds. Before the snowstorm came, the clouds in the sky gradually expanded, which contributed to the snowstorm.

Lev tolstoy, a Russian writer, wrote when describing the snow in the wilderness in Blizzard: "The snowstorm is getting fiercer and fiercer, the sky begins to freeze, and people's noses and cheeks freeze even more. Cold air is injected into leather clothes more frequently, so clothes need to be wrapped more tightly. Sleigh sometimes rolls on bare ice because the snow on the ground is blown away by the wind. ..... I seem to feel that there is a strong light on the snow-white Yuan Ye, and my eyes are wide open. The low and dark canopy suddenly disappeared, and only a fallen snow was seen in all directions.