About Jiaxing Poems

1. Poems about Jiaxing

Smoke and Rain Tower Yang Wanli in the Southern Song Dynasty

Light smoke and sparse rain in the desert, green tiles and red roofs shine in the water corner.

Fortunately, there is a garden next to Yandi, so you might as well fish in a coir raincoat in Yuanhu Lake.

The fishermen’s songs are loud and clear, and the trees in the distance are dimly lit.

Just leaning against the dry shirt, the sleeves of my shirt are cold, which makes me feel happy.

Passing through Jiaxing Yuan·Saduli

Three mountains and a sea of ??clouds are thousands of miles away, and ten cattail sails are hung with smoke and water.

A passer-by in Wuzhong misses Mo’s home, and the paintings of boats in the south of the Yangtze River look like houses.

The reed buds are short and cut through the blue sand, and the carp on the bow are blowing the waves.

Wu Ji rowed into the city, and the drizzle and cold weather produced green sand.

No one can continue my song in the water, and the cold moon on the river blows the purple bamboo.

Partridges sing in the spring breeze, and the city is full of green flowers. 2. What are the poems describing Jiaxing?

The ancient Jiaxing poets used the local conditions and customs as the theme of poetry creation. The earliest poets were Zhang Yaotong's "Hundred Odes of Jiahe" in the Song Dynasty, followed by "Hundred Odes of Xiuzhou" written by Xu Xunru in the Ming Dynasty, and Zhu Yizun's "Yuanyang Lake Song", became a great sight, and its legacy has lasted for hundreds of years. It has been in Jiaxing poetry circle formed a special genre.

"Besides the four hundred songs in Yuanhu Lake, the international songs are everywhere." These two lines of Guo Moruo's poems illustrate the fame of "Song of Yuanyang Lake".

As soon as Zhu Yizun's "Pao Ge" came out, many people harmonized with it. Affected by it, a large number of "Pao Ge style poems" using folk song creation techniques appeared, which complemented "Yuanyang Lake Pao Ge". The annotations of each poem retain a large amount of information on historical sites, legends, products, and customs, and are of high value as local historical documents.

There are dozens of poems in the style of poems that have been recorded before and after: "Hundred Odes of Jiahe", "Hundred Odes of Xiuzhou" by Zhang Yaotong of the Song Dynasty, "Hundred Odes of Xiuzhou" by Zhang Yaotong of the Song Dynasty, "Hundred Odes of Xiuzhou" by Zhang Yaotong of the Ming Dynasty, "Song of Meijia Dancing" by Xu Xunru of the Ming Dynasty, "Range Rover in Wutang" by Zhu Guozuo of the Ming Dynasty. "Eighty-eight Ming Sun Dongxi poems" ("Yuanyang Lake Flood Song", one hundred Qing Dynasty poems by Zhu Yizun (Xiushui) and "Yuanyang Lake Flood Song" eighty-eight Qing Tan Jicong (continued) and "Yuanyang Lake Flood Song" thirty Qing Tan Jicong ( "Yuanyang Lake Flooding Song" by Niu Shikai of the Qing Dynasty ("Yuanyang Lake Flooding Song" One Hundred Qing Poems Li Zhen continued "Yuanyang Lake Flooding Song" One Hundred Qing Dynasty Zhu Linying ("Yuanyang Lake Flooding Song" Thirty Qing Dynasty Yao Jinxi ("Yuanyang Lake Flooding Song" Chapter 50) Shen Zongliang of the Qing Dynasty () "Hundred Ancient Odes of Jiahe" Xu Fa of the Qing Dynasty ("Miscellaneous Songs in the Grain" Qing Dynasty Xuanyou's "Miscellaneous Odes of Heshi" Qing Dynasty Chu Fengxiang () "Miscellaneous Odes of Two Lakes" Qing Dynasty Yu Ruyan ("Hantang Song" 1 One volume of Shen Zongdao of the Qing Dynasty ("Longshan Baoge"), one hundred poems of Qingxuzhao ("Yuanhu Baoge"), one volume compiled by Wu Gaozeng of the Qing Dynasty ("Zhongxi Zhuzhi Ci") Qing Sheng Zongkai ("Zhongxi Baoge") Qing Shen Buqing ("Lingtang" One Hundred Songs of the Qing Dynasty by Zhang Qianli () "One Hundred Odes of the Deep Lake" by Qing Shen Tao () "Poems of Bamboo Branches on the Sea" by Qing Zhu Wenbing ("Miscellaneous Odes of Nostalgic Ancient Poems on Wenchuan") by Qing Wang Mingfu ("One Hundred Songs of Plum Blossom Stream" by Qing Yao Jiao Ao () "One Hundred Odes of Fishing in Yuxi" by Zhu Yuezong of Qing Dynasty ("One Hundred Odes of Nanhu" by Wu Cui'en of Qing Dynasty ("Old Poems of Wenchuan Zhu") by Peijin of Qing Dynasty ("One Hundred Odes of Wei Tang" by Lu Yue'an of Qing Dynasty).