Pronunciation of "A Spring Leek Green"

Pronunciation: yρqíchūn Jiǔlǜ

1, "leek green in one spring" comes from "Lingbi Goose Water" by Cao Xueqin in Qing Dynasty: "leek green in one spring, rice flowers in ten miles."

2. The whole word is:

Lingbi goose shuier

Apricot curtains attract guests to drink, and you can see a villa.

Lingbi Goose Water, Sang Yu Yanziliang.

A bed of spring leeks is green, and ten miles of rice flowers are fragrant.

In prosperous times, you don't have to plow and weave.

3. Appreciate:

The sentence in Zhuan Xu's poem "Sang Yu Water is a Goose, Water is a Swallow" depicts a vivid picture: geese swim in the dragon water full of pools, and swallows fly out of mulberry trees and build nests among the roof beams. This couplet only uses nouns to compose poems, not verbs or adjectives, which is a special syntax of Chinese classical poetry.

How about the second couplet "Lingbi Goose Water, Sang Yu Swallow Beam"? Which of these two sentences is the subject? Which is the predicate? There is no such thing. No verbs, no adjectives, all nouns put together, "water on the goose", which is a special syntax of poetry. It is conceivable that geese are playing in the water there, and there are dragonflies on the water. Don't tell them. Just use "Lingbi Goose Water" and "Sang Yu Swallow Beam". Swallows go through the Woods, make their nests out of branches of mulberry trees and elms, and come back to make their nests. Imagine for yourself. It is such a grammar, especially neat grammar.

"Lingbi Goose Water, Sang Yu Yanziliang." This poem can be associated with "fish in the drizzle, swallow in the breeze" Comparable, and "the chicken sounds like a maodian moon, and the Banqiao frost travels." On the other hand, it is one of Lin Daiyu's many quatrains.