Complete collection of poems praising swans

Poems describing "swan" are:

1, Goose Goose, Quxiang Xiang Tiange. White feathers, floating in green water; The red soles of the feet stir the clear water. Goose, goose, goose, facing the blue sky, a group of geese are singing with their necks bent. White feathers, floating on the green water. The red soles of the feet stirred the clear water waves.

2. There are a flock of Xiting geese in the room, and the sleeping sand is white. We should look back at the Phoenix Pool, because the cage will follow Wang Youjun. From Du Fu's Defang Gongchi Goose, translation: There are a flock of geese in the fragrant Xiting, sleeping on the beach is whiter than clouds. On the Phoenix Pool, I promised to watch it again, so as to report "The Cage" with Wang Youjun.

Yinyinxi is green, and the light rain makes the beach flat and shallow. Goose and duck don't know that spring has passed, but they are scrambling to catch up with peach blossoms. Spring Day by Chao Chongzhi, a poet in the Song Dynasty, is translated as follows: Under the shade of vegetation, the winding stream looks particularly green, and a light rain drops on the lawn, splashing fine sand. Goose and duck don't know that spring has passed, and they are also vying to catch the peach blossoms.

4. The flowing water in Jinghu Lake is clear, and the fanatics return to the ship. In ancient times, I wrote to Taoist Ubak to exchange geese, and you must have such fun. From the Tang Dynasty poet Li Bai's "Welcome to the Moon", the surface of Jinghu Lake is like a mirror. You Siming fanatics come back and row as hard as you can. In ancient times, Wang Xizhi wrote about the exchange of geese between Huang Tingjing and Taoist priests in Yin Shan. You must have an easy time there.

5, lying in the sand and lying in the water, the winding bank is extremely cloudy. Solution will pity Kong Cui, women will grow, so men will divide. A flock of geese are sleeping soundly in the sand water by the river, seemingly free, and the sunset shines on the river, which is a scene of sunset. The author falls in love with geese, laments the difference between men and women, and is filled with the author's disappointment and lonely feelings for his lover.