Ye Shaoweng's poems praise apricot blossoms! ~! ~! ~! !

But this spring spring, after all, can't be caged. Look, there is a pink apricot sticking out of the wall.

This park is not worth visiting.

Ye Shaoweng in Southern Song Dynasty

Perhaps my master was worried that my wooden shoes trampled his precious moss and tapped Chai Men lightly, but no one opened it for a long time.

But this spring spring, after all, can't be caged. Look, there is a pink apricot sticking out of the wall.

Precautions:

1. It's not worth going to the park: I didn't meet anyone in the park.

2. Small buckle: pat lightly.

3. Chai Fei: Chai Men.

4. fangs: uneven

Appreciation: This little poem is very lively and interesting in terms of what the poet saw and felt when he visited the garden in spring. This poem is a blend of scenes and scenes, which has been passed down through the ages. The poet went to a friend's house to enjoy flowers, and the mossy road was covered with traces of the poet's clogs. He knocked on Chai Men for a long time, but no one came to open it. The poet imagined the spring scenery of the garden from an apricot flower exposed on the wall, saying that although the door of the garden was closed tightly, the spring scenery could not be closed!