There is a poem in Guo Moruo's Camellia Poem with hermeneutics: Camellia, a tree with early peaches, what is the full text with hermeneutics?

Guo Moruo's Camellia Poems of Black Dragon Pool

Camellia trees are early pink and proud of the clouds.

Tang Mei, who was shocked, was awake and tired, setting off Bai Song's posture.

The author tried to do a vernacular translation:

This camellia (from Black Dragon Pool) blooms in the red of peach blossom and stands proudly in the sea of flowers, like red clouds. Tang Mei (Plum Blossom in Tang Dynasty), which had had a flower break, was awakened by it, and the cypress (cypress in Song Dynasty) set off, making it more graceful.

Note: This poem was written by Guo Moruo while watching the ancient tea tree "Poinsettia" in Heilongtan. Luo Yangru's "Ji Ji Ji Ji" (also known as "Yunnan Tales"), volume 9, page 309, talks about the camellia in Yunnan, and comments on the poinsettia in Heilongtan as follows: "It's also a tree with big flowers, thick roots and hands, and it's precious to plant poinsettia." There are many ancient camellia trees in central Yunnan, some of which are hundreds of years old and some are thousands of years old. And there are many black tea flowers, such as the famous ancient tree Poinsettia, red agate tea, red orb, pearl red, Chiba red and so on. Therefore, the poet has a soft spot for black tea flowers in central Yunnan and camellias, leaving many excellent works. The first sentence of Yang Shen's "Yue Ling Ci in South Yunnan" is about camellia in Yunnan: "In the first month, the spring in south Yunnan is early, the tea trees on the mountain are in full bloom, the gorgeous peach blossoms are overwhelming, the makeup is good, and Hongyun Island is full of gardens." Monks in the Ming Dynasty praised Camellia: "Leng Yan is full of spring, and Camellia ranks in Yunnan. Thousands of trees swallow fire, and residual snow burns red for a long time. "