Other ancient poems about geese

One day, a guest came to Wang's house. Seeing that he was clever, the guests wanted to test him. The guest casually asked Luo a few questions, and the young Luo answered them one by one. In order to test Wang Bin's adaptability, the guest pointed to a flock of geese on Luojiatang and asked him to write poems. Luo briefly thought for a while, and then wrote Ode to Goose:

White swan, white swan, bend your neck and breathe fire into the sky.

White feathers, floating in green water; The red soles of the feet stir the clear water.

As soon as this poem came out, Wang Luobin became famous and was called a "child prodigy" by the world.

In recent years, an old man in rural Hunan province imitated Luo's Ode to Goose and wrote a poem "Ode to Chicken". He even won the "Farmers' Literature Award" of that year, and won a prize of 654.38+100000 yuan. This grandfather is a farmer in Hunan. Wei Yong was nearly 70 when he won the prize. He usually has a hobby of writing poems, but he didn't expect his works to win the second "Farmers' Literature Award", which really surprised him. The following small series will share the dangerous "Nianji" with everyone.

"Nian Ji" is dangerous and brave.

Chicken, chicken, chicken, sharp mouth crowing at the sky.

Night calls the bright moon, and five drums call the morning light.

Judging from the style of the poem, singing a chicken is really similar to singing a goose. However, Luo's Ode to Goose depicts the picture of white geese playing in the water, while his Ode to Chicken depicts the working scene of roosters crowing at dawn. Although the content of poetry can't be compared with other writers in depth, it is already valuable to a rural old man who tirelessly pursues literary creation. After the publication of this ode to a chicken, many netizens opened their minds and wrote works such as ode to a duck, ode to a pig and ode to a dog, which was ridiculous. The following small series will share with you a netizen's "singing dog":

Dog, dog, dog, craning their necks and shouting at the moon.

An acquaintance wags his tail, but a stranger doesn't want to leave.

After reading the works of some netizens, I have to say that Uncle Wei Yong still has some literary skills. In fact, as early as the Ming Dynasty, Tang Bohu, one of the four gifted scholars in the south of the Yangtze River, wrote three poems about "Chanting Chicken". Let's enjoy his third poem "Nian Ji":

Blood-stained crowns and brocade are feathers, and the weather is new.

Facing the guests outside Daming Gate, listen to the first sound immediately.