Poetry of Mountain Villages is a poem by Shao Yong, a philosopher in the Northern Song Dynasty. The full text is as follows
At first glance, it is two or three miles away, and mist hangs over four or five families.
The pavilions are six or seven, and the flowers bloom in eighty or ninety.
At first glance, two or three miles away, mist enveloped four or five families. There are six or seven pavilions beside the village, and many flowers are in full bloom.
Appreciate:
The poet arranged a quantifier in each sentence of this poem, which is novel and changeable, and each sentence also arranged two or three numbers: the word "one" begins, 23, 45 and 67 are embedded in the sentence, and 890 returns to the beginning of the sentence.
Ten Chinese characters representing numbers from one to ten are woven together with paths, smoke, villages, pavilions, flowers and plants in natural numerical order. With the natural arrangement of poems and paintings, a natural, simple and hazy mountain village landscape painting is formed with only a few strokes, which naturally blends into the artistic conception of the mountain village.