Poems about the beauty of reeds in winter

1. Bai Juyi of the Tang Dynasty, "Nanpu Drinks to Send the King Back to the Capital on the 15th of the Year"

Excerpts from the original text:

Later, the ice is raw and the water is splashing, and the night comes Lushan is lost in the dark clouds.

The wind blows and the snow falls like rice, rustling among the reeds.

Interpretation:

After the twelfth lunar month, ice and snow covered the Huanjiang River, and dark clouds at night covered Mount Lushan. The wind blows the snowflakes down like grains of rice, and the wind blows the reeds in winter.

2. Chang Jian of the Tang Dynasty, "The Late Encounter with the Grand Duke in Mourning"

Excerpts from the original text:

The sunrise over the Wei River was white, when King Wen was hunting.

The fishermen are fishing in the reeds, but there are no bears in Sichuan. ?

Interpretation:

When the sun rises, the water of the Wei River is clear and white, and King Wen is hunting at this moment. The old man was fishing in the reed swamp. There were no wild beasts in the mountains and rivers.

3. "Evening at Niuzhu" by Liu Yuxi of the Tang Dynasty

Excerpt from the original text:

The evening wind blows from the reeds, and scales grow on the autumn river.

The remaining clouds suddenly change color, and there are lingering sounds of swimming geese.

Interpretation:

The evening wind blows from the reed marsh at night, and the river surface sparkles. The remaining sunset glow suddenly changed color, and you could occasionally hear the chirping of wandering geese.

4. Song Dynasty Su Shi's "Shui Long Yin·The dew of cold smoke and the coldness of Jia Jia Lao"

Excerpts from the original text:

The dew of cold smoke and the coldness of Jia Jia Lao are conquering the world. Very few.

Interpretation:

The cold dew air will freeze, and the reeds will not bloom. The geese flying long distances in the sky have a clear and distant sound.

5. Modern Poetry: Zhang Mei's "Reeds in Early Winter"

Excerpts from the original text:

I like to see the reeds in early winter, which are white and seem to have fallen in advance from the wilderness. Snow. "The autumn colors are unattended, half are reed flowers and half are polygonum flowers." In the eyes of Huang Geng, a man of the Yuan Dynasty, the autumn colors are equally divided between reed flowers and polygonum flowers. Polygonum flowers are beautiful because of their warmth, while the reed flowers are light and expressive. The soft reed flowers dancing in the desolation are already the protagonists in the early winter wilderness.