From Xinghua's detours to Gaoyou's seven verses
"From Xinghua's detours to Gaoyou's seven verses" is the work of Qing Dynasty poet Zheng Xie. The whole poem depicts the author's charming scenery along the way to the south of the Yangtze River in August, as well as his praise for the richness of the products of "Jiangnan".
Original text of the poem
One hundred and sixty miles of lotus fields, surrounded by tens of millions of fish and ducks. The boatman couldn't hold up his pole, and he was so beautiful and pink that he looked pitiful.
The mist, raindrops, and water clouds live in the house, and the shoes look like boats and the snails look like huts. Selling green money to buy wine, and spreading fresh fish on lotus leaves.
The most beautiful fish is bought on the lake, and the water in the lake is the fish cooked. After ten years of paddling between heaven and earth, the herons recognized me as a fisherman.
I bought a sea bass with four gills and a bottle of water shield soup with black beans. Recently, Zhang Han had no intention of going out, but he didn't wait for the autumn wind to start.
Liuwu Guaxiang has a lot of greenery, and the reddest ones are autumn lotuses. The dusk clouds rolled away and the sun emerged, and the cold wind at the end of the day blew thin waves.
One pond is covered with cattails and another with lotuses, and the rice fields are covered with water chestnuts and water chestnuts. It is the eighth month of autumn in the south of the Yangtze River, when chicken heads are as good as pearls.
There is nothing to do to feed autumn insects out of the boat window, it is easy to have time and cold wind. The embroidery was ruthlessly fanned thin, and the frost made the persimmon garden red.