Ancient poems describing eating

If you haven’t had a cup of Taiping wine, the flowers will bloom year after year and the hair will grow old - Song Dynasty Shu Yuexiang's "Thousands of Pinggao hibiscus trees are rotten with clouds and brocade, and walking drunkenly among them is like visiting the hibiscus city"

If you take it The roots of the mutton are combined, and the roots of the mutton are combined to eat the rattan - "Steamed Dolphin" by Zi Yishi of the Song Dynasty

The official has to eat salt, but he has no money and a knife - Huang Tingjian of the Song Dynasty "Entering the Labor Pit" City"

The mud cows eat water and grass, and the wooden horses bite the tiles - Song Shi Huihui's "Reply to the Monk Yun Juxi"

The farm cows eat up the wasteland, and two taels of gold Buying food for a living - Zhou Tan of the Tang Dynasty, "Emperor Min of Jinmen"

Eat some oily glutinous rice cakes to return home, but people still blame him - "Ode to the Ancients" by Shi Huikong of the Song Dynasty

For the past eleven years, spring dreams have been cold, and I traveled south and ate Yuchuan tea - "Jihai Miscellaneous Poems 93" by Gong Zizhen of the Qing Dynasty

The two rivers are cracked and I want to wash my armor, and the walls are moaning and I have no food to eat - Chen of the Song Dynasty Yong's "Visiting Dongtun to Worship the Shaoling Statue in the Dusk of February"

The lotus flowers are beautiful, but the ground chestnuts are delicious - Song Dynasty Wumai's "Sending Dili to Monk Yingsou of Nangshan"

Don’t make waves just because you know how to eat, and you will be welcomed by the drums and music in Tianjie - "Watching the Tide" by Anonymous of the Song Dynasty