Compare snow to pear flowers. Who is this poet?

Comparing snow to a pear flower, this poet is Cen Can in the Tang Dynasty.

Cen Can's famous phrase comparing snow to pear blossoms is "Like the strong wind in spring, it comes at night and blows open the petals of ten thousand pear trees". This sentence comes from Bai Xuege Farewell to Wu Gui, a poet in the Tang Dynasty.

Cen Can (7 15-770), a native of Jiangling (present-day Hubei), was born in Nanyang. His father died young and his family declined. He studied books with his brother and read through the history. At the age of 30, he was promoted to Jinshi. I have been to the frontier fortress twice and stayed in the frontier fortress for six years. He is a representative poet of the frontier poetry school in the prosperous Tang Dynasty, and he is as famous as Gao Shi, another frontier poet, and is also called "Gao and Cen". His frontier poems are characterized by the heroic spirit of generously serving the country and the optimistic spirit of not being afraid of hardship, and the highest achievements are some works describing the strange scenery of frontier fortress. Seven-character songs are the most popular.

Original text:

The north wind swept the ground, the white grass was torn off, and eight In the snow crossed the Tatar sky.

Suddenly, like a night wind blowing, like a pear tree in blossom.

Snowflakes fell into the curtains and wet them. The fur was not warm and the gold cup was too thin.

The bow became stiff and almost impossible to pull out, and the metal of the armor condensed on people.

The desert freezes over/kloc-0.000 feet, with a crack, and the sky is full of darkness and melancholy.

In the manager's account, this wine is a farewell party, and the Huqin Pipa flute ensemble adds luster to this entertainment.

In the evening, in front of the headquarters gate, heavy snow fell, the red flag froze, and the wind could not drag.

Luntai East Gate, welcome to the capital. Go, the mountain road is covered with snow.

I haven't seen you in the winding mountain road, leaving only a row of horseshoe prints.