2. Yu Zeng, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, described the scene of fishing in summer in "Smelling Li Duangong fishing and sending him a gift in return": "Ruanlang has no boat to return. He is not as ashamed as a couple, but he wants to go fishing in Los Angeles. "
3. Du Fu's "Jiangcun": "Qingjiang is a song that embraces the village. In Jiang Chun in the long summer, everything is quiet. Since I came from swallows before going to church, I am very close to seagulls in the water. My wife draws paper as a chess game, and my child knocks needles as hooks. The only thing I need for many diseases is medicine, and my body is more desirable. "
4. Meng Haoran's "Looking at Dongting Lake and Merging Books": "In August here, the water in the lake is the same as the sky, and the clouds and smoke are trapped in Yueyang City. If you want to cross without a boat, it is better to sit back and watch the fishermen throw fish."
5. Ji Xiaolan's fishing quatrains: "A fisherman with a paddle, a fisherman with a hook. A clap and a laugh, one person monopolizes a river. "
6. Of course, Liu Zongyuan's "Jiang Xue" was the first to write a winter fishing poem, "There are no birds in a hundred mountains, no footprints in a thousand paths, a boat with a leaf, a bamboo cloak, and an old man fishing for the cold river-snow."
7. Yi Shi in Jiangcun by Sikong Shu: "When the fishing boat comes back, it is not a boat, and the moon in Jiangcun is sleeping. Even if the wind blows away overnight, it is only near the shallow waters of Lu Hua. "
8. There are clouds in Lu You's poem "Casual Love"; "Spring wine is sung at the bottom of the flower, and poles are cast by the river on a moonlit night."
9. On a small fishing trip near Yanhua Reservoir, I hung oblique light with a pole several times. -"Huai East Lake in Autumn" land tour.
10. Take romance as escape, Gan Kun as guide, rainbow as silk, bright moon as hook, unfaithful husband as bait.
-Li Bai's "Fishing Oak at Sea"
1 1. A unkempt little boy learned to draw a bow and sat on the edge of a raspberry-like moss, reflecting his body. Passers-by waved at a distance for fear that the fish would be frightened.