The next sentence is "The Duck Prophet of Warm Spring River Water", which is a poem from "Two Evening Scenes on the Spring River in Huichong" by Su Shi, a poet from the Song Dynasty.
Full poems:
Two Evening Scenes on the Spring River by Hui Chong
Su Shi of the Song Dynasty
One of them
Bamboo A few peach blossoms on the outside are a prophet of the warmth of the spring river.
The ground is covered with wormwood and short reed buds, which is when the puffer fish is about to come.
The second one
The returning Hong wanted to break the group in twos and twos, but they still looked like people returning from the north.
I know from afar that there are many winds and snows in the Shuo Desert, but I am waiting for the spring in the south of the Yangtze River. Extended information
Translation:
Two or three peach blossoms are blooming outside the bamboo forest. Ducks are playing in the water. They are the first to notice the warming of the river in early spring.
The river beach is already full of mugwort, asparagus has begun to sprout, and the pufferfish is about to swim upstream from the sea to the river.
"Two Evening Scenes on the Spring River by Huichong" is a group of poems composed by Su Shi, a writer in the Northern Song Dynasty, inscribed on Huichong's "Evening Scenes on the Spring River". The first poem is titled "Duck Play Picture", which reproduces the mid-spring scenery in the south of the Yangtze River in the original painting, and integrates the poet's reasonable imagination to complement the original painting. The second poem is titled "Picture of Flying Wild Geese", which incorporates human emotions into the wild geese flying north, and expresses the beauty of spring in the south of the Yangtze River.
"Two Evening Scenes on the Spring River by Huichong" were written by Su Shi in the eighth year of Yuanfeng of Shenzong (1085) in Bianjing (now Kaifeng, Henan) for the two pieces of "Evening Scenery on the Spring River" painted by Hui Chong. Inscribe poems on paintings. It is said that this poem was written in Jiangyin.
Su Shi (January 8, 1037 - August 24, 1101), also known as Zizhan and Hezhong, was also known as Tieguan Taoist and Dongpo layman. He was known as Su Dongpo and Su Xian in the world. Han nationality, a native of Meishan, Meizhou (now part of Meishan City, Sichuan Province), and his ancestral home is Luancheng, Hebei Province. He was a writer, calligrapher and painter in the Northern Song Dynasty.
After Song Huizong came to the throne, Su Shi was successively transferred to Lianzhou resettlement, Shuzhou Tuanlian deputy envoy, and Yongzhou resettlement. In April of the third year of Yuanfu (1100), the imperial court issued an amnesty and Su Shi was reinstated as Chaofeng Lang.