1. Poems describing eating chicken, Bai Juyi's "Morning Chicken": "Buy the morning chicken and the chicken will sing, and you don't have to wait for it to crow. Deep in the mountains, the moon is dark and the wind is cold, and you want to be close to the dawn and crow." Xu Yin's "Morning Chicken" of the Tang Dynasty
"Chicken": "Twelve genus of famous ginseng, the flowers are deep into the feathers. It keeps promises to remind the morning, and it can sing to send off the dawn. The crown is decorated with auspicious walls, and the sharp claws cut the gold. It only feels like rice beams, how to repay the sound of virtue." Wang of the Tang Dynasty
Zun's "Cockcrow Song": "The golden ones are perched beside the corolla, and they call each other in unison in the morning. The switch has its own livelihood, and there is no need to be enlightened and wait for you to crow." Li Shangyin's "Fu Deji": "The rice beams are still enough to survive.
Young, the special show of Jealousy Enemy is a good way to entertain yourself. But you have to be frightened at the fifth watch to stabilize your dream, and you will not hesitate to be in the snow." Zhu Yuanzhang's "Golden Rooster Crows": "The rooster crows once and pouts once, the rooster crows twice and pouts twice, and the rooster crows three times.
The fusang day sweeps away the remaining stars and the dawning moon." The essayist Yang Shuo once wrote a poem "Snowy Night Reminiscing" in Yan'an in the winter of 1944: "The wind and snow in the four mountains are melancholy, and the night is full of darkness singing Xiaoji. Since then.
A poetic heart is as burning as fire, and one who devotes oneself to dust is willing to sacrifice himself." 2. Poems about chickens. When the rooster sings, the whole world will be white!
(Li He) Flying to the Qianxun Pagoda on the peak, hearing the rooster crow and seeing the sun rising!
(Wang Anshi) Dogs bark in the deep alley, cocks crow on top of the mulberry trees (Tao Yuanming's "Returning to the Garden and Fields") The sun is visible from half of the wall, and roosters are heard in the air (Li Bai's "Sleepwalking Tianmu's Song of Farewell") There is a lot of green wine on the pavilion, and there is nothing on the plate
Golden Rooster (Li Bai) The sorrow comes from it, and the rooster crows with sighs.
(Cao Zijian's "The Abandoned Wife") The two slender newborns have half white and half black eyes.
The rooster crows for the first time, and falls with the dawn star (Xu Chaoyun of the ancient Yuefu). Killing the chicken and refusing to invite Ji Lu, you should ask the son to wrap up the rice (Su Dongpo's "Ci Yun Xu Ji") Gide's famous name five, the first crow.
Bi San ("Chicken" by Du Fu) is made of carved wood and tied with silk threads to represent an old man. The chicken's skin and white hair are the same as the real one.
It was quiet for a moment, but it seemed like a dream in life.
("The Old Man Ode to Wood" by Liang Quan of the Tang Dynasty) The wind and rain are like darkness, and the cock crows endlessly.
"The Book of Songs" The rooster crows on the purple road and the dawn is cold - Cen Shen's "Fenghe Zhongshusheren Jia arrives at the Daming Palace in the early morning" The rooster crows in the Maodian moon, and the people trace the frost in Banqiao (Wen Tingyun's "Morning Journey to Shangshan") A talk about ancient chicken chanting poems
When referring to the chicken in poetry, contemporary readers may first think of the great man Mao Zedong's popular phrase "When a rooster sings, the world will be white" ("Huanxisha·Mr. Liu Yazi").
In fact, "When I sing the rooster, the world becomes white" is a reference to a poem by Li He, a famous poet of the Tang Dynasty, "I am obsessed with the soul, but when I sing the rooster, the world becomes white" ("To the Drinking Tour").
Obviously, understanding ancient chicken chanting poems is quite beneficial for "serving the past for the present".
In our country, chicken poetry has a long history.
As early as the "Book of Songs", my country's first collection of poems, there are "chickens roosting in Zhe", "chickens roosting in Jie" ("Wang Feng·Gentlemen in Service"), "the wind and rain are miserable, the roosters crow", "The wind and rain are faint, the cock crows", "The wind and rain are like darkness, the cock crows endlessly" ("Zheng Feng·Feng Yu") and other poems about chicken.
Of course, these cannot be said to be poems about chickens, but they are just poems that set off the situation and exaggerate the atmosphere.
After the "Book of Songs", poems about chickens have emerged one after another.
For example, Qu Yuan, the great patriotic poet of the Chu State during the Warring States Period, had a poem: "Would you rather fly with a yellow swan? Will the chickens and swans compete for food?" ("Bu Ju"); Cao Zhi, a poet of the Wei Dynasty in the Three Kingdoms, had a poem: "Cockfighting on the east suburban road, horses walking among the long catalpa trees."
" ("Famous Capitals"), Bao Zhaoyou, a poet from the Song Dynasty in the Southern Dynasty, wrote "When the cock crows in Luocheng, the forbidden gates are opened at dawn" ("Dai Fang Ge Xing").
The Yuefu folk song of the Southern Dynasties "Huashan Ji" (Part 24): "The ever-crowing rooster, who knows that I miss you and crows alone in the sky." This poem can be said to be the earliest poem about roosters that we can see so far.
Tang poetry is a peak in the history of the development of Chinese poetry.
There are many verses and poems about chickens.
The author used the professional version of Peking University's "Complete Tang Poems" electronic retrieval system to query. There were 50 items matching the query for poems containing the word "chicken" in their titles. There were 1,073 items for poems containing the word "chicken" in the lines.
Matches the query.
Among them, representative poems include the five-character rhyme poem "Chicken" by the great poet Du Fu, the seven-character quatrain "Chicken" by the poet Cui Daorong, and the seven-character quatrain "Watching a Cockfight" by Han Xie.
Song poetry can be said to be another peak in the history of the development of Chinese poetry.
The verses and poems about chickens surpass those of Tang poetry.
The author used the professional version of Peking University's "Complete Song Poems" electronic retrieval system to query. There were 275 poems that matched the query that contained the word "chicken" in the title; there were 5,059 poems that contained the word "chicken" in the lines.
The item matches the query.
Among them, the distinctive poems include Liu Jian's "Morning Chicken", Song Xiang's "Fighting Cock", Li Gou's "Poetry of Cherishing the Chicken", Zhou Zizhi's "Responsibility for the Chicken", Gaust's "Poem of Chicken Trouble", etc.
After the Song Dynasty, there were also many verses and poems about chickens.
Among them, the better-written poems include "Golden Rooster Cave" by Chen Tingyan, a poet from the Yuan Dynasty, "Three Poems about Chickens" by Tang Yin, one of the "Four Great Talents in the South of the Yangtze River" in the Ming Dynasty, and "Chicken" by Yuan Mei, a famous poet from the Qing Dynasty.
Some ancient poems about chickens use the image of chicken as an integral part of the natural scenery.