Joke Collection Website - Talk about mood - Poems describing the snow in the Forbidden City

Poems describing the snow in the Forbidden City

1, Han Yu's "Chun Xue": It's too late for snow to spring, so it's flying through the courtyard trees.

2. Li Shangyin's "Two Poems on Snow": The pearl curtain on the powder wall is lighter than catkin and heavier than frost.

3, Guan Hanqing's "Dade Song Winter": There is more snow, and people can't help but keep their souls thin and beautiful.

4. See the South of Fen Liang as a Small Shadow by Lan Xingde: Listen to the rain in front of the lamp from a distance and look back at the mountain behind the snow.

5. Zhao Wei's Happy Zhang Zhangji: Chun Xue is full of air and feels like a flower.

6. Wu Shuji's "Sauvignon Blanc, Smoke Princess": Smoke Princess. It's snowing. Snow piled up on the branches of plum trees.

The Forbidden City is also called the Forbidden City. In ancient China, the planning concept of "harmony between man and nature" was emphasized, and the stars in the sky were used to correspond to the capital planning, so as to highlight the legitimacy of political power and the supremacy of imperial power.

The Emperor of Heaven lives in Wei Zi Palace, and the emperor on earth claims that he is the "son of heaven" ordered by God. His residence should be a symbol of Wei Zi Palace, so as to conform to the Heaven Emperor. The Book of the Later Han Dynasty records that "there is a Wei Zi Palace in the sky, which is the residence of God". The king built a palace and liked it. Wei Zi, Ziyuan and Zigong have become synonymous with the Forbidden City.

Because the feudal palace was forbidden in ancient times, ordinary people could not enter it, so it was called "Purple Forbidden". However, it was called the "Imperial City" in the early Ming Dynasty and directly called the "Forbidden City" in the middle and late Ming Dynasty.