Joke Collection Website - Public benefit messages - Why do you say that roses are not as rich as peonies, as cool as plum blossoms, as noble as chrysanthemums, but they have their own charm?

Why do you say that roses are not as rich as peonies, as cool as plum blossoms, as noble as chrysanthemums, but they have their own charm?

Rose is not as rich as peony, Leng Yan as plum blossom and noble as chrysanthemum, but it has its own charm. The color of the rose is delicate and charming, and it is not an exaggeration to say that it is brilliant. Poets in the Tang Dynasty recited many roses, which Piri described as "as thick as an orangutan, diligent in swallows and flying in the air." Zhang Hu sang: "The breeze sweeps away all the swallows, and the rain at night makes it a brocade machine." Some people are even more ingenious, speculating about the fresh textual research source of rose color: "Because of the soil of thousands of years, Nishikawa Brocade was once buried." The poet imagines that the skilled brocade girl is unwilling to be lonely underground, so the spring breeze and spring rain weave a "long strip of spring flowers" to decorate the world. The ice and snow have just melted, and the grass, like a group of lively and lovely children, playfully dances against the spring breeze from the embrace of Mother Earth. They held their heads high and stretched out their yellow and green arms. These "little green angels" first brought people the message of spring.

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