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Ancient interesting Tibetan poems

1. Liu Tang Zongyuan's "Jiang Xue", there are no birds in hundreds of mountains and no footprints in thousands of paths. A boat on the river, a fisherman wearing his webworm moth; Fishing alone is not afraid of snow and ice. This five-character quatrain was written by Liu Zongyuan, an eight-person master in Tang and Song Dynasties, and is selected into Chinese textbooks every year. In just four sentences, it is incisive and can be called the most artistic Tibetan poem. At the beginning of each sentence, the words "thousands of loneliness" are combined together, and the description of the picture expresses the author's thoughts incisively and vividly. 2. In The Water Margin, Wu Yong wrote a Tibetan poem The Water Margin and Wu Yongzhi Earned a Jade Kirin. On one occasion, Wu Yong pretended to be a fortune teller and said that a poem on the wall of Lu Junyi's house was: A boat among reeds, from which Jie Jun and Russia traveled far. If an upright man can know this, he can't escape from the bow. The first word of every sentence just combined into "Lu Junyi Rebellion", which finally drove the Lu Junyi family to ruin and catch up with Liangshan. This description, the whole battle of this Tibetan poem, can be said to be well known. 3. The works of Xu Weiyou, a writer in Ming Dynasty, visiting the West Lake. At that time, Xu Wei was impressed by the beautiful scenery of the autumn moon in the West Lake and improvised a seven-stop song: Pinghu is full of autumn colors and lakes. There are few full moons in the world, and autumn is best when the moon is fine at four o'clock. The Tibetan poem "Autumn Moon in Pinghu" just shows the moon scenery of the West Lake. 4. The love between Tang Bohu and Chou-heung, a Tibetan poem by Tang Bohu, a romantic genius in Ming Dynasty, is still read by later generations. He is good at playing word games, and many Tibetan poems are memorized. For example, "I love Chou-heung", I painted the clear water, and I love the maple leaves on the evening pavilion. The autumn moon shines on the Buddhist temple, and the fragrant leaves go around the building. The Tibetan poem "I Love Chou-heung" is neat, fresh and natural, catchy without deliberately showing traces.