Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - The 24 Solar Terms - Which of the following poems describes Xiaohan Ant Manor?

Which of the following poems describes Xiaohan Ant Manor?

Huanque builds a new nest.

"Magpies build new nests" comes from Yuan Zhen, a famous poet in Tang Dynasty, who wrote poems about the twenty-four solar terms and the slight cold festival in December.

The original text is "Da Lian Road, the New Nest of Huanque Base". Picking up food to find a winding path, holding purple around the treetops. The frost eagle is near the north head, and the pheasant is hidden in the bushes. Don't blame me for being strict. I pay it in the first month at the turn of spring and summer. "

This poem describes the scene of a slight cold in solar terms, and the magpie is depicted as a bird nesting.

Analysis of Twenty-four Poems Slightly Cold December Festival;

1, "Han Xiao Da Lian Law": Here, "Da Law" is an ancient musical term, which also refers to another name of the December of the lunar calendar. This poem expresses the connection between the solar term "slight cold" and the big Lu Yue (December).

2. "Magpie builds a new nest": It describes the scene that magpies start to build a new nest during the slight cold season. This also implies that spring is coming and magpies are ready to breed.

3 "Picking up food to find a meandering stream, holding purple around the treetops": depicting the dynamics of magpies looking for food and nesting. They look for food in the meander and nest around the treetops with purple branches in their mouths.

4. "The frost eagle is near the north, and the pheasant is hiding in the bushes": It is described here that the frost eagle (possibly a vulture or other large raptor) flies to the north, while the pheasant is hiding in the grass and singing.

5. "Don't blame me for being strict, spring and winter welcome the first month": These two sentences express that although the cold in the slight cold season is still very severe, the alternation of spring and summer is coming in the first month.