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What is the full text of Taohuawu Taohuaan?

Full text of peach blossom temple poems

(Tang Bohu)

Taohuawu Taohuaan, Taohuaan Taohuaxian;

Peach Fairy cultivates peach trees, picks them and drinks them.

When I wake up, I just sit in front of the flowers, and when I am drunk, I come to sleep under the flowers;

Half awake and half drunk day after day, flowers bloom year after year.

I would rather die of old age than bow before horses and chariots;

Cars, dust and horses are interesting, and hops are poor.

If wealth is better than poverty, one is in the ground and the other is in the sky;

If you compare poverty to horses and chariots, he will have to drive away my leisure.

Others laugh that I am too crazy, and I laugh that others can't see through it;

There are no graves of Hao Jie in Wuling, no flowers, no wine, and no hoes to plow the fields.

The appreciation of this poem is still related to Tang Bohu's personal background. In the secular society of China, the name Tang Bohu is a household name. Tang Bohu's image is a folk stereotype, which is based on charm and unrestrained. Various versions of Tang Bohu's story also highlight his arrogance towards talents and the true nature of talents in the game world. Whether it's Feng Menglong's novel "Marrying with a Smile" in the Ming Dynasty or the film "Tang Bohu Dianqiuxiang" in contemporary Stephen Chow, it's the same heritage that talented people in the Tang Dynasty despised traditional morality and subverted secular norms.