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An allusion commonly used in ancient Chinese poetry: Wang Qiao rides a crane

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【Dianyuan】Han Liu Xiang "Liexian Biography • Prince Qiao": Prince Qiao, Prince Jinye of Zhou Ling. Good blowing, phoenix chirping. Between the tour of Iloilo, the Taoist floating hill is connected to the upper Song Mountain. More than thirty years later, when I asked for it on the mountain, I saw Huan Liangyue: "Tell my family: Stay at the top of the Mountain on July 7." When the time came, the white crane stood at the top of the mountain, and when he could not see it, he raised his hand to thank the people of the time and left for a few days.

Legend has it that the Queen Mother's maid Dong Shuangcheng practiced at the Miaoting Temple in the West Lake, and later flew up to the sky on a crane. See Zhejiang Tongzhi, vol. 198.

【Interpretation】 Prince Qiao hao blows the sheng, follows the Taoist priest into the mountains to learn the Tao, and more than thirty years later, riding a crane to meet his family at the top of the Qiao clan. Later, he used the metaphor of "riding a crane on the mountain, riding a crane, riding a crane" to become a fairy; Express a leisurely and self-adapting xiandao life with "Zijin Blowing Sheng, Zi Jin Sheng, Prince Blowing Sheng, Ji Ling Blowing Pipe, Blowing Sheng Ling, Miao Shan Sheng Crane, Sheng Crane" and so on; Use metaphors such as "缑山鹤, 王乔鹤, 缑山仙客, blowing shengzi jin" and other metaphors for extraordinary people, or used to write about cranes; It also uses "crane driving, crane driving" and so on to refer to the car driving of immortals or princes; "Prince Joe" is used to refer to immortals.

An allusion commonly used in ancient Chinese poetry: Wang Qiao rides a crane

Lu You's poem "Nanyuan Guanmei" says: "Luopu Lingbo is in a state of despair, and The crane on Mount Luo wants to be the predecessor."

[Riding a Crane] Zheng Gu's poem "Zongren Hui Four Medicines": "If you are cool, you will ride a crane, why should you burn white cinnabar?" Su Shi's poem "Drama as a Seed Pine": "The white-haired He Foot Dao, to make the double pupil square, but after five hundred years, riding a crane back to his hometown."

[Driving the Crane] One of Wang Ji's "Four Songs of The Immortals": "Driving a crane comes without a day, and ride the dragon for a few years." Li Mengyang's poem "Lingwutai": "Poor generations are in turmoil, and the king is not advised to ride the crane back."

Li Shangyin's poem "The Day of Man is the Matter": "King Wen yu fu this dynasty is the same as this day, and Zi Jin blows sheng on this day." Zhao Yi's poem "The First Works of Nongshen Xia": "Dharma visits the Buddha in the air, and Zi Jin blows the sheng and has obtained immortality." Another poem in the "Sixty Self-Narrations": "Zi Jin blows the sheng has gone, and this Weng has long guarded the temperature of the medicine furnace."

[Zi Jinsheng] Du Mu's poem "Sending titles to the North Xuan of Ganlu Temple": "Lonely Gao Kan Lang Huan Yi Di, Miao Yi Yi Wen Zi Jin Sheng" One of Zhao Yi's "Two Songs of Sending Zhi Tang": "Forbidden in the sentence of the talented zi wei, the young immortal Zi Jin sheng."

An allusion commonly used in ancient Chinese poetry: Wang Qiao rides a crane

Li He's "Ballad of Heaven": "The prince blows the pipe of the goose, and the dragon cultivates tobacco and plants Yao grass."

Luo Yin's poem "Beiyi Mountain" says: "Envy him for blowing pipes at The Lingling, and idly visit the clouds to see the vulgar dust."

Xu Feng's poem "The Story of Shanyin": "After blowing the Mountain Ridge, the East Injection Of The Clear Stream is poor."

Lu You's poem "Scattered Officials": "The autumn of the Kasawa perch is evening, and the moon of the Shenghe of the Mountain is slightly bright."

Du Fu's "Two Songs of the Jade Temple" No. 2: "People say that there are shenghe cranes, and when they pass over this mountain." Liu Yuxi's poem "Rewarding Fox Xiang Gong Seeing and Sending": "The head of the Qunyu Mountain lived for four years, and every time he heard the crane, he looked at the immortals." Su Shi's poem "On October 14th, I Was Sick and Drinking Alone": "I am empty in my heart, as if I have come to shenghe."

Yuan Shu's poem "Don't Li San": "Cang Cang Qin Shu Yun, go to the Mountain Crane."

[Wang Qiaohe] Du Fu's "Three Songs of Guan Li Gu Ask sima Di to Landscape And Water Map" No. 2: "Fan Lizhou is small, and Wang Qiao He is not a group."

Shen Ying's "Water Tune Song Head and Li Shou" Lyrics: "Cranes in the clouds, Rong and waterside gulls." The Cyclamen of The Mountain, Fluttershy, had asked to stay here. ”

An allusion commonly used in ancient Chinese poetry: Wang Qiao rides a crane

Zhao Yi's "Liu Tanqiao's Compilation of Sixty Birthday Poems": "Surrendering to Chen Zun has no day and night, blowing Shengzi Jin ben immortals."

Du Fu's poem "Washing Soldiers and Horses": "The crane drives all night and prepares the phoenix, and the chicken chirps and asks the sleeping dragon Lou Xiao." Lu You's poem "The Giver": "The crane rides three mountains close, and the pot is thousands of miles wide."

Bai Juyi's poem "Sending Li Xianggong Cui Lang Qian Sheren" reads: "I once accompanied Crane To drive two or three immortals, and personally served Long You for four or five years." Yuan Hao asked the poem "Wine on the Mountain": "Prince Qiao of Renyan, the crane rides this guest."

[Prince Qiao] Nineteen Ancient Poems, No. 15: "Immortal Prince Qiao, it is difficult to wait with the period."

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