What are the sentences about good weather in "The Book of Songs"?
1. The north wind makes it cool, and the rain and snow make it foggy. Be kind to me and walk hand in hand.
2. The millet is separated, the seedlings of the rice are growing. The pace is slow and timid, and the center is shaking.
3. Prepare your salary and have three stars in the sky. Tonight or later, I meet this beloved man. Come on, come on, come on, come on, how can you be such a good man!
4. The mountains stand tall and the scenery stops, although you can't reach them, your heart longs for them.
5. Guan Guan Jujiu, in the river island. A graceful lady, a gentleman is fond of quarrels.
1. The Book of Songs is the beginning of ancient Chinese poetry and the earliest poetry collection. It collects poetry from the early Western Zhou Dynasty to the middle of the Spring and Autumn Period (11th century BC to 6th century BC), ***311 Six of them are Sheng poems, that is, they only have titles and no content. They are called the six Sheng poems (Nanmei, Baihua, Huashui, Youkang, Chongwu, and Youyi), which reflect about the early to late Zhou Dynasty. The face of society over the past five hundred years.
2. The author of "The Book of Songs" is unknown, and most of it cannot be verified. It is said that it was collected by Yin Jifu and compiled by Confucius. The Book of Songs was called "The Book of Songs" in the pre-Qin period, or the round number was called "The Three Hundred Songs". It was revered as a Confucian classic during the Western Han Dynasty and was first called the Book of Songs, which is still used today. The Book of Songs is divided into three parts: "Wind", "Ya" and "Song". "Wind" is a ballad from various places in the Zhou Dynasty; "Ya" is a formal song of the Zhou people, and is divided into "Xiaoya" and "Daya"; Song", "Song of Lu" and "Song of Shang".
3. Confucius once summarized the purpose of the "Book of Songs" as "innocence" and taught his disciples to read the "Book of Songs" as the standard for speech and action. Among the pre-Qin scholars, many quoted the Book of Songs. For example, Mencius, Xunzi, Mozi, Zhuangzi, Han Feizi, etc. often quoted sentences from the Book of Songs to enhance their persuasiveness when reasoning and demonstrating. By the time of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty, the Book of Songs was regarded as a classic by Confucianists and became one of the Six Classics and the Five Classics.
4. The Book of Songs is rich in content, reflecting labor and love, war and corvee, oppression and resistance, customs and marriage, ancestor worship and banquets, and even celestial phenomena, landforms, animals, plants and other aspects. It is A mirror of social life in the Zhou Dynasty.