Current location - Quotes Website - Excellent quotations - Wang Changling’s patriotic poems
Wang Changling’s patriotic poems

Wang Changling's patriotic poems are as follows:

1. But the flying generals of Dragon City are here, and they will not teach Hu Ma to cross the Yin Mountains. From "Crossing the Fortress" by Wang Changling (Tang Dynasty).

2. Huangsha wears golden armor in a hundred battles, and Loulan will never be returned until it is broken. From "Four of Seven Poems on the Military March" by Wang Changling (Tang Dynasty).

3. We have always been guests in this quiet place, but we are all old and dusty. It comes from "Fortress Song No. 1" by Wang Changling (Tang Dynasty).

4. The bright moon of the Qin Dynasty passed through the Han Dynasty, and the people who marched thousands of miles have not yet returned. From "Crossing the Fortress" by Wang Changling (Tang Dynasty).

5. Please return to the army to cover your bones. Do not teach the soldiers to cry for help. It comes from "Third of Seven Songs on the Military March" by Wang Changling (Tang Dynasty).

6. Climb the Han family mausoleum in the north and look at Chang'an Road in the south. There are dead tree roots below and a flying squirrel's nest above. It comes from "Long Song Xing" by Wang Changling (Tang Dynasty).

7. Relatives and friends in Luoyang are like asking each other, like a heart of ice in a jade pot. It comes from "Farewell to Xin Jian at Furong Tower" by Wang Changling (Tang Dynasty).

8. The snow-capped mountains are covered with long clouds in Qinghai, and the lonely city looks out to Yumen Pass. From "Four of Seven Poems on the Military March" by Wang Changling (Tang Dynasty).

9. In the Baichi Tower in the west of Fenghuo City, the sea breeze is alone at dusk. It comes from "One of Seven Songs on the Military March" by Wang Changling (Tang Dynasty).

10. The former army fought in Taohebei at night and reported that Tuyuhun was captured alive. It comes from "Fifth of Seven Songs on the Military March" by Wang Changling (Tang Dynasty).

11. The desert is windy and dusty, the sun is dim, and the red flag is half-rolled out of the camp gate. It comes from "Fifth of Seven Songs on the Military March" by Wang Changling (Tang Dynasty).

Wang Changling, courtesy name Shaobo, was a native of Jinyang, Hedong Province, and a native of Jingzhao, Chang'an. He was a famous frontier poet in the prosperous Tang Dynasty.