The ancient poems that Xiaoshengchu often tests are as follows:
1. Philosophical verses:
1. There is no way to recover from doubts, and there is another village. (Lu You's "Traveling to Shanxi Village") Seen from the side of the mountain, the distance is different. (Su Shi's Title of Xilin Wall) but you widen your view three hundred miles, by going up one flight of stairs. (Wang Zhihuan's "at heron lodge")
2. Qian Fan is on the side of the sinking boat, and Wan Muchun is in front of the sick tree. (Liu Yuxi's "Rewarding Lotte at the First Meeting in Yangzhou") Ask where the canal is so clear, because there is flowing water from the source. (Zhu Xi's Thoughts on Reading Books)
Second, the taste of life:
1. Picking chrysanthemums under the east fence, you can see Nanshan leisurely. (Tao Yuanming's "Drinking") In the morning, the reason for waste and filth was promoted, and Dai Yue returned home with a hoe. (Tao Yuanming's Return to the Garden) we open your window over garden and field, to talk mulberry and hemp with our cups in our hands. (Meng Haoran's "Passing the Old Man's Village")
2. The eaves of the thatch are long and clean without moss, and the flowers and trees are planted by hand. (Wang Anshi's "Mr. Shu Hu Yin's Wall") Laughed and laughed, but there was no Bai Ding. (Liu Yuxi's "My Humble Room")
Third, reading:
1. It is better to believe in books than to have no books. (Mencius) Reading is like breaking thousands of volumes, and writing is like a god. (Du Fu) Read a book a hundred times, and its meaning is self-evident. What you get on paper is shallow, and you never know that you have to do it. (Lu You)
2. How can the canal be so clear, because there is flowing water from the source. (Zhu Xi) Good at reading, not asking for much understanding. Every time I know something, I will gladly forget to eat. (Tao Yuanming's Biography of Mr. Wuliu)