秦代 彤弓之什 Tong Gongzhishen  秦代  
hóng yàn HONG YAN
tíng liáo TING LIAO
miǎn shuǐ MIAN SHUI
míng HE MING
tóng gōng TONG GONG
jīng jīng zhě 'é JING JING ZHE E
liù yuè LIU YUE
cǎi CAI QI
chē gōng CHE GONG
JI RI
duō shǒu yī yè
yán shī the poem each line of which consists of four words
liù yuè
LIU YUE

彤弓之什


  liù yuè xīxīróng chē chì kuí kuízài shì cháng
   xiǎn yǔn kǒng chì shì yòng wáng chū zhēng kuāng wáng guó
  
   xián zhī wéi wéi liù yuè chéng
   chéng sān shí wáng chū zhēng zuǒ tiān
  
   xiū guǎng yòu yóng xiǎn yǔn zòu gōng
   yòu yán yòu gòng zhī gòng zhī dìng wáng guó
  
   xiǎn yǔn fěi zhěng jiāo huòqīn gǎo fāngzhì jīng yáng
   zhì wén niǎo zhāngbái pèi yāng yāngyuán róng shíshèng xiān xíng
  
   róng chē 'ān zhì xuān qiě xián
   xiǎn yǔnzhì yuánwén wàn bāng wéi xiàn
  
   yàn duō shòu zhǐlái guī gǎo xíng yǒng jiǔ
   yǐn zhū yǒupáo biē kuài 侯>hóu
shuí zài zhāng zhòng xiào yǒu


    yìzhě: James Legge


【wénjí】shī jīng

【zīliàoláiyuán】 The English translation text was taken from The Chinese Classics, vol. 4 by James Legge (1898) and checked against a reprinted edition by Wen Zhi Zhe chu pan she (Taiwan, 1971).


fàbiǎopínglún