秦代 桑扈之什 Sang Huzhishen  秦代  
sāng SANG HU
yuān yāng YUAN YANG
kuǐ biàn KUI BIAN
chē xiá CHE XIA
qīng yíng QING YING
bīn zhī chū yán BIN ZHI CHU YAN
zǎo YU ZAO
cǎi shū CAI SHU
jiǎo gōng JIAO GONG
wǎn liǔ WAN LIU
duō shǒu yī yè
yán shī the poem each line of which consists of four words
yuān yāng
YUAN YANG

桑扈之什


  yuān yāng fēi zhī luó zhījūn wàn nián zhī
   yuān yāng zài liáng zuǒ jūn wàn nián xiá
   chéng zài jiùcuī zhī zhījūn wàn nián 'ài zhī
   chéng zài jiù zhī cuī zhījūn wàn nián suí zhī


    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