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Poems about good tea
Lu Yu's "Six Envy Songs": "I don't envy the gold base, the white jade cup, the provincial capital, the sunset platform and the Xijiang River. I once went to Jingling City. "

Bai Juyi's "Two Bowls of Tea": "After eating and sleeping, get up two bowls of tea; Looking up at the sun shadow, it is already southwest oblique; Happy people cherish the promotion of the day, and worried people hate the contribution of the year; People who have no worries and no happiness will have long and short careers. "

In the Tang Dynasty, with the development of tea production and trade, a large number of poems with tea as the theme appeared. For example, Li Bai's "Answering a nephew and a monk to give Yuquan cactus tea": "This stone will be born tomorrow, and Yuquan will not rest"; Du Fu's "Re-crossing the Third of Five Songs": "On the sunset stage, when drinking tea"; Bai Juyi's "Night Smell of Changzhou, Cuihuzhou Chashan Pavilion Banquet": "Smell of Chashan Night, bamboo and green songs are all around"; Lu Tong's "Raise a Pen, Xie Meng, Persuade and Send New Tea": "I only feel a breeze blowing under my arm", "Yuchuanzi wants to take this breeze to go home" and so on. Some praised the efficacy of tea, and some borrowed tea to express the poet's feelings, which was widely read by later generations. Poet Gao Yuan's Poems on Chashan: "It's really hard to pick Li Tuo's words to cultivate mulberry. When a husband is in the service, all the rooms are the same. On the wall at the door, wild hazelnuts are unkempt. In the end, there is no benefit to the DPRK, and there are scales on both hands and feet ... The election is day and night, and the horseshoe is faint in the morning, which shows the author's sympathy for the people of Guzhushan who suffer from tribute tea. Li Ying's Song of Tea Mountain Tribute and Baking describes the scene of officials paying tribute to tea, and also shows the poet's sympathy for CoCo Lee's suffering and inner anguish. In addition, there are Tu Mu's Tai Tea Mountain and Tai Temple, Miracle's Xie Hu Cha and Yong Cha Twelve Rhymes, and Yuan Zhen's One Word to Seven Words? Tea, Yan Zhenqing and other six people's "Five Words and Moonlit Tea Couplet" all show the prosperity of tea poetry in the Tang Dynasty.