Li Bai’s poems about wine include:
1. If you don’t see it, the water of the Yellow River will come up from the sky and rush to the sea never to return. Don't you see, the bright mirror in the high hall has sad white hair, and it looks like blue silk in the morning and turns to snow in the evening. If you are proud of life, you must have all the joy, and don't let the golden bottle stand empty against the moon.
2. A pot of wine among the flowers, drinking alone without any blind date. Raise your glass to invite the bright moon, and look at each other as three people.
3. A gold bottle of sake costs ten thousand coins, and a jade plate worth ten thousand coins. Stopping the cup and throwing chopsticks, I can't eat. I draw my sword and look around at a loss.
4. Lanling fine wine and tulips, jade bowls filled with amber light. But it makes the host drunk and the guests don't know where they are in a foreign country.
5. If heaven does not love wine, the wine star will not be in the sky. If the earth does not love wine, there should be no fountain of wine in the earth.
6. Qianque Junshan is good, and the Xiang water flow is flat. There is unlimited wine in Baling, and the drunkenness kills Dongting in autumn.
7. Cut off the water with a knife, the water will flow more, and raise a cup to eliminate the sorrow and make it more sorrowful. Life is unsatisfactory in this world, and the Ming Dynasty will be ruined.
8. The autumn water of Nanhu Lake is smokeless at night, and you can ride the current straight up to the sky. Let's borrow the moonlight in Dongting and buy wine on the boat beside the white clouds.
9. Bells, drums, delicacies and jade are not expensive, but I hope I will never wake up after being drunk for a long time. In ancient times, all the sages were lonely, but only the drinkers left their names.
Li Bai
Li Bai (701-762), also known as Taibai, also known as Qinglian Jushi, also known as "Exiled Immortal", was a great romantic poet in the Tang Dynasty. Known as the "Immortal of Poetry", he and Du Fu are collectively known as "Big Li Du".
Li Bai was cheerful and generous, loved drinking, writing poems, and making friends. He was deeply influenced by Huang Lao Liezhuang's thoughts. There is a "Collection of Li Taibai" handed down from generation to generation, and most of his poems were written when he was drunk. Song people have biographies of Li Bai's poems and poems (such as the first volume of Wen Ying's "Xiangshan Wild Records"). In terms of its pioneering significance and artistic achievements, "Li Bai's poems" enjoy an extremely high status. His representative works include "Looking at the Lushan Waterfall", "The Road is Difficult", "The Road to Shu is Difficult", etc.