Meihua Pavilion Meihua Fu

There are 560 words in Plum Blossom Fu, with beautiful words and clear pronunciation and mellow voice, which are praised by scholars of all ages. Pi Rixiu, a writer in the late Tang Dynasty, commented on Plum Blossom Fu, calling it "beautiful and rich" and praising it as "resolute, suspicious and hard-hearted".

In A.D. 1750, Emperor Qianlong passed Shilipu when he returned to Beijing with his queen and a batch of documents from Wu. I heard that this is the hometown of Song Jing, a famous Tang Dynasty star, so I stopped driving here. Qianlong was an overjoyed feudal emperor who was good at writing. Because he envied his predecessors to read plum blossom fu, he wrote plum blossom fu in Shilipu. Later, he wrote another poem "Dongchuan Poetry" and drew a poem about beauty, praising Song Jing as a former sage who was loyal to the monarch and served the country. Later generations carved poems, words and paintings on stones and embedded them in the inner wall of Meihua Hall on the north side of Meihua Pavilion, which is called "Qianlong Imperial Book Stone Carving".

The imperial "Fu Meihua" stone carving is embedded in the middle wall of Meihua Hall, with a length of 2.9 meters and a width of 0.88 meters. Mei Hua Fu is the masterpiece of Song Jing's life. This poem is a lyrical praise of plum blossom, "Fu Mei covered up his situation". Ganlong's calligraphy and stone carvings have strict font structure, soft brushwork, smooth turning, unique and gorgeous, and have certain calligraphy artistic value. Fu books set each other off, and the pearls are perfect, which has the same effect.

The stone carving of Dongchuan Poem, the imperial pen, is embedded in the east wall, with a length of 0.69 m and a width of 0.6 1 m, which is a five-character rhythmic poem.

The imperial plum blossom stone carving is embedded in the western wall. This stone is 0.73 meters long and 0.64 meters wide. There is a plum blossom on it, which is flourishing and full of flowers. A poem and postscript on the right.

Meihua Pavilion was built in the Ming Dynasty and expanded into a scenic park in the 15th year of Qing Qianlong. It has gone through hundreds of years of vicissitudes. Due to poor protection, there is only a broken plum blossom pavilion and three simple plum blossom halls, which are embedded with imperial pens and stone carvings and are well preserved. In order to protect historical relics, the local government appointed descendants of Song Jing to protect and visit.