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Covered Corridor
Chinese covered corridors fall into many varieties, but roughly they may be divided into youlang which links two or more buildings ,qulang (the zigzag corridor ) , huilang (the winding corridor) , hualang which is used for the display of potted flowers ,and shuilang which bonders on lakes or goes over ponds .
An exquisite winding structure of 770 meters, it stretches its 273 bays * between the hill and the lake, broken at intervals by four double-eave ,octagonal pavilion which represent the four seasons of the year. All its beams are painted with colored pictures of landscapes, human figures, flowers, birds and scenes of historical and popular stories. These paintings total more than 40,000 in number and the visitor would need eight hours just to linger two seconds before each picture.
In effect it is a piece of ingenious engineering which at once divides and links up the hill and the lake of the Summer Palace. Whether one looks at the lake from the hill or at the hill from the lake, the Long Corridor is always there ,not only a pretty frame border for a nice picture but a colorful belt to bind the two parts together.
In LIuyuan (Garden to Linger IN) , another well-known garden of Suzhou, the buildings¡ªpavilion , terrace ,hall, tower , etc. ¨Cbreak, and at the same time are linked by , a 600-meter-long corridor.Its walls have fancy cut-through windows which reveal sciences on the other side, and they are also inset with 300 stone-engravings of calligraphically works and poems by famous masters; both the windows and the engravings are regarded as masterpieces of their respective kinds . Visitors come here either to feast their eyes on the natural views or on the works of art and poetry, all at their choice. * The bay or the area within four columns was the Chinese traditional unit for measuring floor space.
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