Are Bai Juyi's "Watching the Wheat Cut" and Wen's "Going Up the Mountain and Leaving Early" archaic poems?

Bai Juyi's "Looking at Cutting Wheat" and Wen's "Walking in the Morning" are both ancient poems.

Classical poetry is a genre of poetry. It's also called antique. In terms of the number of words in poems, there are so-called four-character poems, five-character poems and seven-character poems. Four words are four words, five words are five words and seven words are seven words. After the Tang dynasty, it was called modern poetry, so it was usually divided into five words and seven words. Five-character ancient poems are referred to as five ancient poems for short; Seven-character ancient poems are referred to as seven ancient poems for short, and those who use three, five and seven characters at the same time are generally considered as seven ancient poems.

Looking at Wheat Cutting is an early work of Bai Juyi, a poet in the Tang Dynasty. This poem describes the busy farming scene in the wheat harvest season, criticizes the exorbitant taxes and levies that caused people's poverty, and feels deeply guilty that the poet himself can have plenty of food and clothing without virtue labor, showing the humanitarian spirit of a feudal official with conscience. In writing techniques, the poet combines panoramic description with the description of specific characters, making the whole poem an organic whole.

Walking in the morning is selected from Wen Feiqing's Notes on Poetry (Shanghai Ancient Books Publishing House, 1998 edition). This is a poem written by a writer in the Tang Dynasty. This poem describes the cold and desolate morning scene in the journey, expresses the loneliness and deep homesickness of the wanderer, and reveals people's frustration and helplessness in the journey between the lines.