"Huanxisha": After the rain, the garden becomes greener and greener. The sunset glow is brilliant and the clouds are heavy, and they meet on the east side of the bridge. I didn't add green temples to my sleep, so my sweat melted slightly and my makeup turned red. No amount of worry is true. A euphemistic and implicit poem by Zhao, a poet in the Southern Song Dynasty, expresses the mood after the rain. After the rain in Chu Qing, the garden trees are dark green. The sunset glow is red and the clouds cover the sunset glow. My heart is heavy with melancholy, and my mind is full of nothing to say.
Huanxisha, formerly known as Tang, was later used as an inscription name. This tone is divided into flat and flat, with 42 words in the majority, 44 words and 46 words. Han in the Tang Dynasty was the first person to adopt this tone. Usually, his words "Huanxisha, hangover sorrow" are the main body, and there are four other variants. Forty-two words are disyllabic, the first three sentences are three-level rhymes, and the next three sentences are two-level rhymes. This tone has distinct syllables and is commonly used by graceful and unrestrained poets.
Representative works include Yan Shu's Huanxisha, a new word and a glass of wine, and Qin Guan's Huanxisha, a lonely cold building.