Who knows what are the five ancient poems about flying general Li Guang?

There are five ancient poems about flying general Li Guang:

In the dark forest, the grass was suddenly blown by the wind, and the wind was rustling. The general thought that the beast was coming and immediately pulled out the arrow. Dawn went to look for the arrow, which had gone deep into the edge of the stone. Arulun's Xia Sai Qu.

Li Ling felt absent and disappointed in Han Gongqing. A "fortress" by Lu Lun.

In Qin Dynasty, the bright moon was off in Han Dynasty, and the Long March did not return: but Longcheng flew, and Huma never taught Yinshan. A Wang Changling's "The Embankment"

Speaking of the hardships of fighting in the desert, today we call this great general Li, who lived a long time ago, an excellent "Ge Yanxing"

Repeatedly ordered brave soldiers to chase the enemy and not let a horse escape from the battlefield. Yanwu's "Early Autumn in Military City"

Bad luck, ill-fated, Feng Tang easy to get old, Li Guang difficult to seal. Wang Bo's Preface to Wang Tengting

Li Guang character introduction:

Han nationality in Li Guang, a native of Longxi, was a famous soldier in the Western Han Dynasty in China. In the 14th year of Emperor Wendi (BC 166), he joined the army to attack the Huns because of his meritorious service. Jingdi was appointed as the magistrate of seven counties in the northern border region. Emperor Wu ascended the throne and was called Weiyang Palace Guard. In the sixth year of Yuanguang (former 129), he served as a general and led more than 10,000 people to ride out of Yanmen (now Youyunan, Shanxi) to attack the Xiongnu.

Injured and captured because of the gap in numbers. Xiongnu soldiers put them between two horses, and Li Guang played dead. On the way, he jumped and galloped home. Later, he served as the magistrate of Youbeiping County (Zhipinggang County, now southwest of Ningcheng, Inner Mongolia). Huns are afraid of clothes and call them flying generals. They dared not attack for years. In the fourth year of Yuanshou (1 19), Li Guang was a general before the Battle of Mobei. He lost his way and failed to take part in the war, so he committed suicide in anger.