What is the most difficult poem for Li Bai to surpass?

The most difficult poem for Li Bai to surpass is Into the Wine.

Li Bai is a famous realistic poet in the history of our country, and he is known as a poet. He created countless excellent works in his life, leaving precious wealth for future generations.

The full text of "Entering Wine" is as follows:

Have you ever noticed how the water of the Yellow River flows out of heaven and into the ocean, never to return?

Have you noticed that the lovely hair in the bright mirror in the high room, although it is silky black in the morning, has turned into snow at night.

Oh, let a man with spirit take risks where he wants to go, and never point his golden cup at the moon empty! .

Since God has given talents, let them be used! As for the money, although it is scattered, it will get together again.

Cook a sheep, kill a cow, sharpen your appetite, and let me, 300 bowls, take a big drink! .

Master Cen, Dan Qiusheng can drink and drink endlessly.

Let me sing you a song! Please listen to me.

What are bells and drums, delicacies and treasures? I hope I will never wake up.

Ancient sober people and sages were forgotten, and only great drinkers can be immortalized.

Chen bought a barrel of wine with 10 thousand gold coins at a banquet in the temple, and everyone laughed and said one-liners

Why do you say, my master, your money is gone? , to buy wine, we drink together! .

Five flower horses, Hsi Chin, give them to the boy in exchange for good wine. Whatever you want, sell eternal sorrow.

This poem was written by Li Bai after receiving money from Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang Dynasty. The whole poem is permeated with a feeling of sadness without injury, anger without anger, free and unrestrained, and has a strong appeal, even if it takes another thousand years, no one can match it.

The sentence "eternal sorrow" at the end echoes the "sad white hair" at the beginning. It's generous, solemn and stirring, and it's full of poems. It's a stroke of genius. This poem is full of famous sentences and has the appeal of shaking the past and shining the present. Never before, never after.