What are the specific attractions in Guqintai?

Guqintai Tourist Attractions: Enter the main gate, pass the small courtyard, and exit the right door of the teahouse. The entrance is the "Inscription Stone House" written by Emperor Daoguang of the Qing Dynasty placed inside the yellow tiles and red pillars. It is engraved with brushwork, which looks convex and protruding when viewed from a distance, and sunken in when viewed up close. There is a small door on the east side of the screen wall with the word "Qintai" on the forehead. It is said that it was written by Mi Fu, a famous calligrapher in the Northern Song Dynasty. Further ahead is the Qintang, also known as the Friendship Hall. It is a half-eaves hilltop-style hall with a building in front. It is three rooms wide, surrounded by corridors, brick and wood frame buildings, glazed tile roofs, and exquisite colorful paintings. , magnificent. The four words "High Mountains and Flowing Waters" are written on the plaque under the eaves.

The Stele Gallery is engraved with stone carvings from past dynasties and the inscriptions on the Qintai stele that were rebuilt. Among them is a poem on the wall written by Song Xiang, a talented scholar from Lingnan in the third year of Daoguang's reign (AD 1826), who dipped bamboo leaves in ink and wrote: "Hey, hey, why is Boya's harp suddenly high in the mountains and suddenly deep in the running water?" If you don't tell me this song, how can you know that you are so high in the mountains and so deep in the flowing water? Is it true? No, we meet here in the eternal mountains and the flowing water. Write a poem on the wall, I will go away!" This is Song Xiang's poem on the wall, which is known as the best in both poetry and calligraphy. Song Xiang was a native of Meixian County, Guangdong, and was once the governor of Hubei Province. When he was seventy-eight years old, he came to visit Qintai because of his attachment to it. After the tour, he was filled with emotions and was so excited that he wanted to sing. poetry. Because the attendants did not prepare a large pen at that time, they bundled bamboo leaves instead. He was full of thick ink and swaying on the wall like a dragon and a snake, and wrote this wall poem that has been passed down to this day. Later generations copied and carved it on stone and preserved it, becoming a calligraphy treasure.

BoYa Terrace is a stone platform built of white marble. According to legend, it was the place where Boya played drums and harps. It is 1.75 meters high. In the center of the platform are engraved an obelisk with the word "Qintai" written by Mi Fu, a calligrapher of the Northern Song Dynasty, and "Bo Ya playing the qin". The stone platform is surrounded by stone railings, and the railings are engraved with a relief picture of "Bo Ya dropped his harp to thank his bosom friend", which is a relic of the Qing Dynasty.