What are the representative works of Song Yu in Songs of the South?

Song Yu's representative works in Songs of the South: Jiubian, Feng Fu, Gao, Goddess Fu and Disciple Fu.

Song Yu (298-222 BC) was a poet of Chu State, a descendant of Song Xianggong and a native of Chu State. He is a scholar-bureaucrat in the state of Chu. Song Yu was a famous poet in the Warring States Period, who was as famous as Le Tang and Jing Ke. His works are Nine Arguments. The so-called "Xialiba people", "Yangchun Baixue" and "Qu Gao and Widow" all refer to him, and all the allusions come from him. The first emperor was twenty-five years old and died in 222 BC at the age of 76.

graveyard

According to historical records, there are five tombs of Song Yu in China. There are Song Yu's former residence and Song Yu's tomb in Yicheng, Hubei. There is a tomb of Song Yu near Huashan Mountain near Linli Song Yucheng Site in Changde, Hunan Province. According to textual research, Song Yu's tomb (now Yicheng) with high credibility was rebuilt in the twenty-first year of Jiaqing, Qing Dynasty, with inscriptions such as "Thousands of people were destroyed by spring snow, and clouds were suspected in twilight". Today, Zhong Xiang also has the "Yangchun Baixue" monument and the "Yangchun Taifu" marble monument, which was created by the father of Emperor Jiajing.