Qin Yubo’s compositions are melodically harmonious and pursue sophistication. Judging from the laws of literary development, from simplicity to magnificence, from simplicity to complexity, it is an inevitable trend. As Xiao Tong said: "Add to the story to enhance its splendor, change its essence to intensify it, and since the things are there, the literature should also be the same." Lu and Pan developed Cao Zhi's "luxurious diction" side and expressed their views on China. It contributed to the development of poetry and promoted the development of landscape poetry in the Southern Dynasties and the maturity of rhythm and antithesis techniques.
The poems handed down by Qin Yubo include "Shanzhou Ci" and other representative works. There are 6 articles by Qin Yubo in existence today, including "Ode to the Temple of Nine Sages", "Records of Studying in Mizhou", "Shangzhongshu Xiangguo Que's Appointment Letter", etc. His friend Li Shizhan, the Minister of Household Affairs, once praised him: "I have known the scenery for fifteen years, and it is quite possible to say that I know each other." He specially wrote a poem of Qi Jue as a thank you: brocade is cut from five colors of silk, and thousands of square meters are used to make it. Feeling ashamed to lose to Tiansunqiao, ordinary girls will never get off the plane from now on. Qin Yu Bo is a calligrapher, and his work "Shanghai Lingzhu Doctor Stele" is a rare authentic calligraphy by a celebrity. It was handwritten in the first year of Hongwu (1368) at the invitation of the famous writer Yang Weizhen (1296-1370, courtesy name Lianfu, alias Tieya). He wrote the "Shanghai Magistrate Zhu Dafu Monument" written for Zhu Ting, the first magistrate of Shanghai in the Ming Dynasty (this monument was destroyed by Western soldiers in the 11th year of Xianfeng in the Qing Dynasty).