"Poems in Reply to Poyang Guests on the Names of Medicines" written by Zhang Ji of the Tang Dynasty:
The place where Jiang Gao meets each other at dusk,
The yellow leaves and pinellia branches are covered with frost.
Reciting poems to Song Gui at midnight,
Everything in my heart is happy and you know it.
(Contains four kinds of Chinese medicine)
Northern Song Dynasty. Huang Tingjian's "One of the Eight Poems on Jingzhong Jishi":
There is no far-reaching ambition in the four seas, but one stream is sweet and satisfying.
The morning glory avoids washing the ears and lies in the shade of cinnamon branches.
The rain comes like raspberries, and there is no paint on the flat ground.
Looking back at my Yiling, the stars in the south of the sky are wet.
Thousands of miles away and returning home, half a day's journey reflects the shadow of the river to the east.
The family is outdoors, laughing and hugging the white-headed man.
Let the gentlemen and the common people pray that the rain will not fall.
The purpose of guarding the field is full, and the keel is hung on the high wall.
(Contains eleven kinds of traditional Chinese medicine)