Which poems in Meng are bi xing sentences?

The third chapter of "Self-protection" begins with the traditional Bi Xing and writes "Mulberry leaves are full of flowers". It first depicts its youth with lush mulberry trees, and then compares the attractive mulberry to intoxicating love, and compares the girl in love to a greedy and happy bird, earnestly warning people not to indulge in love, otherwise, compared with the youth taken away by the fleeting time, the once radiant girl lost her beautiful face in the years, and lived a poor life after marriage for a long time, and the fate of being abandoned naturally fell on her at this time. The third and fourth chapters compare the changes and natural phenomena of the heroine's love life with the rising poems, and the poems expressing her emotional life are derived from the rising poems. This shows the heroine's aversion to her husband's behavior of liking the new and hating the old. In the last chapter, she described her endless misfortune with the words "all the land is on the bank, and all the land is on the plate". "Ji" is a low-humidity place that can be seen everywhere, and "Qi" is the only river that the heroine must pass when she meets Meng before marriage and Meng after marriage. Very appropriate, more meaningful.