What are the poems that describe "loneliness and loneliness"?

1. Thinking of the long journey of heaven and earth, I shed tears with sadness. ——Chen Ziang's Tang Dynasty "Deng Youzhou Taiwan Song"

2. Beside the broken bridge outside the post, it is lonely and ownerless. ——Lu You, Song Dynasty, "Bu Suanzi·Yong Mei"

3. Only the running water in front of the building should miss me and stare at me all day long. Where I stare, I feel a new sadness from now on. ——Li Qingzhao, Song Dynasty, "The Flute Has Been Blown on the Phoenix Platform"

4. When the flute player leaves the Jade Tower, who will he lean on with a broken heart?——? p>

5. Where are the people? The grass is dying all over the sky, and it is impossible to see the way back. ——Li Qingzhao, Song Dynasty's "Dian Rou Lips: Boudoir Thoughts"

6. Asking you how much sorrow you can have is like a river of spring water flowing eastward. ——Li Yutang's "Poppies·When Will Spring Flowers and Autumn Moon Come"

7. This time, how can the word "sorrow" be so special! ——Li Qingzhao's "Slow Voice" of Song Dynasty

8 After washing up, I leaned alone on Wangjiang Tower. ——Wen Tingyun, "Wang Jiangnan" of the Tang Dynasty

9. The soul's dream is full of resentment, and even more cries. ——Li Qingzhao, Song Dynasty's "Good things are near, the wind is setting and the flowers are falling deep"

10. The sunset is infinitely beautiful, but it is almost dusk. ——Li Shangyin's "Le Youyuan" of the Tang Dynasty

11. Picking up all the cold branches and refusing to live on them, the lonely sandbank is cold. ——Su Shi's "Bu Shuzi" of the Song Dynasty

12. Holding hands and looking at the tearful eyes, I was speechless and choked. ——Liu Yong, Northern Song Dynasty's "Yulin Bell"

13. The sunset is infinitely beautiful, but it is almost dusk. ——Li Shangyin's "Le Youyuan" of the Tang Dynasty

14. A man with a coir raincoat hat fishing alone in a boat in the snow in the cold river. ——Liu Zongyuan, "Jiang Xue" of the Tang Dynasty

15. The flowers fell helplessly, and the swallows returned, as if they had known each other before.

——Yan Shu, "Huanxi Sand" of the Song Dynasty