Li Qingzhao's Eight Pagodas is an eternal swan song. What other famous poems does she have?

Li Qingzhao is known as the first talented woman in China in ancient and modern times. Many of her poems are widely circulated in later generations, and the meanings expressed in her poems are also relatively concentrated. What she expresses is Li Qingzhao's deep sorrow, her thoughts about her husband and her understanding of life, which can be said to be her disappointment with life and inner anguish after she fled to the south.

For example, there is a sentence in Li Qingzhao's "Pruning Plums": There is no way to eliminate this feeling, only frowning, only caring. It can be said that Li Qingzhao's deep feelings at that time were vividly reflected. The main idea of the poem is: the most indelible thing is this acacia and this sadness, which just disappeared from my brow, but slowly lingered in my mind!

Another sentence, known as Li Qingzhao's eternal famous sentence, is in Wuling Spring: I'm afraid the ship can't carry much on its mind. In this sentence, Li Qingzhao expressed her shapeless sadness with great weight, saying that I was full of sadness. If I put it in a boat in this stream, I don't think even this boat can carry my full sadness. This shows how heavy the sadness in Li Qingzhao's heart was at that time!

However, Li Qingzhao's ci gives people the feeling that it is more direct and not procrastinating, and often uses some objects to express their innermost feelings. Although it is said that she expresses herself by means of objects, the objects she borrows are directly related to her heart at the moment, giving people a feeling that is easier to understand!