Drunk with the trace of Xi, singing white poems. Whose poem is it?

This is a cursive work of many calligraphy lovers on the Internet, "Drunk in love with Xi traces, chanting poems".

This is a wonderful story about Jie Jin and Shangshu:

This is about Jie Jin, a great writer in the Ming Dynasty. He studied hard when he was a child and became famous at the age of ten.

Once, Cao Shangshu, who was born in Hanlin, wanted to test him, so he sent someone to invite him. As soon as they met, Cao Shangshu blurted out a photo of Mo Bao hanging on the wall, saying "traces of drunken love for Xi". Jie Jin casually chanted: "Crazy chanting of' Bai Ye' poems". "Bai Ye" comes from the poem "Bai Ye's poetry is invincible" written by Du Fu, a poet sage, on Li Taibai. This couplet is even and elegant. The function words "ye" and "zhi" are opposite, which makes couplets very interesting. Cao Shangshu immediately issued a couplet: "The wind blows a thousand lines of ponytails." Jie Jin said: "Rizhao Changlin has ten thousand points of gold." This couplet is catchy. Thought-provoking, the audience applauded.

Cao Shangshu contacted several people in one breath, but failed to be admitted to Jie Jin. Very angry, he pointed to the picture hanging on the screen and went in: "The dragon doesn't sing, the tiger doesn't bark, the fish doesn't jump, and the toad doesn't jump, laughing and banging." Jie Jin pondered a little, pointed to the chess pieces on the case and said, "Cars have no wheels, horses have no saddles, and guns are smokeless. Capture the general in the village alive. " The words just fell. The audience was amazed. So after reading this story, you should know who wrote it for your reference.