What rhetorical devices are used in Li Dongyang's poem "You Yue Lu Temple" and point out its expressive effect?

What rhetorical devices-exaggeration, metonymy, empathy, etc.-are used in Li Dongyang's Poems on the Temple of Yuelu?

The author of A Visit to Lu Yue Temple is Li Dongyang, a writer in the Ming Dynasty. The full text of his ancient poems is as follows:

The dangerous peak overlooks the trunk of the Chu River, and the road is in the first set.

Thousands of trees, pines and cypresses are combined in two ways, and four mountains are stormy and one monk is cold.

Flat sand and shallow grass are far away from the sky, and the sunset is separated from the water.

Jibei and Xiangnan are in front of us, and the partridge is alone in the sound.

Exaggerated rhetoric: Jibei and Xiangnan are in sight-this sentence is exaggerated, and Jibei can never be seen on Yuelu Mountain Peak. Exaggerated words express a broad vision.

Metonymy figure of speech: four mountains are stormy and one monk is cold-using "monk" as metonymy of "temple", and using metonymy here makes the writing concise and clear.

Empathy rhetoric: partridge monologue-Empathy refers to the use of empathy rhetoric, first moving subjective feelings to things, and in turn setting off subjective emotions with infected things. The poet heard the partridge singing alone on the dangerous fence, and the ancients called the partridge singing a sad voice. The application of empathy here brings out the emotion of the whole poem.

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