Enjoy your son's midnight music.

This is a poem about your son drinking and having fun all night. Although there is no direct description of "binge drinking at night", we can imagine the prosperity and long time of the scene through "curling hookah" and "jade belt around the waist" There are only 20 words in the whole poem, which seems to have just begun and ended. However, the way Li He writes poetry is unpredictable, and there is no fixed frame or sentence in poetry. This poem is only a side contrast, and it will come to an abrupt end at the slightest touch.

Li He's poetry captures this "last scene of midnight music", and only makes a subtle and static description throughout, not to mention various pleasures such as binge drinking. Although the noble son in the poem is drunk and slightly tired, his mind is still clear, and he is feeling the sound, color, fragrance and material of things around him with satisfaction, as if all his senses have been fully expanded in an instant. The sentence "curling hookah" is about vision and smell, "Five-body Night Scene" is about hearing and vision, "Qubo Furong Wave" is about vision and hearing, and "Waist White Jade Cold" is about vision and touch. Throughout the poem, the work presents a strange image composed of many subtle sensory entanglements. These four poems have four meanings. Among the sensory words that frequently appear in Li He's poems, the most striking ones are fragrance, fragrance and fragrance, which express the sense of smell. Wet, cold and cold belong to the sense of touch. Smell and touch are the most primitive feelings in daily life. By honing these most primitive and fundamental emotions, Li He achieved the transcendence of daily life emotions.

The transcendence of ordinary life through poetry touched a key point in Li He's creation. As far as the birthright of "the prince and grandson of Tangmen" is concerned, Li He considers himself a "noble son". The problem is that as a declining aristocrat, it is impossible to get universal respect and generous material treatment from society. Li He's potential wishes are not accepted by reality, and can only be vented through poetic imagination in dreams. Songs such as Sleeping at Night and Ancient Meanings on the Balcony try their best to describe the colorful lives of the nobles, full of unrestrained enjoyment, without moral constraints and irrational adjustment, just to feel the free flow of drunkenness and desire. This "Nocturnal Song of Your Childe" is even more wordless, which makes the "primitive feeling" that human beings had at the beginning wander in the poem. Li He's mind responded to the sentence "I feel therefore I am". However, fantasy is always illusory, and the gap between ideal and reality can only multiply Li He's pain and make him sink deeper and deeper in the helplessness of life.