Poems that can express Li Bai's inaction.

The romanticism of Li Bai's poems is also manifested in his unrestrained pursuit of personal freedom, which is most prominent in his poems about singing mountains, seeking immortality in seclusion or describing drinking. He can't find a way out in the darkness of reality. Most of the "rich houses" he saw in reality were decadent and vulgar, which made him deeply feel the horror of vulgarity and hypocrisy, as well as the poison and bondage of feudal ethics. So he took an opposite uncooperative way: bohemian, eager to pursue personal freedom and liberation, forced to find some ideal state that had long been lost. He shouted: "The road is as wide as the blue sky, but there is no way out before my eyes!" " He not only feels that he is not free and longs to get rid of the fetters, but also yearns for an extraordinary and free life. He believes that Dapeng is free from any fetters and can soar freely in the universe. This is the highest freedom realm of "heartless swimming" (drinking the bright moon alone) that Li Bai yearns for and pursues. Until the end of his life, he still remembered that "Big Pengfei was shocked for eight generations, and the sky fell apart." ("The Last Song"), this kind of wild and uninhibited ideological character, the pursuit of personal freedom, is also very prominent in landscape description. "How does the water of the Yellow River flow out of heaven and into the ocean, and never return?" (Into the Wine) This is a landscape that gives people a strong sense of life. The emotional color aroused is not gloomy but bright. It is the affirmation and treasure of life, which embodies self-confidence and strength. "I climbed up. I look at the world and the river does not return. " ("Lushan Ballad") The river he wrote is an irresistible image. The peak he described is "the highest cliff is barely a foot below the sky" ("Difficult Road to Shu"), tall and straight, higher than the sky. These twists and turns also show Li Bai's enthusiasm to break free and pursue freedom.