What is the meaning of emptiness in ancient poetry?

The word "emptiness" is often used in ancient poetry to describe the emptiness and emptiness of a scene or a feeling. For example, in "Into the Wine", it is written that "there is no way to doubt the mountains and rivers, and there is another village." The bright moon shed clear light from the cracks and cleared the fountain on the rocks. The bamboo forest is sonorous, the washerwoman returns, and the lotus leaves are swaying to get on the canoe. Spring spring might as well give it a rest, and the autumn sun can stay on the hills for a long time. Who says the heart is actually empty? "The' empty heart' here refers to the feeling after drinking, and it can also be understood as longing for more material enjoyment but experiencing that material can't fill the inner emptiness.

In ancient poetry, emptiness can also represent hypocrisy. "Xie Xiaoer in the Ancient Style" wrote: "Shu Er turned into tears, and his homesickness was empty." The "emptiness" here means that this kind of lovesickness has not really been realized, and it is an illusory fantasy.

In ancient poetry, emptiness can also refer to nothingness and illusion. For example, "there is such bright light at the foot of my bed, can it have frosted?" Thinking in the silent night. Looking up, I found that it was moonlight, sinking again, and I suddenly thought of home. " What impressed me most about this poem is the dreamlike illusion, like lamenting something that doesn't exist and thinking about the past that has passed away.