"Complete Poems of the Tang Dynasty" was written in the 45th year of Emperor Kangxi's reign in the Qing Dynasty (1706), and contains a total of more than 48,900 poems - the so-called "tens of thousands of poems with different styles". Among them, volumes 860 to 867 are particularly unique. The first volume indicates that the author refers to gods and ghosts. Under these three entries, his poems are listed according to the author's name. Some of these authors have names and surnames, and some are nameless. They are named "a certain ghost", "a certain immortal", "a certain monster" based on their characteristics or the place where their poems were written, or named after their identities, such as a certain Taoist. Others are crowned as "unnamed ghosts". There is often a paragraph before the poem describing the "power" of the poem, which is particularly interesting to read and can be generally called a supernatural poem. Ghost poems that express the sorrow of failing the imperial examination, the sorrow of the deceased in a foreign land, and the sadness of those who died in vain during the war are also common in "Poems of the Tang Dynasty", such as "The Funeral Examiner in Xiangyang". The running water is trickling, the celery sprouts are blooming, and the weaving flowers are flying away from home. In the deserted village, no one is eating cold food, and the funeral palace is empty facing Tangli flowers. The first line of this poem describes the natural scene during the cold food season. The second sentence laments the loneliness of the lonely soul in the underworld with no one to worship him.