The third poem "Yong Huai Bei" is a poem written by Du Fu, a great poet in Tang Dynasty. He praised the monument left by Wang Zhaojun and others in the Three Gorges area and expressed Zhaojun's grievances with his own life experience. He saved his family because he was worried about his country and loved his talents, angered Su Zong, and was finally alienated, resigned and drifted southwest. Zhaojun was unable to return because of the fatuity of Emperor Han and Yuan, and was far away from his native land. He is dead and has a long-standing hatred. It expresses the poet's feelings about frustration and wandering life experience. Extended data translation
Qian Shan Wangu continues to Jingmen, and the mountain village where Wang Zhaojun grew up still exists.
The palace walked towards the desert beyond the Great Wall, leaving only a solitary grave facing the dusk in an unknown place.
Confused. The king only recognizes Zhaojun's face by drawing pictures, and the Jingling at the foot of the mountain is the resurrection of Zhaojun.
Her Huyin pipa has been circulated for thousands of years, and it is clearly sad and angry.