After two exiles, Qu Yuan may have gradually seen the gap between society and ideals. When the ideals could not be realized, his poems were full of romanticism. The contradiction between ideal and reality forced Qu Yuan to "drive a young man to Bai Chi, and I will visit the gardens in Yao Xi with China. Climbing Kunlun Mountain is like eating jade, life is longer than heaven and earth, and life is longer than the sun and the moon, living in Guang Qi ... "The unsuccessful experience of life forced Qu Yuan to gallop romantic imagination and use the 245 lines in Li Sao to" look around ". From heaven to earth, he trudged a long and tortuous journey, through the ages, to find his own ideals, appreciation and sustenance. Over the years, under the influence of Qu Yuan, The Songs of the South became the source of romanticism in China's classical literature.
Romantic poetry can not only be imagined by the poet himself, but also be integrated into the artistic conception when readers appreciate reading, so as to feel the poet's ideal. In addition, because most of the romantic poems have entrusted the poet's various wishes, they have objectively played a great role in promoting social development. You know Verne. Verne's science fiction is so popular that it must have something to do with this truth.