Which line in the poem does Bing Xin's pen name come from?

Bing Xin's pen name is taken from A Piece of Bing Xin in the Jade Pot.

"Bing Xin" means honesty, cleanliness and purity. Bing Xin's pen name is taken from Wang Changling's "The Separation of Furong Inn and Xin Qiji" in the Tang Dynasty: "If relatives and friends in Luoyang ask each other, there is a piece of Bing Xin in the jade pot." This poem means that when I arrive in Luoyang, if any relatives and friends ask about me, please tell them that my heart is still as pure as the ice of a jade pot and has not been defiled by worldly things such as fame and fortune.

Bing Xin, formerly known as Xie Wanying, is a native of Changle, Fujian, and a member of China Association for Promoting Democracy. China poet, modern writer, translator, children's literature writer, social activist and essayist. 1February 28th, 999 At 2 1 p.m., Bing Xin died in Beijing Hospital at the age of 99, and was called "the old man of the century".

Bing Xin's creative characteristics

When Bing Xin describes characters, most of them don't need strong colors, and they rarely carve them with heart. They only sketched and counted a few strokes lightly. Characters are like hibiscus just emerging from the water, and fresh spirits emerge on the water. In artistic expression, Bing Xin is good at using lyricism and learning from it. In the works, the author's subjective will is sometimes revealed through the psychological activities of the characters or the characters' language, thus making the novel full of lyricism.

Bing Xin often uses the first-person narrative technique to tell stories with "I" as the clue, and tells what she sees, hears, feels and feels, so that readers can feel that everything that happens in the novel is real, without romance, dramatic conflict, fictional weaving and kitsch humor, which is intimate and realistic.