Poems, songs, wandering songs

Meng Jiao's Ode to a Wandering Son is a five-character Yuefu poem, which does not belong to the Five Classics and Five Laws. Yuefu poetry refers to the poems sung by poems in China in the Middle Ages, that is, during the Han, Wei, Jin and Southern and Northern Dynasties. The central government has set up a special official Yuefu to manage music and songs, and is responsible for collecting and compiling all kinds of music. Five-character Yuefu poetry is five-character Yuefu poetry.

Five-element poem refers to a poem with five words and four sentences, which conforms to the standard of metrical poem. It's called five-character poem, or five-character poem for short. However, You Zi Yin does not meet the requirements of five words and four sentences and cannot be regarded as a poem of five elements.

Rhyme is the abbreviation of five-character metrical poem, which belongs to a kind of metrical poem in modern poetry. There are five words and eight sentences in a sentence, and only one rhyme can be used in the end. The five laws take the first sentence as a positive example and rhyme as an example. From this perspective, Ode to a Wanderer does not belong to the Five Laws.