The last episode of this edition is also called "The General Turtle with Poems". There are more than 1,400 things and 2,400 poems, which are divided into 46 categories (Ruan Yue's Preface to Poems). These forty-six schools are holiness, loyalty, irony, reason, knowledge, sensitivity, ambition and knowledge. , collected from various biographies, miscellaneous notes, unofficial history, and cited nearly 100 kinds of books. According to the content, the compilation style should be copied from the Song Dynasty books such as "Taiping Yulan" and "Yuan Gui", and there are traces of poetry books such as "Sao Zhi" in the late Tang Dynasty. The author's purpose is to "imitate" the poems, events and comments in various essays for reading (Preface to Poetry), rather than expressing the editor's own poetic ideas. However, the first volume, the second volume and the ninth volume of this book are all "comment gates", which shows that editors tend to attach importance to poetic criticism. However, the division is too thin, which leads to the overlapping of contents, such as "scorn gate" and "humor gate", "poetry gate" and "strange gate", "immortal gate" and "ghost gate" and so on. There are also mistakes in quoting book titles, so be careful when using them. The latter episode, also known as "A Hundred Poems Pass a Turtle", is divided into 62 volumes, namely, Imperial System, Song Dynasty, Imperial Swallow, Honor, Loyalty, Filial Piety, Tribe and Grace. It is mainly composed of three books: Tiaoxi Fishery Talk by Hu Zai, Creek Fear Poetry by Huang Che and Rhyme and Yu by Ge, which are not as valuable as the last episode.
The Return of Poems to Zong Hua (mainly referring to the previous episode) not only provides rich materials for future generations to study ancient Chinese poems, especially Song poems, but also has a direct inspiration for the compilation of Hu Zai's Tiaoxi Echoes. Since then, the similar species of General Tortoise and Conghua are arranged in chronological order. "The two books bring out the best in each other, and the poems before the Northern Song Dynasty are generally slightly prepared" (Summary of the Catalogue of Sikuquanshu). Most of the books he quoted were lost, and it was because of this book that they were preserved.