Poetry about things is a poem that expresses the aspiration of things, and embodies humanistic thoughts through the chanting of things. The "things" chanted in poems about things are often the author's own situation, which is completely integrated with the poet's self-image, and the author has placed certain feelings in describing things. In the poem, the author either reveals his attitude towards life, or expresses his good wishes, or contains the philosophy of life, or expresses the author's interest in life. According to statistics, there are 6261 poems about objects in The Whole Tang Poetry, including 54 poems in the early Tang Dynasty, 746 poems in the prosperous Tang Dynasty, 1455 poems in the middle Tang Dynasty and 3556 poems in the late Tang Dynasty.
Mo Mei by Wang Mian in Yuan Dynasty (the trees near my home in Xiyan Lake are blossoming with faint ink marks)
Ming Yu Qian's Lime Ode (a thousand hammers cut out a deep mountain, and the fire burns if it is idle)
Song Wang Anshi's Plum Blossom (there are several plums in the corner, and Ling Han opens them alone). I know from afar that it is not snow, because there is fragrance coming. )
Zheng Xie's Bamboo Stone in Qing Dynasty (insisting that the green hills are not relaxed, and the roots are originally in the broken rocks)
Tang Lihe's Horse Poetry (the desert is as sand as snow, and the Yanshan moon is like a hook), the fifth
Tang He Zhizhang's "Singing Willow" (Jasper is dressed as a tree with ten thousand green silk tapestries hanging down)