Han Yu has many poems, as follows:
1. "Reply to Zhang's Eleven Merits"
The mountains are clear, the rivers are empty, and the water sees sand, and the mournful ape cries. There are two or three houses.
Yundun competes with long slender bamboo shoots, and wanders around leisurely blooming colorful flowers.
If you don’t repay your favor and know where you died, don’t let the miasma of inflammation ruin your life.
After reciting your poems, I looked at my temples and felt that half of the hair on my temples had grown frosty.
This is a poem written by Han Yu when he was demoted for the first time. After encountering setbacks in life, the mood is always sad, and the birds are singing and the flowers are falling. The poet seems to be trying his best to bury his passionate feelings deep in his heart, but he consciously or unconsciously reveals them between the lines, making people feel the suppressed emotional undercurrent and be moved by it when reading.
2. "Spring Snow"
There is no youth in the new year, and I was surprised to see grass buds in early February.
The white snow is too late for spring, so it flies through the trees in the garden.
In the 10th year of Yuanhe (815), Han Yu served as a compiler in the history office of the dynasty and knew how to make imperial edicts. For northerners, it is normal to have no youth in the New Year, but Han Yu, who has been to Lingnan, feels that spring comes late in the north, and no grass buds grow until February. The author drew on the meaning of Cen Shen's "Song of White Snow" to create this poem. poetry.
Three or four sentences are full of strong romanticism, which can be described as a stroke of genius. "But I am afraid" and "I am wearing it" have always been praised for their beautiful and spiritual portrayal of Chun Xue.
3. "Visit to Princess Taiping Villa"
The princess wanted to seize the spring, so she suppressed the terraces and gates of the city.
If you want to know how much money you will spend ahead, until Nanshan Mountain no longer belongs to people.
Han Yu wrote this poem after visiting Princess Taiping Villa. He highlighted the grandeur of Princess Taiping Villa by describing the pavilions, continuous forest gardens, and flourishing flowers and trees, which was a satire on Princess Taiping's luxury and vanity. .