Li He's twenty-three poems about horses are all about horses, and they outline the image of horses in a short space.
For example, the "fourth" swift horse can still maintain its beautiful quality in the face of very bad conditions: "Beat the bone forward and still bring its own copper sound", while the "twenty-third" mocked the feudal rulers for abandoning good horses and raising only some useless "meat horses".
In fact, these horse poems are all works of expressing one's heart. They express their feelings of lack of talent by chanting Malay, or satirize the feudal ruling class for not cherishing talents, or express their feelings of hoping to meet wise masters.
Extended data:
Ma's poems, by chanting, praising or lamenting the fate of horses, express the heterogeneity of genius, lofty aspirations, feelings and resentment of people with lofty ideals, and their expression methods are concrete.
Among them, The Fifth Poem of Ma Shi has been selected into the first volume of the fifth grade of primary school Chinese published by Beijing Normal University, the second volume of the sixth grade of primary school Chinese published by Jiangsu Education and the first volume of the sixth grade of primary school Chinese published by People's Education.
References:
Ma Shi _ Baidu Encyclopedia