The first is to study the metrical form of poetry. What is a quatrain, what is a rhyming form and what is a rhyming form? How to divide ditty and long tune? What variations do each epigraph have? Then understand the rhyme of poetry, read Ping Yun Shui and Linz Zheng Yun, so that you can begin to fill in the poems in an orderly way.
This method is the most solid, although I said a lot, but it is not difficult. You don't need to remember Ping Yunshui and Linz Zheng Yun, just look them up in the dictionary at first. You don't need to recite the rhymes of quatrains and aphorisms, but you can find out which one you want to fill in and fill in accordingly. You must remember those poems, such as Dream in a Dream, Huanxisha and Bodhisattva Man, which have been filled in three or four times, and you probably remember that they are all regular. For those long middle notes and long notes, first, you may not want to fill them, and second, in fact, middle notes and long notes are regular. Take your time one by one and you will remember them. Moreover, most poets and poets have their favorite epigrams, not all of which have been filled in, and you don't need to remember them all.
To say the least, since I don't take the professional route, I don't care if I don't remember. If I want to write an inscription, I'll find it now and fill it in. The same is true of the quatrains in metrical poems. Of course, the quatrains of metrical poems are easier to remember than epigrams, and it is possible to remember them all. Moreover, when the teacher taught me, he actually only taught me a basic formula, and everything else can be deduced. So there's actually only one thing to remember.
Then fill in more, and you will get familiar with it. All the masters in this world have only one trick, that is, practice makes perfect. Coupled with your occasional whimsy, you can make a good sentence. 1% inspiration +99% sweat, inspiration is very important, but it needs the foundation of sweat.
So the second method is, when you are inspired by 1%, don't care about anything, no matter the meter or the epigraph, just write boldly! If you write too much, you will gradually get your own feelings, and then you will slowly learn the meter, which is the pile I mentioned in the first method. As you learn more slowly, you will find that what you write is more and more irregular, even if you write casually, it is in line with the rules. This is outstanding. ...
There are two ways for you to choose. Anyway, inspiration and sweat are indispensable. You can start by sweating, or you can write boldly when you are inspired! Same result ~