Qian Qi's "Xiang Gu Ling Se" is called "ghost ballad", so it is called "ghost ballad" because it ends with a sum of money, describing that there is only one river and several green hills after Xiangling plays the piano. This extremely clean and simple picture leaves readers with a vast space for infinite thinking: perhaps Xiangling's sadness has merged into the running water of Xiangjiang River, perhaps her beautiful body has turned into several green hills on the river, or even Xiangling has already merged with nature, telling people her sad and moving story after 1000 years. Xiangling's piano music, with the Xiangjiang River flowing slowly, left a beautiful dream.
Zu Yong, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, wrote the poem Looking at the Snow Peak in Central South China. Every sentence in this poem talks about snow, and every sentence describes the snow-capped mountains and the cold after snow from the perspective of the word "king". The first sentence is about the general impression of Zhong Nanshan from Chang 'an. The next sentence is about the snow that does not melt at the top of Zhongnanshan Mountain. Because the top of the mountain is very high, from a distance, the snow on it seems to be floating in the air.
The penultimate sentence turns to the real scene of Zhong Nanshan when the rain and snow stopped. The word "Ji" aptly describes the afterglow of the sunset reflected on the mountainside, turning the forest into a yellow color. The last sentence of Sunset, which inherits the previous sentence, is written because I saw the snow that hasn't melted for a long time in Zhong Nanshan, so I felt the biting cold in winter. This poem is fresh and lively, very simple and natural.