The rhyme of Han Yuefu folk songs is free and flexible. There are rhyming sentences, such as "Ping Ling East": "Ping Ling East, pine and cypress trees, I don't know who robbed Gong Yi", "I was so worried that my blood leaked, so I sued my family for selling yellow calves".
There are rhyming sentences, such as "East Gate", "Yan Ge" and "Fu Liangyin". There are also rhymes between two sentences and three sentences, such as "the southeast corner of sunrise" and "calling yourself Luo Fu" in Shang Mo Sang rhymes with two sentences, and "According to my Qin family" and "Guizhi as a cage hook" rhymes with five sentences. This shows the diversity of rhymes.
Narration in the form of dialogue or monologue
Yuefu poems in the Han Dynasty ingeniously cast dialogues to depict characters, which are full of sound and emotion, making people feel like hearing their voices and seeing their people. For example, "Picking Weeds on the Mountain" even consists almost entirely of questions and answers from the abandoned wife and her dead husband, which shows the kind character of her wife. There are also monologues throughout, such as the plight of orphans written in monologues in "The Journey of Orphans".
Although the folk songs of Han Yuefu mostly express reality, many works also use romanticism. For example, Shangxie is as passionate and highly exaggerated as a flash flood; The crow's soul in Vu Thang attracts people. The rotten fish in "Dead Fish Cry Over the River" can cry and write letters. These rich and peculiar fantasies show the characteristics of romanticism.