Qin Feng Jia Jian is a poem in The Book of Songs, the first collection of poems in ancient China. This poem was once regarded as a mockery of Qin Xianggong's inability to consolidate the country with Zhou Li, or as a pity to attract hermits and saints. Modern scholars generally believe that this is a love song, which is about the melancholy and anguish of pursuing what you love but not getting what you love, and creates a wonderful realm of Qiu Shui Yi people.
"White dew is frost" in the poem "Sword armour of Qin Feng" conveys to readers that it is late autumn and the dawn of genius, because there are frost flowers condensed by dew at night on reed leaves. On such a late autumn morning, the poet came to the river in pursuit of the person he longed for, and an endless reed appeared in front of him, showing cold silence and loneliness.
The influence of later generations
Jian Qin's influence on later generations is very obvious. Song Yu's description of autumn weather and vegetation withering in Nine Arguments created a chilling atmosphere, expressed the poet's sad mood, or was influenced by Jian Qin, which showed the inheritance and development clues of Chu Ci to The Book of Songs.