Climbing high and looking far, looking at historical sites, can be divided into three genres, namely, ancient poetry or modern poetry.

Du Fu's "Ascending the Mountain" is full of wind and the ape whimpers, and "Chanting about Historic Sites III" is close to Jingmen.

All belong to the seven methods in modern poetry.

note:

China's ancient poetry can be roughly divided into two categories: one is called archaic poetry (or "ancient style"), which began in the Tang Dynasty. In the Tang Dynasty, the new metrical poems that appeared at that time were called modern poems, while those that originated from less metrical restrictions before the Tang Dynasty were called ancient poems. Following the viewpoint of the Tang Dynasty, later generations called Yuefu folk songs, poems written by scholars before and after the Tang Dynasty "archaic poems". There are four words (such as The Book of Songs), five words (such as Han Yuefu), seven words (such as Cao Pi's Ge Yanxing) and miscellaneous words (such as Li Bai's Shu Dao Nan). The rhyme of ancient poetry is relatively free. The other is called modern poetry (or "modern poetry"), which is a new style of poetry that appeared in the Tang Dynasty.

There are two kinds of modern poems, quatrains and metrical poems. The latter consists of eight sentences, five of which are called five laws, seven are called seven laws, and those with more than eight sentences are called excluded laws (or "long laws"). Metric poetry is extremely strict, with definite sentences (except arrangement), definite words for each sentence, definite rhyme (definite rhyme position) and definite words.