Feng Weimeng is a poem in The Book of Songs, the first collection of poems in ancient China. This is a poem about a woman who abandoned her wife and told the tragedy of her marriage. With great sadness, the heroine of this poem recalls the sweetness of love life and the pain of being abused and abandoned by her husband after marriage, expresses her remorse and decisive attitude, and profoundly reflects the oppression and destruction of women in ancient society on love and marriage issues.
2, "The Book of Songs, Picking Wei"
Xiaoya and Cai Wei is a poem in China's ancient realistic poetry collection The Book of Songs. This is a poem about returning home, singing the hard life and homesickness of soldiers who joined the army. This poem consists of six chapters, each with eight sentences.
3. Li Sao
Lisao is a poem written by Qu Yuan, a poet in China during the Warring States Period, and it is also the longest lyric poem in ancient China. This poem centers on the poet's life experience, experience and mental journey.
The first half repeatedly confided the poet's concern about the fate of Chu and people's life, expressing his desire to reform politics and his will to stick to his ideals and never compromise with evil forces even in times of disaster. The second half reflects the poet's thoughts and feelings of patriotism and love for the people through the statement of dreaming, pursuing ideals and dying after failure.
4. "Pick hibiscus on the river"
"Picking Hibiscus by Wading" is a five-character poem written by scholars in Han Dynasty, and it is one of the nineteen ancient poems. By collecting hibiscus flowers of foreign vagrants and homesick women, this poem expresses the feelings of missing each other and profoundly reflects the pain of real life and spiritual life of vagrants.
5. "short song"
The two short songs are two poems written by Cao Cao, a politician and writer at the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, with the theme of ancient Yuefu. The first poem expresses the poet's desire for virtue and ambition to unify the world through the singing of banquets. The second song praises Zhou Wenwang, Qi Huangong and Jin Wengong's adherence to the history of the Minister's Day, indicating that they only have the ambition to help the Han Dynasty, but have no intention of representing the Han Dynasty's independence.