Seeking a Seven-line Poem of Zhaojun Dike

Zhaojun's four-line poem of Shangbao is as follows:

Zhao Jun left the fort.

Does Princess Ming carry her daughter's body and embrace the pipa?

A song leaves the song, fills the vacancy, and the geese fall in autumn.

Zhaojun's departure from the fortress is a story in the history of China. In 54 BC, Uhaanyehe, a Hun, was defeated by his brother Zhi Zhi Khan and surrendered to the Han Dynasty. He visited Chang 'an three times and asked Emperor Gaozu to be his son-in-law.

When Wang Zhaojun heard this, he asked to leave the fortress. When she arrived in Xiongnu, she was named "E Shi of Hu Ning" (E Shi, meaning Queen), symbolizing that she would bring peace, tranquility and prosperity to Xiongnu. Later, with the support of the Western Han Dynasty, Uhaanyehe controlled all the territory of the Huns.

Wang Zhaojun (about 52 BC-BC 19), named Ni, was originally a palace maid in the Han Dynasty. Later generations were called Zhao Jun and Zigui (now Xingshan County, Yichang City, Hubei Province), and were called the four beauties in ancient China together with the stories of Diusim, Shi and Shi. They are one of the four beauties in ancient China, and they are wild geese. In the Jin Dynasty, they were taboo to avoid Si Mazhao, also known as "Fei Ming" and Wang Mingjun.

In the decades since Zhaojun left the fortress, the two families of Han and Hungary have maintained friendly and harmonious relations. Uhaanyehe's attachment to the Han Dynasty and showing his majesty to the fortress not only ended the division and war of the Huns for many years, but also laid the foundation for the unification of the Central Plains dynasty.

Coupled with the strengthening of exchanges between the two sides, the relatively backward ethnic minorities at that time inevitably yearned for the advanced system of the Central Plains, prompting some ethnic minorities to imitate the system of the Central Plains.