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Who can take a Tang poem or a Song poem as an example to talk about the basic characteristics of Tang poems and Song poems?

Take a difficult poem as an example. The following are the basic characteristics of Tang poetry and Song poetry I answered a few days ago. See if you can understand:

Song Ci basically has a epigraph name, such as Shuiu Tou, Queqiao Xian, Basheng Ganzhou, Shengsilan, Rumengling and so on. It is basically divided into two parts: most words are directly divided into upper and lower parts, a few are upper, middle and lower parts, and some are single parts. The number of words in each epigraph is regular, in fact, it is also because a epigraph represents a tune, and it is full of different words but sings the same tune. Que is divided according to the number of words: those with less than 50 words are called small quees, those with 50 to 98 words are called middle quees, and those with more than 98 words are called long quees.

Tang poetry basically has the same number of words in each sentence, which is mainly divided into five-character poems and seven-character poems. For example, "the mountains cover the day, the ocean drains the golden river" and "the wind sleeps in the river on a frosty night". . . . Four sentences are quatrains and eight sentences are rhymes. Every two sentences are called a couplet. There is a saying that rhymes with words, and the antithesis is neat. Simply put, every word has four-tone even words, and the number of words in each sentence must be the same. Then, just like the antithesis requirements of couplets, that is, the parts of speech must correspond to each other one by one, such as "a tree in Hanyang is clear, a nest of herbs in Parrot Island", "Mermaids shed tears in the green sea next month, and Lantian spits jade to the sun", and "the three summoners attach importance to state affairs, and the two generations attach importance to sincerity". Poetry has no fixed name, but is written by the poet according to his own intention, and many of them are directly replaced by "untitled". . There are also Yuefu poems, which are relatively long poems. There are several rhymes throughout, and the number of words in individual sentences has changed. For example, Bai Juyi's Song of Eternal Sorrow, Li Bai's Into the Wine and so on. .