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How to understand: the historian sings a swan song, and Li Sao has no rhyme.
The farewell of the historian is nothing more than affirming its value in historiography, so that future generations can have records and history to study.

Li Sao Wu Yun praised the literary value contained in it.

Li Sao, written by Qu Yuan at the end of the Warring States Period, is a masterpiece of romanticism. This poem expresses Qu Yuan's thoughts and feelings, in short, the author's own thoughts and feelings.

Mr. Lu Xun called Historical Records Li Sao, a blank work, which actually affirmed the author's subjective thought and literariness at the end of the article.

Extended data:

Historical Records is a biographical history book written by Sima Qian, a historian of the Western Han Dynasty. It is the first biographical general history in the history of China, recording the history of four years and more than 3,000 years from the legendary Huangdi era to Emperor Wudi of the Han Dynasty. In the first year of Taichu (BC 104), Sima Qian began to create Taishi Gongshu, later called Shiji. It took 14 years before and after its completion.

Historical Records includes twelve biographies (recording the political achievements of emperors in past dynasties), thirty biographies (recording the rise and fall of vassal states and governors in Han Dynasty), seventy biographies (recording the words and deeds of important people, mainly describing the characters and ministers, and the last one is the preface), ten tables (chronology of major events) and eight books (recording various laws and regulations, such as etiquette, music, temperament, calendar, astronomy, etc.).

Historical Records is listed as the first of the "twenty-four histories", and it is also called the "first four histories" with the later Hanshu, Houhanshu and the History of the Three Kingdoms, which has had a far-reaching impact on the development of later historiography and literature.

His original biographical method of compiling history was passed down by the "official history" of later generations. Historical Records is also an excellent literary work, which occupies an important position in the history of China literature. It is praised by Lu Xun as "a historian's swan song, and Li Sao has no rhyme", which has high literary value. Liu Xiang and others think that this book is "good in order and reason, argumentative but not flashy, qualitative but not vulgar".