The first picture is a mountain with a word behind it. Obviously, this mountain has a name called Sun Shan. Fall into Sun Shan. What do you mean? I failed the exam. Sun Shan was the last one. If you are not as good as Sun Shan, you have not passed the exam. So it is called Sun Shan.
It is said that there are not many ordinary people who leave their names in history. How lucky this Sun Shan is. And Wang Lun in Li Bai's poems is also lucky. Li Bai was about to go by boat when he heard singing on the shore. Peach Blossom Pond is deeper than thousands of feet, not as good as Wang Lun! If Wang Lun could get Li Bai to write this poem on paper and frame it as a family heirloom, it would be a national treasure by now.
Wang Lun will be immortal. We now have no other information about him except that he is a rich boy and has sponsored or entertained Li Bai. Lucky and unlucky.
The second picture: footsteps, meteors, describe a person walking very fast. This reminds me of the origin of Stephen Chow's name. Stephen Chow should be named after my mother. How learned and educated she is.
Similarly, there is Li Qingzhao, called Qingzhao. There is moonlight in the pine forest and crystal stone in the stream. Then the opposite direction is always a clear photo. There is a female classmate named Lu Jing in the author's class. She seems to be shocked by the homonym: The flying of a horse is like a bolt from the blue.
Figure 3: The wrong answer is bullying. The idiom in this picture is related to eating. The strong eat the weak.