as follows:
Mu Junmao? (mù jùn mào)。
moral analysis: from "Songs of the South", Li Sao said, "Ji's branches and leaves are luxuriant", and they are luxuriant.
mu xiuneng? (mù xiū néng)。
moral analysis: from "Songs of the South", Li Sao "emphasizes the cultivation of ability".
mu Feilong? (mù fēi lóng)。
moral analysis:
Feilong: from the nine songs of Chu Ci Xiang Jun "Feilong Xi Pian" Feilong: here refers to the dragon boat. If the "flying dragon is in the sky" in the Book of Changes, it will be domineering.
mu wangshu? (mù wàng shū)。
moral analysis: from Li Sao's Songs of the South, "Wang Shu was a pioneer", Wang Shu: the mythical god who drove for the moon. Such as Dai Wangshu, a poet who wrote Rain Lane.
mu chengyu? (mù chéng yǔ)。
moral analysis: it comes from Chapter 9 of the Songs of the South. Shejiang "Clouds are raining and bearing the rain". Bearing the rain: it means that the clouds in the mountains are flourishing and bearing the eaves.
An Ge? (mù ān gē)。
moral analysis: from "Songs of the South", nine songs, East Emperor Taiyi, "Slow down and relax, An Ge", An Ge: singing peacefully. There is a Tang poem that says, "An Ge sends a good voice".