In the famous Guqin piece "Pelan", Mingzhi's piece, Peilan likened to pretending to be noble, for example, "Li Sao" has "Ren Qiulan thinks that she is a pet".
Guqin piece "Pei Lan", according to "Spring Caotang Qin Score", according to legend, the author Mao Minzhong of the Southern Song Dynasty, took the poet Qu Yuan's "Li Sao" and wrote "New Qiulan thinks that he is wearing". The tune is light and simple, showing the author's noble sentiment of using orchids as a metaphor for his patriotism. "Tianwenge Qinpu" said: "During the Warring States period, there were people with Lingxuzi who traveled to the Songshan Mountains and met Yuren who played the qin under the stone window. The tune of feathers is called Pei Lan." This song has a mellow and mellow rhyme, like the postscript of "Da Huan Ge Qin Pu" (1673) by the voice of Jiuxiao Huan Pei: "Lan is born in an empty valley, and no one is proud of himself; General. The tune is fine but not forced, slow and melodious."
This song is divided into three parts, the first part is soothing and indifferent, with less publicity and changes in tone, elegant with deep, fresh and vigorous, mostly using the technique of "singing", which is round and friendly. This paragraph describes the gentleman as Lan, calm and calm, Ruolan born in the mountains, unknown and proud. The second part of the musical tone changes to a certain degree. There is a short high-pitched syllable (a bit like a mute tone) in which the strings are cut with fingers. It is like a spring rain in a blue orchid, and it is like a stream flowing by, expressing the fresh and refined appearance of the blue. It uses more portamento, which is melodious, tactful, and quiet. During the period, there are accents like "playing like a broken string". In the last paragraph, it gradually returns to calm in the gentleness, and the last syllable is melodious and ethereal. The fragrance of Shulan is fragrant, and the fragrance is far away, like a gentleman's arrogance and breeze, with a feeling of boating in rivers and lakes. The whole piece of music is leisurely and vigorous, deep and atmospheric, and it is worthy of the name of the music.