All the interludes of "A Dream of Red Mansions" include "Sighing on the Fragrant Ling", "Song of Qingwen", "Wan Ning Mei", "Yin of the Burial Flower", "Song of Zilingzhou", etc.
1. "Sighing the Sweet Ling": It is a music single written by Cao Xueqin and composed by Wang Liping. It is the ending theme of the 30th episode of the 1987 CCTV TV series "A Dream of Red Mansions".
2. "Qingwen Song": It is an interlude in the TV series "A Dream of Red Mansions". The song sings about Jia Baoyu's maid Qingwen. Qingwen is the most rebellious maid in "A Dream of Red Mansions". The lyrics come from the original work and were written by Cao Xueqin.
3. "Wan Ning Mei": It is a piece of music composed by Cao Xueqin, a novelist in the Qing Dynasty, and comes from the fifth chapter of "A Dream of Red Mansions". This song mainly describes the story of the "love ideal" of Jia Baoyu and Lin Daiyu, the hero and heroine of Dream of Red Mansions, which was finally shattered due to various reasons. Lin Daiyu died in tears. The song adopts the technique of first rising and then suppressing, expressing the inner pain of those who were persecuted by the feudal society and unable to get married. It conveys the sad and sad emotions inexhaustibly, and has a strong artistic appeal.
4. "Ode to Burial Flowers": This is a poem recited by the heroine Lin Daiyu in the novel "A Dream of Red Mansions" by Cao Xueqin, a Qing Dynasty writer. It comes from Chapter 27 of the novel. Through rich and peculiar imagination, dim and desolate pictures, and strong and sad mood, this poem shows Daiyu's spiritual world under the cruel reality and expresses her complicated struggle between life and death, love and hate. An experience of anxiety and confusion.
5. "Purple Lingzhou Song": It is a poem in the novel "A Dream of Red Mansions" written by the Qing Dynasty writer Cao Xueqin. It is found in the 79th chapter of "A Dream of Red Mansions". This is what Jia Baoyu, the protagonist of the novel, felt when he went to Zilingzhou after Jia Yingchun was taken out of the Grand View Garden. This poem describes the bleak autumn wind, the fallen lotus and the fallen water chestnuts, and the fallen chessboard to express the sadness of parting in the spring when the bride is about to marry. The first four sentences of the whole poem describe the scene, and the last four sentences are lyrical. There is a scene in the mood, and there is emotion in the scene, creating a strong tragic atmosphere.