The full name is "Ode to Li Xi's Zheli Bridge and Pavilion". The official script of the Eastern Han Dynasty is carved on the cliff. It is passed down as the book of Qiu Tui. Engraved in the first year of Xiping. The stone is located in Lueyang, Shaanxi today.
"Jin Shi Cui Bian" records: The stone is seven feet six inches high and five feet five inches wide. The article has a total of twenty lines and a full line of twenty-seven characters. The text has been completely stripped away. Shen Ruxun, the county magistrate of the Ming Dynasty, once carved a stone for it at Lingyan Temple in the south of the city. It is assumed that there are 49 characters, but there is no evidence for them. There are many reprints in factories and shops in Xi'an and Beijing. The writing method is simple and clumsy. Wanjing's "Fen Li Oocun" commented on it: "The writing is like "Xia Cheng", but it is very dangerous and weird. It looks like the writing is rough and blunt, and it is like the drawings of a five or six-year-old child in the village school, but it is careful." Playing, a kind of simple and unsophisticated style, free in the line, covering the cliff will make the calligraphy and engraving twice as difficult as the stone ears." The two characters of "Jiaozhi" in the handed down ink edition were added in the early Qing Dynasty. "Essay on the School Monument".