Qi Jiguang was a military general and scientist during the Ming Dynasty in China. He wrote many poems about fighting the Japanese pirates. The following are some of the more famous ones: 1 Climbing the Liuzhou City Tower The wind is strong, the sky is high, the apes howl, the white birds fly back to the clear sand of the mournful island. Endless trees fall and the endless Yangtze River rolls down. I'm always a guest in autumn, sad for thousands of miles. I've been sick for a hundred years, and I'm alone on the stage. I'm in trouble, bitter resentment, frosty hair, downcast hair, I've just stopped drinking. "Entering Wuyue" Huguang cooked the world is enough. Huguang cooked to ask for land to ask Mu. When the granary is full, you know etiquette. When you have enough food and clothing, you know honor and disgrace. Think of danger in times of peace, think of peace, think of danger. Victory or defeat, military affairs are not expected, it is a good time to bear shame. Qin and Jin love each other, lips and teeth are attached to each other, killing each other next! 3. Climbing Yueyang Tower I once heard that Dongting Lake is now on Yueyang Tower. The lake and the moon are in harmony with each other, and the surface of the pool is windless and the mirror is not polished. Climbing the tower to eat crabs, recalling the past, laughing and laughing, the oars turn into ashes. These poems described the environment and challenges Qi Jiguang faced when he fought against the Japanese pirates, expressing his loyalty and love for the country and the people, and also showing his outstanding military talent and scientific accomplishment.