To tell you the truth, the previous strategy has not been done carefully. The Louvre is really too big to be a museum that needs enough time to go through different categories. From the castle of the 12th century to the palace of the 16th century, and then to the Museum of the 19th century, the Louvre has reached its present scale after more than 800 years. It has 400,000 exhibits and a building area of more than 60,000 square meters. It is the oldest and largest museum in the world. Such a rich collection is both lucky and burdensome for tourists. Because no one can browse these works of art in a short time or even a few years. For most visitors, a visit to the Louvre is only a regret that has not been missed. People come here all the time, and the queues stand around the glass pyramid. As I stood in line, I carefully looked around and imagined how the gifted architect I. M. Pei, when he was designing and rebuilding the Louvre, thought of decorating the entrance to the Louvre with a modern minimalist glass pyramid. It is amazing that the old and the new are so perfectly integrated that they shine in the world. However, when I passed through the pyramid with the flow of people, and saw the light reflected through the glass like a phantom, as the moving escalator slowly descended into the palace, it seemed to understand something: the modern pyramid surrounded by the Louvre, like a magic tunnel of time and space, through which we could meet the ancient civilization. Visiting museums in the impression should be in the halls of Noda, slowly, quietly, thoughtfully, with eyes and every part of the works in mind or amazed or inspired. But when I walked into the Louvre, it wasn't all that spectacular. The libraries of famous works are crowded with people. In De Nong Guan, I drilled left and right among the crowd, and managed to squeeze into the nearest place to see only the side face of Mona Lisa. And the people around them, their eyes are free, their faces are impetuous, they know what they are, but they are unwilling to know what they are. It seems that I have come here through thousands of mountains and rivers only for those who have been here, and have passed through the magnificent palace, to see the three most representative exhibits of the Louvre: Venus, the Goddess of Victory, and Mona Lisa.