Classic sentences
Don't stay in the wind and moon, spring mountains are everywhere.
Actually, it's ancient prose, from On China written by Tian Xin in Ming Dynasty.
It means: follow the wind and moon all the way, don't stop, because at the end of the grassy plain, there is a spring mountain.
The implication is that there is still a long way to go and many mountains to climb. Since you have chosen a distant place, don't give up halfway for the scenery, but always work hard and stand together through thick and thin.
Because our journey is a sea of stars, not just a plain. So, don't stop traveling, keep going and keep moving towards the distant mountains.
Interpretation of Huaxia Shuo
The first time I saw "Chasing the wind and the moon, not staying" was "A Generation of Masters", and I was happy at that time.
Later, it was said that the whole sentence was "the wind and the moon don't stay behind, and spring mountains are everywhere."
I remember the second half of the sentence was Ouyang Xiu's "Walking on the sand, waiting for Mei Can"
When the museum is destroyed, the bridge is thin. The grass is warm and swaying. Sadness is getting farther and farther away, and the distance is like spring water.
Inch by inch, my heart ached, and my eyes were full of tears. The height of the building is not near the dangerous fence. Pingwu is full of spring mountains, and pedestrians are even outside.
Biography from Tian Xin's "Huaxia Shuo". I haven't heard of it. I'm not sure. I use China's ancient poems to search online. Without the ancient book The Story of China and the poet Tian Xin, has it been lost?
Online said that he used Ouyang Xiu, but I didn't find the full text of Huaxia's statement.