The first part, there are flowers in spring and months in autumn. How to do the second part?

There are flowers in spring and moons in autumn.

It's cool in summer and snowy in winter.

If you don't mind your own business,

This is a good time on earth.

-This is a poem by Huang Longhui, a Zen master in the Song Dynasty. Because the first two sentences have the word "you" in the same place, "flowers" and "cool breeze" are not couplets and cannot be counted as couplets. Talk about it for your reference:

The first part: there are flowers in spring and months in autumn;

Bottom line: snow in winter and lotus in summer.

(Note: One foot of snow-one foot of snow; Heavy snow. The text "Zuo Zhuan's Nine-year Hidden Gong": "Heavy snow on the flat ground." "Biography of Lu Jin": "The wind breaks the wood and the ground is covered with snow." One of Tang Du Fu's After a Bitter Cold Journey: "There was no witch cottage in the Southern Dynasties, and there was no snow since ancient times."