Three or four sentences are written about the mentality of flower lovers, which is very romantic. "I'm afraid of falling asleep at night" is the key sentence of the whole poem. This sentence, with a change of pen, wrote the mentality of flower lovers. "Fear" in the sentence means worry, which vividly describes the poet's psychological activity of loving flowers and his reluctant enjoyment: when the moonlight can no longer shine on the beauty of Haitang, the poet suddenly fills with pity: Haitang is so beautiful, how can he bear to let her live alone in the dark? This flower, which has accumulated a season of hard work and quietly blooms, is unexpectedly unappreciated. Is it too sad and disappointing for her? Poets who are lonely in the dead of night naturally can't sleep; Flowers are so lonely and cold that they want to sleep. How do poets spend the long night alone? I wrote about my anxiety caused by loneliness, and also hid my persistence in spending the night with flowers. The word "only" polarized the infatuation of the flower lover. Now all he can think of is the bright smile of the flower, and all the other unhappiness can be written off for the time being: this is a transcendental realm of "forgetting me" and "being or not".
The last sentence goes further, raising the love for flowers to the extreme. "Geng" refers to the word "lest" mentioned above, which means deliberately doing it, showing the poet's special liking for Haitang. This sentence uses the allusion of Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang Dynasty that Yang Guifei's drunken appearance is "Haitang didn't sleep enough", and instead uses flowers as a metaphor for people, chanting little by little without trace. "Lighting a Candle" is a wonderful contrast with the "Moon Corridor" mentioned above. Moonlight seems to be too jealous of the brilliance of this blooming begonia, so mean and ungrateful, and refuses to show her a beautiful stage; Then let me drive away the darkness of this long night for her with a red candle with a high fever! The poet's chivalry and kindness are faintly visible here. "Red Makeup" echoes the word "flowers go to sleep" in the previous sentence and describes the charm of Haitang.