Which article does Dong Zhen's "Goldilocks" come from? Looking back at the golden steps, cinnabar points crimson autumn water Artemisia?

Nothing, this is a combination of several allusions:

Looking back, it is estimated that "a thousand dollars won't be exchanged" comes from Jia Baoyu's "tearing a fan to make his daughter laugh" in A Dream of Red Mansions. Looking back, Iraqis should use "If she turns her head and smiles, there are a hundred spells to cast" and "The clouds in her hair, the petals on her cheeks, and the golden ripples in her crown when she moves" in the Song of Eternal Sorrow.

Crimson autumn wormwood is dotted with cinnabar between the eyebrows. "Eyebrow cinnabar" seems to be a makeup method in the Tang Dynasty, which came from a princess (according to legend, when the princess slept under a peach tree, she was caught by petals, leaving peach blossom marks on her eyebrows, and the concubines watched the charm and followed suit, and even used cinnabar dots on her eyebrows); "Dianjiang" should also be a makeup method in the Tang Dynasty. Later, it was used to describe that women's lips were small and red like cherries, and it was named "Dianjiang Lip" in Song Ci. "Autumn Water" originally came from Zhuangzi, and later generations used it to describe women's bright eyes, but it should come from Li He's poem "A pair of pupils cut autumn water"