You are with the breeze. What do you mean, I embrace the moon with autumn water?

Once you know each other, you can't love them.

Spring breeze and I are just passers-by in your life, and you embrace the brilliant galaxy with your favorite autumn water. It expresses the feeling that the author knows a person he likes, but he can't fall in love. Simply put, I love you, but you love someone else.

At first, this poem only circulated two sentences: "I am on the same side as the spring breeze, and you embrace the galaxy with autumn water." Because it was so beautiful, many people mistakenly thought it was written by an ancient master, and they searched for the roots one after another, only to find that it was a modern nameless work. This is also a sentence that can rarely be compared with ancient poetry.