Tang Poetry: What's the next line in the whole poem of Spring Rain?

The next sentence is that it is raining all over the street.

From: Ming Jie Jin's Spring Rain

Jie Jin was a brilliant man since he was a child. His articles are elegant and quaint, his poems are rich and elegant, his calligraphy is excellent in small letters, and he is good at walking and cursing, especially at wild grass. Together with Xu Wei and Yang Shen, he is known as the three great talents of the Ming Dynasty, and he has written The Collection of Scholars, The Jade Dies of Tianhuang and so on. President Mao Shi Lu and Biography of Women in Ancient and Modern Times; Presided over the compilation of Yongle Dadian; Ink marks include Poems from the Book, Poems from the Tang Dynasty, Song Zhaoheng's palace examination's anecdote, etc.

Extended information:

Spring Rain

Author: Ming? Jie Jin

Spring rain is as expensive as oil, and

it pours all over the street.

slip and learn,

laugh at a herd of cows.

Jie Jin (December 6, 1369-February 22, 1415) was born in Jishui, Ji 'an Prefecture, Jiangxi Province, a minister and writer in the Ming Dynasty.

In the 21st year of Hongwu (1388), he was a scholar, from the official to the cabinet record, and a university student in Youchunfang, who took part in confidential affairs. Jie Jin was afraid of speaking out because of his high intellect, and was repeatedly demoted. He was finally imprisoned with "no courtiers". In the thirteenth year of Yongle (1415), he was buried in a snowdrift and froze to death. He died at the age of forty-seven. In the first year of Chenghua (1465), he was given to the doctor of Chao Yi.

Interpretation: There is a saying in the north that "Ruixue bodes well for a bumper year". First, Ruixue has accumulated enough water for the beginning of spring; Second, Ruixue keeps warm the crops in the field; Third, some pests will die from snow. And "spring rain is as expensive as oil" brings opportunities for spring ploughing, spring sowing and spring planting in the south, especially for the "relying on the sky to eat".