What do you mean by Wu Shan's more water and clouds?

The meaning of Wu Shan is as follows:

Wu Shan is the green mountain in Jiangsu, and the water is the clear water in Zhejiang, and the cloud means there are many clouds. Used to describe the beautiful scenery enjoyed by poets.

This poem comes from Xu Ning's Looking at the Rain in August in the Tang Dynasty. The whole poem is: on the night of August 15 this year, the cold rain was rustling. If practice is like frost, where is Wu Shan?

On the night of August 15th this year, the cold rain was rustling and I couldn't hear it clearly. Like where the training is like frost, like the green hills in Jiangsu and the clear water in Zhejiang, there are thousands of heavy clouds in the sky.

The whole poem is unpretentious, with lofty artistic conception and fluent and natural brushwork. Take advantage of the scenery to express feelings, look at the scenery outside on August 15, miss my hometown and my family.

Introduction to the poet:

Xu Ning, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, was born in Baishan Village, Fenshui County, Muzhou County, Zhejiang Province (now Dongshan Baishan Village, Fenshui Town, Tonglu County). His annual date of birth and death is unknown, which is equivalent to that of his friend Zhang Hu (792-853), but a little later than that of Bai Juyi and Yuan Zhen. Yuanhejian (86-82) has a poetic title. In the Ming Dynasty, Yang Ji's Mei 'an Collection, volume five "long and short sentences" gave a poem cloud: "Li Baixiong's wonderful poems are immortal with Xu Ning's biography."

There are 12 poems by Xu, 96 of which are five-character quatrains, including 16 five-character quatrains and 8 seven-character quatrains, and they are also excellent. Xu Ning mentioned three poems of Peony, the first of which is hard to see and is highly praised by later generations. His representative works include "Recalling Yangzhou" and "Offering a reward for Yuan Xiang Gong Shang Yuan".

Xu Ning is famous for his calligraphy. According to "Xuan He Shu Pu", "Xu Ning, the book has its own way, and its brushwork has its own Confucian style, which is not regulated by the book." Mo Bao, whose two poems, Yellow Crane Tower and Jing Wu Meng Si, were collected by the court of Song Dynasty.