If I start writing about lovesickness, how can Mo Chi return to her dream?
If I start to write about lovesickness, Mo Chi will still dream about it like this: Write about lovesickness with a pen, and Mo Chi will still fall in love with the dream. This reply poem expresses lovesickness with faint strokes. In the poem, "gently lifting the pen" means gently holding the pen. When the pen tip is dipped in Mo Chi, the feeling of missing begins to smear on the paper. And "Mo Chi has run out" means that the ink has been used up, and all the ink has been used up. However, Dream Is Still a Mystery expresses that even though Mo Chi has dried up, the obsession with dreams still exists. This reply poem conveys the indescribable depth of lovesickness, and symbolically expresses the yearning through ink pool and dream. It shows that all the pen and ink can't free the feelings in my heart, and the persistence and nostalgia in my dream still haunt me. If I start to write about lovesickness, the poem "Mo Chi is still infatuated with dreams" comes from the Song Dynasty poet Li Qingzhao's Dream. This word expresses deep yearning, which means that no matter how you express your love for Acacia, just like Mo Chi's ink runs out, the persistence in the dream will still exist.