Sunrise in the East and Rain in the West are poems written by Liu Yuxi.

Rising to the East and Falling to the West is a poem written by Liu Yuxi when he was in Kuizhou. It is an ancient eastern Sichuan folk song. People sang and danced with drums and piccolo.

"Rising in the East and Falling in the West" comes from Liu Yuxi's Two Poems on Bamboo Branches: "Willow green Jiang Shuiping, I listen to Langjiang songs. Sunrise in the east and rain in the west, the road is sunny but sunny. "

The Yangliuqing River is wide and flat, and I hear my lover singing on it. Sunrise in the east and rain in the west say it's sunny but sunny.

From the first month of the second year of Changqing (822) to the fourth year of Changqing (824), Liu Yuxi was the secretariat of Kuizhou in the summer and wrote eleven poems about Zhi Zhu. Eleven Zhuzhi Ci Poems are divided into two groups. This is a group of two poems, written after the other nine (nine poems on bamboo branches). It's about the poet writing the first nine poems and re-creating, but he doesn't want to add ten or eleven poems after the first nine poems, so it's called "Two Poems on Zhuzhi".

This poem is about the mood of a girl immersed in her first love. She loves someone, but she doesn't really understand their attitude, so she has both hope and doubt; I am both happy and worried. The poet successfully expressed this subtle and complicated psychology in his own tone. The latter two sentences have always been loved and quoted by later generations.