Sunrise in the east and rain in the west.

The next sentence of "Rise to the East and Fall to the West" is "Tao is sunny or sunny". This poem comes from two Zhuzhi Ci poems written by Liu Yuxi in the Tang Dynasty (I). The poem is as follows:

Two poems on bamboo branches? one

Don Liu Yuxi

The willows in Jiang Shuiping are green, and I can hear the songs on the Langjiang River.

Rain in the east, sunrise in the east, said it was not sunny, but it was still sunny.

Poetic:

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.

Two Poems on Zhuzhi (I) is the first poem written by Liu Yuxi, a writer in the Tang Dynasty. 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 a girlish tone.

The first sentence, "willow green and Jiang Shuiping green", describes what the girl saw in front of her eyes: willow trees by the river are hung with green stripes; The running water in the river is as flat as a mirror. This sentence describes the willows by the river, which is most likely to arouse people's feelings, so it naturally leads to the second sentence: "I smell the songs on the Langjiang River." This sentence is a narrative, describing the ups and downs when a girl hears her lover's song. The last two sentences, "sunrise in the east, sunset in the west and rest, the road is sunny and sunny", are two clever metaphors, using a semantic pun.