When reading "The West Lake in Hangzhou is full of makeup but light" in "We Love You, China", I can't help but think of the poem written by Su Shi.

When I read "We Love You, China", "The West Lake in Hangzhou is full of makeup, but not heavy makeup", I can't help but think of the poem written by Su Shi: "To compare the West Lake to the West Lake, light makeup and heavy makeup are always appropriate".

The phrase "The West Lake in Hangzhou is full of make-up but understated" should come from the famous sentence "Drinking on the lake makes it clear after the rain" written by Su Shi in the Song Dynasty when he was a judge in Hangzhou. Heavy makeup refers to the West Lake in sunny days, while light makeup refers to the West Lake in rainy days. The whole poem is as follows:

The water is bright and sunny, and the mountains are cloudy and rainy.

If there are more dead beauties in the West Lake, C+ is so appropriate.

The main idea of this poem is: it's nice to have a sunny day with rippling water, and it's even weirder to have a rainy day with misty rain. If we compare the West Lake to a city, whether it is beautiful or colorful, it is equally radiant.

Tip: Lake refers to the West Lake in Hangzhou. The lakes and mountains set each other off and the scenery is beautiful. The whole poem writes "sunny" first, then "rain", and the last two sentences are summed up together, while praising the charming scenery of the West Lake with novel quips. "Xi Zi" means "Xi Shi", the first of the four beauties in ancient China. Comparing the West Lake to a beauty is an eternal conclusion. It can be proved that the lake is named "Xizi Lake" because of its poetry.

Shi, formerly known as Shi Yiguang, was born in Zhuluo Village, Zhuji, Zhejiang at the end of the Spring and Autumn Period. Born beautiful. The first of the four beauties in ancient China is the embodiment and pronoun of beauty. The "sinking fish" in "the posture of closing the moon and feeling ashamed of flowers, sinking fish and falling geese" tells the classic legend of sand. Xi, together with the stories of Wang Zhaojun, Diophantine and Yang Yuhuan, is called the four beauties in ancient China, and ranks first among them. The four beauties enjoy the appearance of "closing the moon and feeling ashamed of flowers, sinking fish and falling geese".