1, willow shoots on the moon, about after dusk.
From Cha Sheng Zi Yuan Xi written by Ouyang Xiu in Song Dynasty.
Commentary: After dusk, I met a beautiful woman at the willow tip on the moon and talked with her.
He knows that the dew will be frost tonight, and how bright the moonlight is at home! .
Du Fu's Remembering Brothers on a Moonlit Night in Tang Dynasty.
Commentary: Starting from tonight, entering the Millennium solar terms, the moon in my hometown is still the brightest.
3, the moon, now full of the sea, the end of the world at this time.
From Zhang Jiuling's Full Moon Philip Burkart in the Tang Dynasty.
Explanation: A bright moon rises in the vast sea, reminding people of relatives and friends far away from the ends of the earth. Now we are looking at the same bright moon.
4, I don't know the month when I am an hour, so I call it a white jade plate.
From Li Bai's Gulangyu Trip in Tang Dynasty
Explanation: I didn't know the moon when I was a child, so I called it white jade plate.
5, evening alone in Zhu Lan. The southwest crescent is arched.
Five generations of Azolla leaves.
Commentary: At dusk, leaning against Zhu Lan alone, I unconsciously saw a crescent moon hanging in the southwest sky.
6. On the poor third night of September, dewdrops are like real pearls and bows.
From Bai Juyi's Ode to Mujiang in Tang Dynasty
Commentary: The loveliest thing is the night on the third day of September, when the dew is like beads and the crescent moon is like a bow.
7. Meteors pass through sparse trees and walk on the retrograde clouds of the moon.
Sushan Temple in Jia Dao in Tang Dynasty.
Commentary: From the cracks in the branches scattered outside the temple, I saw meteors passing by in the night sky, and the light clouds fluttered slowly, as if walking in the opposite direction to the moon.
8. Wandering around the courtyard, the clouds hate Yu He's face.
Sai Qiu Hong Chun Qing by Zhang Kejiu in Yuan Dynasty.
Commentary: Sparse stars, faint moon, empty swing yard, sorrow like clouds, hate like rain, covered with hibiscus-like face.
9. The wind blows through the leaves on both sides, and the moon crosses my lonely sail.
Meng Haoran from Tonglu to Yangzhou in Tang Dynasty.
Commentary: The river breeze on both sides of the strait rustled the branches and leaves, and the moonlight shone like water on the lonely boat by the river.
10, until, holding up my cup, I asked the bright moon to bring me my shadow and make the three of us.
From Li Bai's Drinking the Bright Moon Alone in Tang Dynasty.
Commentary: Raise a glass to the sky and invite the bright moon to drink with me. The shadow of the moon is opposite to my shadow, reflecting three people.