I don't ask how long Wu Chaohe is.
I don't ask how much light fireflies have:
If you want to go, don't ride a meteor.
You have heat, you will always be the sun.
?
You, Mo Wen and I will fly there,
Every rock eagle and crow in the sky has its own nest.
When the sun comes, it's time to go back to the mountain.
Just ask the moon, "Will you come tomorrow?"
This article was published in the 4th issue of Volume 3 of Literature and Art Monthly on April 30th 1932, with many signatures. Later, it was written into the novel "Day and Night" (1June 30, 932, Literature and Art Monthly, Volume 3, No.5-6, Chapter 9), and some words were slightly changed.
According to the author's explanation in Day and Night, this poem is a duet between Miao men and women at dusk, and sometimes it is sung by servants who follow the "wizard" everywhere.