Su Shi wrote poems about wine glasses and the moon.

The poem of snuff: "The flute breaks the moonlight, and the glass is empty when the moon sets."

It means: the flute is broken on this moonlit night, and I only worry about the moon falling through the glass.

From: Su Shi's "Moonlit Night under the Apricot Flowers" in the Song Dynasty

Apricot flowers fly over the curtain to disperse the spring, and the bright moon enters the house to find a lover.

Step by step, step by step, step by step, like running water, like green apples.

The flowers are fragrant with wine, and they are struggling to pull long strips of fragrant snow.

The thin wine in the mountain city tastes terrible, so I advise you to drink a glass of moon.

The flute is broken in the moonlight, and the glass is empty when the moon sets.

In the Ming Dynasty, the spring breeze was evil, but the green leaves remained red.