1. Thousands of shadows are due to the moon, and thousands of sounds are due to autumn.
From "Autumn Night Boating" by Liu Fangping of the Tang Dynasty. The poem describes the scene of an autumn night when the moon is bright in the sky, everything has its shadow, and thousands of voices compete with each other, all showing the mood of autumn.
2. The moon is reflected in the trees, and the wind and water are palindromic.
From "Autumn Leap Hope" by Yu Dan, Liang of the Southern Dynasties. The poem describes the scene where the moon is setting in the west, the shadows of trees are reflected in the water, and the wind is rising and the water is making countless ripples.
3. The swift wind blew through my clothes, and the white dew stained my clothes.
From "Three Seven Sorrow Poems" (Part 2) by Wang Can of Han Dynasty. Swift, fast. Shang, lower clothes. 袂, sleeves. The scene of autumn wind blowing clothes and white dew on one's lap is originally a sad image, but when read in these two sentences, it still retains a desolate beauty.
4. The shadow of the moon sinks in the autumn water, and the sound of the wind falls on the dusk mountain.
From Tang Dynasty Lingyi's "Reward Chen Mingfu Seeing Gifts in the Boat". The poem describes the scene of an autumn night when the water reflects the shadow of the moon and the wind blows through the mountains and forests.