Waving your sleeves will not take away a single cloud. This is a poem by a famous poet.

1. "Wave your sleeves and don't take away a single cloud" is a poem from Xu Zhimo's "Farewell Cambridge".

2. The original text is attached as follows:

Farewell Cambridge

Author. Xu Zhimo

Gently I left,

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Just as I came gently;

I waved gently,

Farewell to the clouds in the western sky.

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The golden willows by the river,

are the bride in the sunset;

the beautiful shadows in the ripples,

Ripples in my heart.

----

The green cattails on the soft mud,

swaying slickly under the water;

In the Cam River In the soft waves,

I am willing to be a waterweed!

----

The pool under the shade of elm trees,

is not a clear spring, but a rainbow in the sky;

crushed in Among the floating algae,

a rainbow-like dream precipitates.

----

Looking for a dream? Take a long pole ⑶,

Walk upstream to where the grass is greener ⑷;

Load a boat full of stars,

Sing songs in the colorful starlight.

----

But I can’t sing,

Quietness is the shengxiao of parting;

The summer insects are also silent for me ,

Silence is Cambridge tonight!

----

Quietly I left,

Just as quietly as I came;

I waved my sleeves ,

Do not take away a single cloud.

3. Introduction to the author:

Xu Zhimo (January 15, 1897 - November 19, 1931), a modern poet and essayist. His original name was Zhang Qu and his courtesy name was Qian Sen. He changed his name to Zhimo when he was studying in England. The Crescent School represents the poet. He studied at Shanghai Hujiang University, Tianjin Beiyang University and Peking University. In 1918, he went to the United States to study economics. In 1921, he went to the United Kingdom to study and became a special student at Cambridge University, studying political economics. During his two years in Cambridge, he was deeply influenced by Western education and influenced by European and American Romanticism and Aesthetic poets. Crescent Society was established in 1923. In 1924, he was appointed professor of Peking University. In 1926, he served as professor at Guanghua University, Daxia University and Nanjing Central University (renamed Nanjing University in 1949). In 1930, he resigned from his posts in Shanghai and Nanjing. At the invitation of Hu Shi, he once again became a professor at Peking University and a professor at Beijing Women's Normal University. Died in a plane crash on November 19, 1931. Representative works include "Farewell Cambridge" and "A Night in the Emerald Green", etc.