Full text: I know Jade Rabbit is round, and it has been in first frost in September. ? The message is that the door is closed and the key is closed, and the night tide stays on the moon.
You know, the moon is very happy tonight, and the autumn wind in September is already cold. Message: Please don't lock the Nine Heavenly Doors. I want to keep the moonlight and watch the night tide.
Origin: Five Wonders of Watching Tide on August 15th is one of the works of Su Shi, a poet in the Song Dynasty.
Extended data:
The first two sentences: "I know the jade rabbit is round, and it has been frosted in September." The first sentence points out the Mid-Autumn Festival. "The period from the first month to the Mid-Autumn Festival is particularly bright." This year's Mid-Autumn Festival coincides with a sunny day, and the author predicts that the moon will be round and the mood will be doubly happy. On a clear autumn night, the wind blows hard. Although it is Mid-Autumn Festival, it is chilly in September because it is close to the mouth of Qiantang River.
The author imagines that watching the tide on a moonlit night, the seaside must be very cold, and the scene must be more exciting. Three or four sentences: "The message is that the door should be closed, and the night tide stays on the moon." At this time, the author lived in Zhai Jun, so he called the clerk in charge of the door and said, "This heavy door must be locked. I want to watch the tide on a moonlit night! " Bai Juyi recalled Hangzhou's words: "Looking for laurel trees in Yuezhongshan Temple, the tide is on the pillow of the county pavilion."
Su Shi is different from Bai Juyi. He wants to see the tide in the seawall himself, and it is more interesting to watch the tide on the Mid-Autumn Moon Night than Bai Juyi's "Watching the tide on the pillow in the county pavilion". This poem is just an attempt to watch the tide and the beginning of a series of poems.