The poem "Mu Jiang Yin" uses figurative rhetoric to compare what works.

In this poem, the author compares dewdrops to pearls and crescent moons to bows. With the metaphor of "real pearl", not only the roundness of dew is written, but also the luster of dew shining under the new moon. The poet looked up again and saw a crescent moon Ran Ran rising, just like a delicate bow hanging in the blue sky. The poet condensed the two wonders of heaven and earth into a poem-"The dew is like a real pearl, and the moon is like a bow". From a crescent moon bent like a bow, the author remembered that it was "the third night of September", and could not help but blurt out his lovely praise for it, expressing his feelings directly, pushing his feelings to a climax and causing waves in his poems.

Ode to Mujiang is a poem written by Bai Juyi, a poet in Tang Dynasty. This is a masterpiece of landscape writing. The poet chose two groups of scenes from sunset to the rising of the new moon to describe them, used novel and ingenious metaphors to create a harmonious and peaceful artistic conception, and expressed his deep feelings and love for nature through chanting.