This is a carefully cut scene, but it is written so naturally. Li Bai and the bright moon alone, facing the bright moon and shadow, seem to form a picture of three people drinking in hallucinations. On this spring night, Li Bai was singing and dancing while drinking, and the moon shadow fluctuated with his mood, as if sharing his joy and sadness in drinking. Logically speaking, things have little to do with people's inner world. But from the perspective of poetry, they are closely related. This is also the origin of "Xing" in China's poems. Since the Book of Songs, it has always endowed nature with anthropomorphic actions, thoughts and emotions, such as "the moon is bright, people are beautiful", "worrying about the moon" and "hating Taiwan". Li Bai's poems are in line with this "xing" writing style, which endows the moon and shadow with emotion. As Lin Yutang said: "It is a poetic belief in harmony with nature, which makes life fluctuate with the fluctuation of human emotions."
But at the end of the poem, Li Bai reveals a kind of lonely, not lonely, not lonely complex feelings. He knows that the moon shadows are heartless things, but they are just sentient beings. In the face of this heartless thing, does Li Bai still think that goodwill was ever safe? That is to say, when he is drinking alone with the moon, he will still invite him to sing and dance with him this month, even if it is "I see the long road of the Milky Way". Visible Taibai loneliness has reached a point! Stephen Owen once said: "Poetry is a tool, and the poet makes people understand and admire his uniqueness through poetry." It is with this song "Bring My Shadow, Let the Three of us" and "Drinking Alone with the Moon" that Li Bai makes people understand and admire his uniqueness. No matter men, women and children, any China person who drinks a cup will sing "Until I raise my glass, I ask the moon, bring me my shadow, and let the three of us" to express his appreciation of the so-called elegance and drinking alone. The uniqueness of this poem has long been transformed into the collective unconsciousness of the nation.