What is the next sentence in the poem "A bright moon walks with me"?

The next sentence of "A bright moon will accompany me" is correct: two pots of turbid wine are drunk.

"A bright moon walks with me" has no fixed sentence, because this sentence is not from ancient poetry, but evolved from "I turned my heart to the bright moon long ago, but the bright moon shines on the ditch". These seven-character quatrains were written by Mr. Qian Zhonglian, a well-known expert in literature and history, and were included in the leaf-sweeping record of Chronicle of Qing Poetry (Volume 2 1), but their origins can no longer be tested.

"I compare my heart to the bright moon, and the bright moon shines on the ditch" has been quoted too many times in China's modern and contemporary literary works, with only a few words slightly changed, but the original intention is the same. It is more common in other people's comments and memoirs of famous scholars such as Li Qingzhao, Hu Shi and Lao She, and many intellectuals have also sung this sentence as a joke. There are also quotations in vernacular novels, plays, poems and couplets.