The rustling leaves send the cold sound, and the autumn wind moves the guests on the river. What's the next sentence?

"The rustling leaves send a cold sound, and the autumn wind on the river moves guests" means that the rustling autumn wind blows the phoenix leaves, bringing chills, and the autumn wind on the river can't help but miss my hometown. The poem comes from Ye Shaoweng's Night Book in the Southern Song Dynasty.

The poem is as follows:

Ye Shaoweng in the Southern Song Dynasty as Seen in Night Books

The rustling leaves send the cold sound, and the autumn wind moves the guests on the river.

I know that children choose to promote weaving, and a lamp fell on the fence at night.

Note 1

Rustle: the wind.

2

Guest feeling: the homesickness of passengers.

three

Pick: Pick and move.

four

Promote knitting: commonly known as cricket, and some areas are also called cricket.

five

Fence: A fence.

Appreciation of a seven-character quatrain written by Ye Shaoweng, a poet in the Southern Song Dynasty, in What I See in Night Books. One or two poems describe the scenery, and the feeling of wandering and loneliness are set off by fallen leaves, rustling autumn wind and chilly air. Write three or four sentences about children catching crickets at night, which is very interesting, cleverly contrasts sadness and shows the loneliness and helplessness of living in a foreign country.

In the poem, the scenery is used to set off feelings, the combination of motion and static, the leaves and wind are used to set off the silence of autumn night, and the music scene promoted by children at night is used to set off the sadness of foreign life.

This poem was written by a poet who lived in a foreign land and felt autumn in a quiet night, expressing his worries about travel and deep homesickness. Plants and trees are dying, flowers are dying, the autumn wind on the river is chilly, and the leaves are rustling cold. The word "send" in the poem makes people seem to hear the voice of cold bones.

Poetry shows nostalgia for childhood. The children caught at night to promote knitting reminded the poet of his childhood. Write the voice of autumn wind first, then listen to the feeling of this voice. At the end of the poem, write down what you see outdoors. This poem is fluent in language, distinct in layers, with a turning point in the middle, and sentence breaks and meanings run through it. Poets are good at euphemistically expressing the unspeakable feelings of autumn night travelers through artistic images without falling into the realm of decline. The last word is light and far-reaching and chewy.