What did Ye Shaoweng, a night book poet, hear on an autumn night? When I saw something, I was deeply touched and wrote down the scenery described in the poem "What I saw in a Night Book" as follows.

In the autumn night, I heard the sound of the autumn wind blowing the phoenix tree leaves, and wrote down the scenery described in the poem "What I saw in the Night Book": the children of the phoenix tree leaves were set off by the fallen leaves, the rustling of the autumn wind and the cold air, setting off a lonely and desolate feeling.

Writing about children catching crickets at night is of great interest, which subtly sets off sadness and shows the loneliness and helplessness of living in different places.

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.

Extended data:

He compared his "lonely world" with the "crossing the fence" in Yi Deng, and conveyed a homesickness through the scenery, which was linked with the sentence "on the river" and wrapped up the whole article, especially for Qiu Si, which made people daydream.

Poetry reveals nostalgia for childhood, and at night children reminisce about the past and promote weaving, reminding the poet of childhood. This poem first wrote the voice of autumn wind, then wrote the feelings of this voice, and at the end of the two paragraphs, wrote what they saw and heard 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.