The bright moon rises above the Tianshan Mountains, among the vast sea of ??clouds
This poem comes from Li Bai's "Moon over the Mountains".
The ancients have always had extraordinary visions and dreams for the sky and space. The legend of Chang'e flying to the moon, Kuafu chasing the sun, Nuwa patching up the sky, the goddess flying high into the clouds in the Dunhuang murals, and countless astrologers' notes of their thoughts on gazing at the stars are all records of the ancients' dream of flying into the sky. In the history of Chinese literature, the writer and poet Qu Yuan wrote an article called "Heavenly Questions", which asked 147 questions about the heavenly world. Li Bai, a poet of the Tang Dynasty, was eager to try his best, "he was full of joy and excitement, and wanted to fly up to the blue sky to embrace the sun and the moon." Su Dongpo, a poet from the Song Dynasty, expressed his uneasiness in "I want to ride the wind back home, but I am afraid of the beautiful buildings and beautiful buildings", which reflects the curiosity, yearning and speculation of the ancient Chinese about the bright space.