The moon: the perfection of life, shortcomings, homesickness, missing family, loneliness, loneliness, loss...
The moon: in ancient Chinese poetry, the moon is used to express feelings It is a commonly used writing method. Generally speaking, the moon in ancient poetry is synonymous with homesickness. Li Bai's "Quiet Night Thoughts": "There is bright moonlight in front of my bed, I suspect it is frost on the ground. I look up at the bright moon and lower my head to think about my hometown." This poem expresses Li Bai's homesickness. The moon in the poem is no longer a purely objective object, but an image imbued with the poet's emotions. Wang Jian of the Tang Dynasty wrote "Wish for Du Langzhong on the Fifteenth Night": "Tonight, when the moon is bright, everyone looks out, and I don't know who is missing my autumn thoughts." The poem uses euphemistic questions to point out the common caring mood in the world on this night of the full moon, implicitly expressing the poet's feelings. Deeply missing my friends back home.
In addition, "moon" also has the following images
(1) The bright moon contains the sorrow of people around you.
For example: "The sand in front of Hui Le Feng is like snow, and the moon outside the city is like frost" is tragic and resentful; "The moon is bright in Qin and Han is close, and the people who have marched thousands of miles have not yet returned".
(2) The bright moon contains emotional helplessness.
For example, Xie Zhuang’s prayers and blessings: “The beautiful woman is standing near the Yinchen Palace, and thousands of miles away is the bright moon.”; Zhang Jiuling’s hope and longing: “The bright moon is on the sea, and the end of the world is at this time.” .
(3) The bright moon contains the eternity of time and space.
"People in ancient times and today are like running water, even when you look at the bright moon." It vividly expresses the plunder of life by time and the helplessness of life in the face of time.