There are many poems describing beautiful eyes.
"Take care of the city first, then the country" (Biography of Li Furen in the Book of Filial Piety in Han Dynasty), "Good Eyes" (Cao Zhi's Ode to Luoshen) and "Wandering with Eyes" (Yi Fu's Ode to Dance). The description of beauty's eyes in A Dream of Red Mansions includes "a pair of eyes that seem to be happy but not happy" (Lin Daiyu), "watery almond eyes" (Xue Baochai) and "a pair of red phoenix triangle eyes" (Xifeng). It can be seen that the traditional standards of China are almond eyes, phoenix eyes, agility and charm, beautiful eyes like autumn water, eyes rippling, vivid and touching.
The description of eyes in literary works of past dynasties mostly refers to "watery". "The Book of Songs Zheng Feng": "There are creeping weeds in the wild, and there is no dew." . There is a beautiful woman, Wan Ru, who is very young. "Qing Yang" means watery, which is a metaphor for bright eyes and watery clear water; Yan's "Picking Mulberry Seeds": "An inch of time and an inch of gold are not many." Use "1000 pearls" as a metaphor for bright, clean, smart and gentle eyes; Li He's Song of the Second Tang Dynasty in the Tang Dynasty has "a pair of eyes with autumn waters", which is a metaphor for a clear and clean eye pool. "Tang Yuan Zhen's Cui Huige": "Eyes are like glass bottles, and the heart is clear. "Use" glass bottle "and" clear autumn water "as metaphors for bright and agile eyes; Liu E wrote in Travel Notes of Lao Can: "Those eyes are like autumn water, like cold stars, like spheres, like two black mercury in white water and silver ..." Ming Che's eyes of God are more black and mercury than autumn water, cold stars and orbs, and the black and bright pupils are more black and mercury than white water and silver. In Cao Xueqin's Dream of Red Mansions, many women often use the expression "frown in spring and frown in autumn" to describe the features of eyebrows and eyes.