For example, Wang Wei's "Dwelling in the Mountains in the Dark Autumn": After the new rain in the empty mountains, autumn comes late. The bright moon shines among the pines, and the clear spring flows over the rocks. The bamboo noise returns to Huan Nu, and the lotus moves off the fishing boat. The spring fragrance rests at will, and the king and grandson can stay.
The chin couplet describes the bright moon in the sky and the green pines like a canopy, which is a description of a quiet scene. The mountain spring is clear and flowing over the rocks, which is a description of a moving scene. The mountain spring has sufficient water after the rain, and the flow increases. It flows over the rocks, making a gurgling sound, which contrasts the stillness with movement and reflects the tranquility of the mountain. When describing scenery, poets pay great attention to the contrast between dynamic and static scenery. They can combine dynamic and static, or they can use static to describe movement, use movement to describe stillness, and use movement to contrast stillness. The combination of movement and stillness is often related to foil. For example, Li Bai's "Looking at Lushan Waterfall" and "Looking at the waterfall hanging in front of the river from a distance" wrote the first image of seeing the waterfall from a distance, like a huge white chain hanging in the mountain, and the word "hanging" turned into movement and stillness. Another example is Wang Wei's "Birdsong Stream": "People are idle, osmanthus flowers are falling, and the night is quiet in the spring mountain sky. The moonrise scares the birds, and they sing in the spring stream." The falling flowers, moonrise, and birdsong highlight the tranquility of the spring stream. Wang In "Entering Ruoye Stream" written by Ji Ji, "The noisy forest becomes quieter, and the singing of birds makes the mountain more secluded." It also uses sound to describe stillness, and uses movement to contrast stillness. "Silver snakes dance in the mountains, and wax statues ride in the mountains" is a combination of movement and stillness.