This sentence comes from Jiang Yan's Biefu?
The specific full text is as follows:
Those who are ecstatic, just don't! In addition, Qin and Wu Xi were out of the country, and Yan and Zhao Xi were thousands of miles away. Or the spring moss begins to grow, and the autumn wind rises temporarily. Therefore, my son was heartbroken and I felt sad. The wind is rustling and ringing, and the clouds are long and strange. The boat is stuck on the waterfront, and the car is behind the mountain side. Before the tolerance, Ma Hanming kept ringing. He who conceals the gold is royal, and he who crosses the jade column is touched by poetry. Living in sorrow, it seems that there is death. The sun sets on the wall and the color sinks, while the moon flies away on the porch. See the dew of the red orchid, and look at the frost of the green catalpa. The patrol floor is empty and covered, and the brocade curtain is empty and cool. Wandering away from the dream, I don't want the soul to fly.
Bie Fu, which comes from Selected Works, is a lyric poem written by Jiang Yan, a writer in the Southern Dynasties. At the beginning of the fu, I always wrote with the sentence "Those who are fascinated by ecstasy, only don't do it", which is thought-provoking with the sentence of Jing Jing.
With rich lyrical style, environment contrast, emotional rendering, psychological characterization and other artistic methods, this poem vividly and concretely reflects the profile of social unrest in the Qi and Liang Dynasties through the description of the parting of garrison, rich man, wandering official, chivalrous man, Taoist priest and lover. Quanfu uses the sentence pattern of parallel couples, which is vivid, beautiful in language and harmonious in sound and emotion. It has been well-known for thousands of years.
reference data
Ancient Poetry Network: http://www.gushiwen.org/