The complete sentence of this famous saying is as follows:
As long as you want it, as long as I have it. Give it my all, give it your all. What I gave you cannot be given to anyone else. What you gave to me, please don’t give it to the second person.
This sentence comes from Xu Zhimo's "Ai Mei Xiaozha", the original text is: "What do you want to tell me, tell me as much as possible, like a river, try to give its accumulation to the sea on the horizon, Like a high-spirited sunflower, revealing her secrets pet by petal to the warm sunshine, if you want my comfort, of course you have my comfort, as long as I have it, I can give it; whatever you want, I will As long as you do what you said - 'fight on'!"
"Love Eyebrows" Table of Contents:
1. Xu Zhimo and Lu Xiaoman (preface)< /p>
2. Love Meimei’s Xiaozha·Diary
3. Love Meimei’s Xiaozha·Letters
4. Meixuan’s trivial words
5 , Zhimo Love Poems
6. I Have a Love
7. A Night in Feilengcui
8. Who to Ask
9. Fallen Leaves Sing
10. Moaning Language
11. Build a Wall
12. Love in Two Places
13. The Last That day
14. "I don't know which direction the wind is blowing"
15. What is love?
16. Spring Reincarnation
17. I'm waiting for you
18. Appendix: Lu Xiaoman and "Xiaozao of Bei Mei" Chronology of Xu Zhimo's Life
"Xiaoza of Bei Mei" This book is written by Lu Xiaoman to commemorate the 40th anniversary of Xu Zhimo's birth and the fifth anniversary of his death. The unforgettable love between her and Xu Zhimo was completely made public to the world. This also added to the history of Chinese literature in the twentieth century. A masterpiece of true and beautiful prose. The so-called "Ai Mei Xiaozha" refers to a set of diaries and letters written by Xu Zhimo and Lu Xiaoman in the 1920s, despite the pressure from family and society.
There are two versions of "Ai Mei Xiaozha".
1. One is the "authentic handwritten book" published by Shanghai Liangyou Book Company in January 1936. It is titled "Aimei Xiaozha" and signed by Xu Zhimo "Xin Shou" in August 1925. Photocopy of the manuscript of the diary from September 9th to 31st and September 5th to 17th.
The "authentic handwritten book" is made of high-quality historical paper, overprinted in black and blue, and bound with silk thread. It is beautiful, limited to one hundred copies, and extremely precious.
2. The other is a lead-type version published by Shanghai Liangyou Book Company in March 1936. In addition to the above-mentioned diary of Zhimo, it also includes Xu Zhimo’s diary from March 3 to 5, 1925. Eleven letters to Lu Xiaoman on March 27 and "Xiaoman's Diary" written by Lu Xiaoman from March 11 to July 11, 1925.
The small 32-inch lead-set book is hardcovered in cloth and comes with an exquisite cover. It is equally elegant and endearing. "Little Letters from Love Eyebrows" is eye-catching because it is a true confession of love between Xu Zhimo and Lu Xiaomanre.
Extended information:
Xu Zhimo (1897.1.15~1931.11.19), a modern poet and essayist. A native of Xiashi Town, Haining County, Zhejiang Province. The name is Zhang Qu, the courtesy name is Zhimo, and the small character is Youshen. Pen names he has used: Nanhu, Yunzhonghe.
Xu Zhimo is a representative poet of the Crescent School and a member of the Crescent Poetry Society. He graduated from Hangzhou No. 1 Middle School in 1915 and studied at Shanghai Hujiang University, Tianjin Beiyang University and Peking University. In 1918, he went to the United States to study banking. In 1921, he went to study in England and became a special student at Cambridge University, studying political economics. During his two years in Cambridge, he was deeply influenced by Western education and influenced by European and American Romanticism and Aesthetic poets.
In 1921, he began to write new poems.
After returning to the country in 1922, he published a large number of poems and essays in newspapers and periodicals.
In 1923, he participated in the establishment of the Crescent Society and joined the Literary Research Association.
In 1924, he founded the weekly "Modern Poetry Review" with Hu Shi, Chen Xiying and others, and served as a professor at Peking University. The great Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore served as translator when he visited China.
In 1925, he went to Europe and traveled to the Soviet Union, Germany, Italy, France and other countries.
In 1926, he edited the supplement "Poetry" of "Morning News" in Beijing, and launched the metrical movement of new poetry with Wen Yiduo, Zhu Xiang and others, which affected the development of the art of new poetry. In the same year, he moved to Shanghai and served as professor at Guanghua University, Daxia University and Nanjing Central University.
In 1927, he participated in the founding of Crescent Bookstore. The following year, the monthly magazine "Crescent Moon" was founded and he became the editor-in-chief. He also traveled abroad to Britain, the United States, Japan, India and other countries.
In 1930, he served as a member of the Chinese Cultural Fund Committee and was elected as a member of the British Poetry Society. In the winter of the same year, he taught at Peking University and Beijing Women's University.
In early 1931, he co-founded the quarterly "Poetry" with Chen Mengjia and Fang Weide, and was elected as a director of the Chinese branch of PEN.
On November 19, 1931, while flying from Nanjing to Peiping, the plane crashed due to heavy fog hitting the mountains near Jinan, and he died. What is even more coincidental is that the crashed plane was named "Jinan". Cai Yuanpei wrote an elegiac couplet for him:
Conversations are poems, actions are poems, and life-long actions are poems. The meaning of poetry is permeated, and there is a paradise wherever you go. You can die in a boat, you can die in a car, and you can live in a small room. You can die lying down. Those who die by accident on a plane need not be regarded as fear of the road.