"Who has never died since ancient times" is a sentence in Guo Yang, an ancient poem in the Song Dynasty. Its creator is Wen Tianxiang, a writer in the late Southern Song Dynasty, and his writing style is "Seven-character Rhyme". The whole poem was included in The Complete Works of Mr. Wenshan by later generations.
The next sentence of "who has never died since ancient times" is "cultivating the mind and nourishing the nature, illuminating the history of history". They are located in the last paragraph of the ancient poem "Crossing Zero and Ding Yang", and they are the two most emotional sentences in the whole ancient poem. They roughly mean "no one can live forever. I want to reflect on history with my patriotism in this short life."
Appreciation of Zero Crossing and Ding Yang
The specific creation time of this ancient poem "Crossing the Zero Ding Yang" was in the late Song Dynasty and the first month of the second year of Xiangxing. At that time, Wen Tianxiang was forced to surrender by the enemy Zhang Hongfan. In order to show his unshakable will and lofty national integrity, he began to write this magnificent poem to express his unyielding position by "expressing his will through poetry".
Therefore, Zero Crossing and Ding Yang is an ancient poem with strong patriotic feelings. Later generations often use these two sentences to describe those national heroes who died for their country and justice.
Reference to the above content: Baidu Encyclopedia-"Crossing the Zero Ocean"