As follows:
1. The autumn wind is blowing, and the waves in Dongting are under the wooden leaves.
The "wood" in "木叶" means tree, and 木叶 means leaves. In classical poetry, it specifically refers to fallen leaves. The poem comes from Qu Yuan's "Nine Songs: Mrs. Xiang". The general idea of ??these two lines is: The cool autumn wind keeps blowing, the water in Dongting Lake rises, and the leaves on the shore fall. Integrating emotions into the scenery and dyeing emotions with the scenery; the swan song of autumn water is known as the "ancestor of the eternal words of autumn".
2. Live as long as the heaven and the earth, and shine as brightly as the sun and the moon.
It comes from "She Jiang" by Qu Yuan during the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period. "Xi" is a modal particle. The meaning of the sentence is that the life span is as long as the heaven and the earth, and the brilliance is as bright as the sun and the moon. It describes a person who is very great, admired by thousands of people, and has a name in history, which is enough to be compared with the sun and the moon in the sky and the earth.
3. The whole world is turbid and I am alone pure; everyone is drunk and I am alone sober.
This sentence comes from Qu Yuan's "The Fisherman" in the Warring States Period. Qu Yuan explained that the reason for his exile was "The whole world is turbid and I am alone in my purity. Everyone is drunk and I am alone in my sobriety." That is to say, he is different and alone. Go alone, be uncompromising, uncompromising.
4. Don’t be sad because of parting; don’t be happy because of new acquaintances.
This sentence comes from Qu Yuan's "Chu Ci·Nine Songs·Shao Siming", which is translated as: There is nothing more sad than separation, and there is nothing more joyful than new acquaintances.
5. Drink the dew of the magnolia in the morning, and eat the fallen chrysanthemums of the autumn in the evening.
Falling dew and falling brilliance are antithetical texts. The two words "falling" and "falling" are both interpreted as "falling". Here, Qu Yuan just used the aromatic substance he took in the morning and evening as a metaphor for his own self-cultivation and clean conduct, which corresponds to the above "fear of not establishing a good reputation for cultivation". Fallen Flower: Fallen Flower.