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What are the poems that describe the tenacious vitality of grass?

1. Ice pin springs pulse, and grass sprouts grow after the snow. ——Bai Juyi of the Tang Dynasty, "Wandering Alone in Qujiang in Early Spring"

Translation: The ice melts, the clear springs surge, the snow melts, and the tender grass sprouts.

2. If you don’t see the grass by the river, it dies in winter and fills the road in spring. ——Baozhao of the Southern Song Dynasty, "It's Difficult to Travel on the Road Five"

Translation: Look at the grass by the river. It dies in winter and grows over the road again in spring.

3. The grass grows in the original land, and it dries up and flourishes every year. Wildfires cannot be burned out, but spring breezes blow again. ——Tang Bai Juyi's "Farewell to the Ancient Grassland"

Translation: The grass on the wilderness is lush. Once a year it withers and flourishes again. No matter how mercilessly the fire burns. As long as the spring breeze blows the next year, there will be green weeds everywhere again.

Related introduction:

"Farewell with Ancient Grasses" is a famous work by Bai Juyi, a poet of the Tang Dynasty. This poem expresses the feeling of farewell to friends through the description of the wild grass in the ancient plains. It can be seen as an ode to weeds and then to life. The first four sentences focus on expressing the beauty of the weed's life over time, while the last four sentences focus on expressing the beauty of its immediate life.

The whole poem is rigorous in composition, with natural and fluent language, neat dialogues, a harmonious blend of scenery and lyricism, and a complete artistic conception. It is the swan song of "Fu Dede". "Wild fire never burns out, but the spring breeze blows and grows again." As a kind of "resilience", the two sentences are well-known and have been passed down through the ages.